127 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
127 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
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# HACKING -*- org -*-
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#+TITLE: Hacking notes for GPGME
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#+STARTUP: showall
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* How to contribute
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** No more ChangeLog files
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Do not modify any of the ChangeLog files in GPGME. Starting
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on December 1st, 2011 we put change information only in the GIT
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commit log, and generate a top-level ChangeLog file from logs at
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"make dist" time. As such, there are strict requirements on the
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form of the commit log messages. The old ChangeLog files have all
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be renamed to ChangeLog-2011
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** Commit log requirements
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Your commit log should always start with a one-line summary, the
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second line should be blank, and the remaining lines are usually
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ChangeLog-style entries for all affected files. However, it's fine
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-- even recommended -- to write a few lines of prose describing the
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change, when the summary and ChangeLog entries don't give enough of
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the big picture. Omit the leading TABs that you're used to seeing
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in a "real" ChangeLog file, but keep the maximum line length at 72
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or smaller, so that the generated ChangeLog lines, each with its
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leading TAB, will not exceed 80 columns. If you want to add text
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which shall not be copied to the ChangeLog, separate it by a line
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consisting of two dashes at the begin of a line.
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Note that ./autogen.sh installs a git hook to do some basic syntax
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checking on the commit log message.
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Typo fixes and documentation updates don't need a ChangeLog entry;
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thus you would use a commit message like
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#+begin_example
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Fix typo in a comment
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--
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#+end_example
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The marker line here is important; without it the first line would
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appear in the ChangeLog.
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If you exceptionally need to have longer lines in a commit log you may
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do this after this scissor line:
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#+begin_example
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# ------------------------ >8 ------------------------
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#+end_example
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(hash, blank, 24 dashes, blank, scissor, blank, 24 dashes).
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Note that such a comment will be removed if the git commit option
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=--cleanup-scissor= is used.
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** License policy
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GPGME is currently licensed under the LGPLv2.1+ with tools and the
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manual being under the GPLv3+. We may eventually update to a newer
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version of the licenses or a combination of them. It is thus
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important, that all contributed code allows for an update of the
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license; for example we can't accept code under the LGPLv2(only).
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If you want to contribute code or documentation to GPGME you are
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asked to assert that the contribution is in accordance to the "GPGME
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Developer's Certificate of Origin" as found in the file "DCO".
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Except for a slight wording change, this DCO is identical to the one
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used by the Linux kernel. Please take these simple steps:
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- Decide which mail address you want to use. Please have your real
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name in the address and not a pseudonym. Anonymous contributions
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can only be done if you find a proxy who certifies for you.
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- If your employer or school might claim ownership of code written
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by you; you need to talk to them to make sure that you have the
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right to contribute under the DCO.
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- Send an OpenPGP signed mail to the gnupg-devel@gnupg.org public
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mailing list from your mail address. Include a copy of the DCO as
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found in the official master branch. Insert your name and email
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address into the DCO in the same way you want to use it later.
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Example:
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Signed-off-by: Joe R. Hacker <joe@example.org>
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If you need it, you may perform simple transformations on the mail
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address: Replacing "@" by " at " or "." by " dot ".)
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- That's it. From now on you only need to add a "Signed-off-by:"
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line with your name and mail address to the GIT commit message.
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It is recommended to send the patches using a PGP/MIME signed
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mail.
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** Coding standards
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Please follow the GNU coding standards. If you are in doubt consult
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the existing code as an example. Do no re-indent code without a
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need. If you really need to do it, use a separate commit for such a
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change.
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- C99 syntax should not be used; stick to C90.
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- Please do not use C++ =//= style comments.
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- Try to fit lines into 80 columns.
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- Ignore signed/unsigned pointer mismatches
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- No arithmetic on void pointers; cast to char* first.
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** Commit log keywords
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- GnuPG-bug-id :: Values are comma or space delimited bug numbers
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from bug.gnupg.org pertaining to this commit.
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- Debian-bug-id :: Same as above but from the Debian bug tracker.
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- CVE-id :: CVE id number pertaining to this commit.
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- Regression-due-to :: Commit id of the regression fixed by this commit.
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- Fixes-commit :: Commit id this commit fixes.
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- Reported-by :: Value is a name or mail address of a bug reporte.
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- Suggested-by :: Value is a name or mail address of someone how
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suggested this change.
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- Co-authored-by :: Name or mail address of a co-author
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- Some-comments-by :: Name or mail address of the author of
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additional comments (commit log or code).
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- Proofread-by :: Sometimes used by translation commits.
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- Signed-off-by :: Name or mail address of the developer
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* Debug hints
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- Use gpgme-tool for manual tests.
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- The envvar GPGME_DEBUG enables debugging; see debug.[ch] for
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details.
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