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Create a new document to list what I think are (within the scope of XFS) our shared goals and community roles. Since I will be stepping down shortly, I feel it's important to write down somewhere all the hats that I have been wearing for the past six years. Also, document important extra details about how to contribute to XFS. Cc: corbet@lwn.net Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> Reviewed-by: Chandan Babu R <chandan.babu@oracle.com>
195 lines
7.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
195 lines
7.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
XFS Maintainer Entry Profile
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============================
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Overview
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--------
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XFS is a well known high-performance filesystem in the Linux kernel.
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The aim of this project is to provide and maintain a robust and
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performant filesystem.
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Patches are generally merged to the for-next branch of the appropriate
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git repository.
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After a testing period, the for-next branch is merged to the master
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branch.
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Kernel code are merged to the xfs-linux tree[0].
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Userspace code are merged to the xfsprogs tree[1].
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Test cases are merged to the xfstests tree[2].
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Ondisk format documentation are merged to the xfs-documentation tree[3].
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All patchsets involving XFS *must* be cc'd in their entirety to the mailing
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list linux-xfs@vger.kernel.org.
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Roles
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-----
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There are eight key roles in the XFS project.
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A person can take on multiple roles, and a role can be filled by
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multiple people.
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Anyone taking on a role is advised to check in with themselves and
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others on a regular basis about burnout.
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- **Outside Contributor**: Anyone who sends a patch but is not involved
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in the XFS project on a regular basis.
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These folks are usually people who work on other filesystems or
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elsewhere in the kernel community.
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- **Developer**: Someone who is familiar with the XFS codebase enough to
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write new code, documentation, and tests.
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Developers can often be found in the IRC channel mentioned by the ``C:``
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entry in the kernel MAINTAINERS file.
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- **Senior Developer**: A developer who is very familiar with at least
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some part of the XFS codebase and/or other subsystems in the kernel.
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These people collectively decide the long term goals of the project
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and nudge the community in that direction.
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They should help prioritize development and review work for each release
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cycle.
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Senior developers tend to be more active participants in the IRC channel.
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- **Reviewer**: Someone (most likely also a developer) who reads code
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submissions to decide:
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0. Is the idea behind the contribution sound?
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1. Does the idea fit the goals of the project?
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2. Is the contribution designed correctly?
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3. Is the contribution polished?
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4. Can the contribution be tested effectively?
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Reviewers should identify themselves with an ``R:`` entry in the kernel
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and fstests MAINTAINERS files.
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- **Testing Lead**: This person is responsible for setting the test
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coverage goals of the project, negotiating with developers to decide
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on new tests for new features, and making sure that developers and
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release managers execute on the testing.
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The testing lead should identify themselves with an ``M:`` entry in
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the XFS section of the fstests MAINTAINERS file.
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- **Bug Triager**: Someone who examines incoming bug reports in just
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enough detail to identify the person to whom the report should be
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forwarded.
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The bug triagers should identify themselves with a ``B:`` entry in
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the kernel MAINTAINERS file.
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- **Release Manager**: This person merges reviewed patchsets into an
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integration branch, tests the result locally, pushes the branch to a
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public git repository, and sends pull requests further upstream.
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The release manager is not expected to work on new feature patchsets.
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If a developer and a reviewer fail to reach a resolution on some point,
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the release manager must have the ability to intervene to try to drive a
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resolution.
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The release manager should identify themselves with an ``M:`` entry in
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the kernel MAINTAINERS file.
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- **Community Manager**: This person calls and moderates meetings of as many
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XFS participants as they can get when mailing list discussions prove
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insufficient for collective decisionmaking.
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They may also serve as liaison between managers of the organizations
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sponsoring work on any part of XFS.
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- **LTS Maintainer**: Someone who backports and tests bug fixes from
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uptream to the LTS kernels.
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There tend to be six separate LTS trees at any given time.
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The maintainer for a given LTS release should identify themselves with an
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``M:`` entry in the MAINTAINERS file for that LTS tree.
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Unmaintained LTS kernels should be marked with status ``S: Orphan`` in that
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same file.
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Submission Checklist Addendum
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-----------------------------
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Please follow these additional rules when submitting to XFS:
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- Patches affecting only the filesystem itself should be based against
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the latest -rc or the for-next branch.
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These patches will be merged back to the for-next branch.
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- Authors of patches touching other subsystems need to coordinate with
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the maintainers of XFS and the relevant subsystems to decide how to
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proceed with a merge.
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- Any patchset changing XFS should be cc'd in its entirety to linux-xfs.
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Do not send partial patchsets; that makes analysis of the broader
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context of the changes unnecessarily difficult.
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- Anyone making kernel changes that have corresponding changes to the
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userspace utilities should send the userspace changes as separate
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patchsets immediately after the kernel patchsets.
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- Authors of bug fix patches are expected to use fstests[2] to perform
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an A/B test of the patch to determine that there are no regressions.
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When possible, a new regression test case should be written for
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fstests.
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- Authors of new feature patchsets must ensure that fstests will have
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appropriate functional and input corner-case test cases for the new
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feature.
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- When implementing a new feature, it is strongly suggested that the
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developers write a design document to answer the following questions:
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* **What** problem is this trying to solve?
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* **Who** will benefit from this solution, and **where** will they
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access it?
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* **How** will this new feature work? This should touch on major data
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structures and algorithms supporting the solution at a higher level
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than code comments.
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* **What** userspace interfaces are necessary to build off of the new
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features?
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* **How** will this work be tested to ensure that it solves the
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problems laid out in the design document without causing new
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problems?
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The design document should be committed in the kernel documentation
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directory.
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It may be omitted if the feature is already well known to the
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community.
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- Patchsets for the new tests should be submitted as separate patchsets
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immediately after the kernel and userspace code patchsets.
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- Changes to the on-disk format of XFS must be described in the ondisk
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format document[3] and submitted as a patchset after the fstests
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patchsets.
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- Patchsets implementing bug fixes and further code cleanups should put
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the bug fixes at the beginning of the series to ease backporting.
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Key Release Cycle Dates
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-----------------------
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Bug fixes may be sent at any time, though the release manager may decide to
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defer a patch when the next merge window is close.
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Code submissions targeting the next merge window should be sent between
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-rc1 and -rc6.
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This gives the community time to review the changes, to suggest other changes,
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and for the author to retest those changes.
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Code submissions also requiring changes to fs/iomap and targeting the
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next merge window should be sent between -rc1 and -rc4.
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This allows the broader kernel community adequate time to test the
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infrastructure changes.
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Review Cadence
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--------------
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In general, please wait at least one week before pinging for feedback.
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To find reviewers, either consult the MAINTAINERS file, or ask
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developers that have Reviewed-by tags for XFS changes to take a look and
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offer their opinion.
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References
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----------
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| [0] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfs-linux.git/
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| [1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfsprogs-dev.git/
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| [2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfstests-dev.git/
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| [3] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfs-documentation.git/
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