This section is addressed to the Django committers and to anyone interested in knowing how code gets committed into Django core. If you’re a community member who wants to contribute code to Django, have a look at Working with Git and GitHub instead.
Django has two types of committers:
These are people who are “domain experts.” They have direct check-in access to the subsystems that fall under their jurisdiction, and they’re given a formal vote in questions that involve their subsystems. This type of access is likely to be given to someone who contributes a large sub-framework to Django and wants to continue to maintain it.
Partial commit access is granted by the same process as full committers. However, the bar is set lower; proven expertise in the area in question is likely to be sufficient.
Decisions on new committers will follow the process explained in How we make decisions. To request commit access, please contact an existing committer privately. Public requests for commit access are potential flame-war starters, and will simply be ignored.
Since Django is now hosted at GitHub, many patches are provided in the form of pull requests.
When committing a pull request, make sure each individual commit matches the commit guidelines described below. Contributors are expected to provide the best pull requests possible. In practice however, committers - who will likely be more familiar with the commit guidelines - may decide to bring a commit up to standard themselves.
Here is one way to commit a pull request:
# Create a new branch tracking upstream/master -- upstream is assumed
# to be django/django.
git checkout -b pull_xxxxx upstream/master
# Download the patches from github and apply them.
curl https://github.com/django/django/pull/xxxxx.patch | git am
At this point, you can work on the code. Use git rebase -i and git commit --amend to make sure the commits have the expected level of quality. Once you’re ready:
# Make sure master is ready to receive changes.
git checkout master
git pull upstream master
# Merge the work as "fast-forward" to master, to avoid a merge commit.
git merge --ff-only pull_xxxxx
# Check that only the changes you expect will be pushed to upstream.
git push --dry-run upstream master
# Push!
git push upstream master
# Get rid of the pull_xxxxx branch.
git branch -d pull_xxxxx
An alternative is to add the contributor’s repository as a new remote, checkout the branch and work from there:
git remote add <contributor> https://github.com/<contributor>/django.git
git checkout pull_xxxxx <contributor> <contributor's pull request branch>
Yet another alternative is to fetch the branch without adding the contributor’s repository as a remote:
git fetch https://github.com/<contributor>/django.git <contributor's pull request branch>
git checkout -b pull_xxxxx FETCH_HEAD
At this point, you can work on the code and continue as above.
GitHub provides a one-click merge functionality for pull requests. This should only be used if the pull request is 100% ready, and you have checked it for errors (or trust the request maker enough to skip checks). Currently, it isn’t possible to check that the tests pass and that the docs build without downloading the changes to your development environment.
When rewriting the commit history of a pull request, the goal is to make Django’s commit history as usable as possible:
Practicality beats purity, so it is up to each committer to decide how much history mangling to do for a pull request. The main points are engaging the community, getting work done, and having a usable commit history.
In addition, please follow the following guidelines when committing code to Django’s Git repository:
Never change the published history of django/django branches! Never force- push your changes to django/django. If you absolutely must (for security reasons for example) first discuss the situation with the core team.
For any medium-to-big changes, where “medium-to-big” is according to your judgment, please bring things up on the django-developers mailing list before making the change.
If you bring something up on django-developers and nobody responds, please don’t take that to mean your idea is great and should be implemented immediately because nobody contested it. Django’s lead developers don’t have a lot of time to read mailing-list discussions immediately, so you may have to wait a couple of days before getting a response.
Write detailed commit messages in the past tense, not present tense.
The commit message should be in lines of 72 chars maximum. There should be a subject line, separated by a blank line and then paragraphs of 72 char lines. The limits are soft. For the subject line, shorter is better. In the body of the commit message more detail is better than less:
Fixed #18307 -- Added git workflow guidelines
Refactored the Django's documentation to remove mentions of SVN
specific tasks. Added guidelines of how to use Git, GitHub, and
how to use pull request together with Trac instead.
If the patch wasn’t a pull request, you should credit the contributors in the commit message: “Thanks A for report, B for the patch and C for the review.”
For commits to a branch, prefix the commit message with the branch name. For example: “[1.4.x] Fixed #xxxxx – Added support for mind reading.”
Limit commits to the most granular change that makes sense. This means, use frequent small commits rather than infrequent large commits. For example, if implementing feature X requires a small change to library Y, first commit the change to library Y, then commit feature X in a separate commit. This goes a long way in helping all core Django developers follow your changes.
Separate bug fixes from feature changes. Bugfixes may need to be backported to the stable branch, according to the backwards-compatibility policy.
If your commit closes a ticket in the Django ticket tracker, begin your commit message with the text “Fixed #xxxxx”, where “xxxxx” is the number of the ticket your commit fixes. Example: “Fixed #123 – Added whizbang feature.”. We’ve rigged Trac so that any commit message in that format will automatically close the referenced ticket and post a comment to it with the full commit message.
If your commit closes a ticket and is in a branch, use the branch name first, then the “Fixed #xxxxx.” For example: “[1.4.x] Fixed #123 – Added whizbang feature.”
For the curious, we’re using a Trac plugin for this.
Note
Note that the Trac integration doesn’t know anything about pull requests. So if you try to close a pull request with the phrase “closes #400” in your commit message, GitHub will close the pull request, but the Trac plugin will also close the same numbered ticket in Trac.
If your commit references a ticket in the Django ticket tracker but does not close the ticket, include the phrase “Refs #xxxxx”, where “xxxxx” is the number of the ticket your commit references. This will automatically post a comment to the appropriate ticket.
Write commit messages for backports using this pattern:
[<Django version>] Fixed <ticket> -- <description>
Backport of <revision> from <branch>.
For example:
[1.3.x] Fixed #17028 - Changed diveintopython.org -> diveintopython.net.
Backport of 80c0cbf1c97047daed2c5b41b296bbc56fe1d7e3 from master.
Nobody’s perfect; mistakes will be committed.
But try very hard to ensure that mistakes don’t happen. Just because we have a reversion policy doesn’t relax your responsibility to aim for the highest quality possible. Really: double-check your work, or have it checked by another committer, before you commit it in the first place!
When a mistaken commit is discovered, please follow these guidelines:
Dec 23, 2012