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Adapted from http://go/cleanup. Fixes: #15932 Signed-off-by: Simon Law <sfllaw@tailscale.com>
195 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
195 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Commit messages
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There are different styles of commit messages followed by different projects.
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This is Tailscale's style guide for writing git commit messages.
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As with all style guides, many things here are subjective and exist primarily to
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codify existing conventions and promote uniformity and thus ease of reading by
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others. Others have stronger reasons, such as interop with tooling or making
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future git archaeology easier.
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Our commit message style is largely based on the Go language's style, which
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shares much in common with the Linux kernel's git commit message style (for
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which git was invented):
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* Go's high-level example: https://go.dev/doc/contribute#commit_messages
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* Go's details: https://golang.org/wiki/CommitMessage
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* Linux's style: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.10/process/submitting-patches.html#describe-your-changes
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(We do *not* use the [Conventional
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Commits](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/) style or [Semantic
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Commits](https://gist.github.com/joshbuchea/6f47e86d2510bce28f8e7f42ae84c716)
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styles. They're reasonable, but we have already been using the Go and Linux
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style of commit messages and there is little justification for switching styles.
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Consistency is valuable.)
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In a nutshell, our commit messages should look like:
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```
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net/http: handle foo when bar
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[longer description here in the body]
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Fixes #nnnn
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```
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Notably, for the subject (the first line of description):
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- the primary director(ies) from the root affected by the change goes before the colon, e.g. “derp/derphttp:” (if a lot of packages are involved, you can abbreviate to top-level names e.g. ”derp,magicsock:”, and/or remove less relevant packages)
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- the part after the colon is a verb, ideally an imperative verb (Linux style, telling the code what to do) or alternatively an infinitive verb that completes the blank in, *"this change modifies Tailscale to ___________"*. e.g. say *“fix the foobar feature”*, not *“fixing”*, *“fixed”*, or *“fixes”*. Or, as Linux guidelines say:
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> Describe your changes in imperative mood, e.g. “make xyzzy do frotz” instead of “[This patch] makes xyzzy do frotz” or “[I] changed xyzzy to do frotz”, as if you are giving orders to the codebase to change its behaviour."
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- the verb after the colon is lowercase
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- there is no trailing period
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- it should be kept as short as possible (many git viewing tools prefer under ~76 characters, though we aren’t super strict about this)
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Examples:
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| Good Example | notes |
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| ------- | --- |
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| `foo/bar: fix memory leak` | |
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| `foo/bar: bump deps` | |
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| `foo/bar: temporarily restrict access` | adverbs are okay |
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| `foo/bar: implement new UI design` | |
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| `control/{foo,bar}: optimize bar` | feel free to use {foo,bar} for common subpackages|
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| Bad Example | notes |
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| ------- | --- |
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| `fixed memory leak` | BAD: missing package prefix |
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| `foo/bar: fixed memory leak` | BAD: past tense |
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| `foo/bar: fixing memory leak` | BAD: present continuous tense; no `-ing` verbs |
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| `foo/bar: bumping deps` | BAD: present continuous tense; no `-ing` verbs |
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| `foo/bar: new UI design` | BAD: that's a noun phrase; no verb |
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| `foo/bar: made things larger` | BAD: that's past tense |
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| `foo/bar: faster algorithm` | BAD: that's an adjective and a noun, not a verb |
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| `foo/bar: Fix memory leak` | BAD: capitalized verb |
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| `foo/bar: fix memory leak.` | BAD: trailing period |
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| `foo/bar:fix memory leak` | BAD: no space after colon |
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| `foo/bar : fix memory leak` | BAD: space before colon |
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| `foo/bar: fix memory leak Fixes #123` | BAD: the "Fixes" shouldn't be part of the title |
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| `!fixup reviewer feedback` | BAD: we don't check in fixup commits; the history should always bissect to a clean, working tree |
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For the body (the rest of the description):
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- blank line after the subject (first) line
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- the text should be wrapped to ~76 characters (to appease git viewing tools, mainly), unless you really need longer lines (e.g. for ASCII art, tables, or long links)
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- there must be a `Fixes` or `Updates` line for all non-cleanup commits linking to a tracking bug. This goes after the body with a blank newline separating the two. [Cleanup commits](#is-it-a-cleanup) can use `Updates #cleanup` instead of an issue.
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- `Change-Id` lines should ideally be included in commits in the `corp` repo and are more optional in `tailscale/tailscale`. You can configure Git to do this for you by running `./tool/go run misc/install-git-hooks.go` from the root of the corp repo. This was originally a Gerrit thing and we don't use Gerrit, but it lets us tooling track commits as they're cherry-picked between branches. Also, tools like [git-cleanup](https://github.com/bradfitz/gitutil) use it to clean up your old local branches once they're merged upstream.
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- we don't use Markdown in commit messages. (Accidental Markdown like bulleted lists or even headings is fine, but not links)
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- we require `Signed-off-by` lines in public repos (such as `tailscale/tailscale`). Add them using `git commit --signoff` or `git commit -s` for short. You can use them in private repos but do not have to.
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- when moving code between repos, include the repository name, and git hash that it was moved from/to, so it is easier to trace history/blame.
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Please don't use [alternate GitHub-supported
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aliases](https://docs.github.com/en/issues/tracking-your-work-with-issues/linking-a-pull-request-to-an-issue)
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like `Close` or `Resolves`. Tailscale only uses the verbs `Fixes` and `Updates`.
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To link a commit to an issue without marking it fixed—for example, if the commit
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is working toward a fix but not yet a complete fix—GitHub requires only that the
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issue is mentioned by number in the commit message. By convention, our commits
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mention this at the bottom of the message using `Updates`, where `Fixes` might
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be expected, even if the number is also mentioned in the body of the commit
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message.
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For example:
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```
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some/dir: refactor func Foo
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This will make the handling of <corner case>
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shorter and easier to test.
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Updates #nnnn
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```
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Please say `Updates` and not other common Github-recognized conventions (that is, don't use `For #nnnn`)
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## Public release notes
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For changes in `tailscale/tailscale` that fix a significant bug or add a new feature that should be included in the release notes for the next release,
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add `RELNOTE: <summary of change>` toward the end of the commit message.
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This will aid the release engineer in writing the release notes for the next release.
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## Is it a #cleanup?
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Our issuebot permits writing `Updates #cleanup` instead of an actual GitHub issue number.
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But only do that if it’s actually a cleanup. Don’t use that as an excuse to avoid filing an issue.
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Shortcuts[^1] to file issues:
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- [go/bugc](http://go/bugc) (corp, safe choice)
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- [go/bugo](http://go/bugo) (open source, if you want it public to the world).
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[^1]: These shortcuts point to our Tailscale’s internal URL shortener service, which you too [can run in your own Tailnet](https://tailscale.com/blog/golink).
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The following guide can help you decide whether a tracking issue is warranted.
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| --- | --- |
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| Was there a crash/panic? | Not a cleanup. Put the panic in a bug. Talk about when it was introduced, why, why a test didn’t catch it, note what followup work might need to be done. |
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| Did a customer report it? | Not a cleanup. Make a corp bug with links to the customer ticket. |
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| Is it from an incident, get paged? | Not a cleanup. Let’s track why we got paged. |
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| Does it change behavior? | Not a cleanup. File a bug to track why. |
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| Adding a test for a recently fixed bug? | Not a cleanup. Use the recently fixed bug’s bug number. |
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| Does it tweak a constant/parameter? | Not a cleanup. File a bug to track the debugging/tuning effort and record past results and goals for the future state. |
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| Fixing a regression from an earlier change? | Not a cleanup. At minimum, reference the PR that caused the regression, but if users noticed, it might warrant its own bug. |
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| Is it part of an overall effort that’ll take a hundred small steps? | Not a cleanup. The overall effort should have a tracking bug to collect all the minor efforts. |
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| Is it a security fix? Is it a security hardening? | Not a cleanup. There should be a bug about security incidents or security hardening efforts and backporting to previous releases, etc. |
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| Is it a feature flag being removed? | Not a cleanup. File a task to coordinate with other teams and to track the work. |
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### Actual cleanup examples
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- Fixing typos in internal comments that users would’ve never seen
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- Simple, mechanical replacement of a deprecated API to its equivalently behaving replacement
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- [`errors.Wrapf`](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/pkg/errors#Wrapf) → [`fmt.Errorf("%w")`](https://pkg.go.dev/fmt#Errorf)
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- [math/rand](https://pkg.go.dev/math/rand) → [math/rand/v2](https://pkg.go.dev/math/rand/v2)
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- Code movement
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- Removing dead code that doesn’t change behavior (API changes, feature flags, etc)
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- Refactoring in prep for another change (but maybe mention the upcoming change’s bug as motivation)
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- Adding a test that you just noticed was missing, not as a result of any bug or report or new feature coming
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- Formatting (gofmt / prettifier) that was missed earlier
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### What’s the point of an issue?
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- Let us capture information that is inappropriate for a commit message
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- Let us have conversations on a change after the fact
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- Let us track metadata on issues and decide what to backport
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- Let us associate related changes to each other, including after the fact
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- Lets you write the backstory once on an overall bug/effort and re-use that issue number for N future commits, without having to repeat yourself on each commit message
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- Provides archaeological breadcrumbs to future debuggers, providing context on why things were changed
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# Reverts
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When you use `git revert` to revert a commit, the default commit message will identify the commit SHA and message that was reverted. You must expand this message to explain **why** it is being reverted, including a link to the associated issue.
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Don't revert reverts. That gets ugly. Send the change anew but reference
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the original & earlier revert.
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# Other repos
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To reference an issue in one repo from a commit in another (for example, fixing an issue in corp with a commit in `tailscale/tailscale`), you need to fully-qualify the issue number with the GitHub org/repo syntax:
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```
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cipher/rot13: add new super secure cipher
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Fixes tailscale/corp#1234
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```
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Referencing a full URL to the issue is also acceptable, but try to prefer the shorter way.
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It's okay to reference the `corp` repo in open source repo commit messages.
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# GitHub Pull Requests
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In the future we plan to make a bot rewrite all PR bodies programmatically from
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the commit messages. But for now (2023-07-25)....
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By convention, GitHub Pull Requests follow similar rules to commits, especially
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the title of the PR (which should be the first line of the commit). It is less
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important to follow these conventions in the PR itself, as it’s the commits that
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become a permanent part of the commit history.
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It's okay (but rare) for a PR to contain multiple commits. When a PR does
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contain multiple commits, call that out in the PR body for reviewers so they can
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review each separately.
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You don't need to include the `Change-Id` in the description of your PR.
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