github.com/slene/docker@v1.8.0-rc1/docs/project/review-pr.md (about) 1 <!--[metadata]> 2 +++ 3 title = "Participate in the PR review" 4 description = "Basic workflow for Docker contributions" 5 keywords = ["contribute, pull request, review, workflow, beginner, squash, commit"] 6 [menu.main] 7 parent = "smn_contribute" 8 weight=5 9 +++ 10 <![end-metadata]--> 11 12 13 # Participate in the PR review 14 15 Creating a pull request is nearly the end of the contribution process. At this 16 point, your code is reviewed both by our continuous integration (CI) systems and 17 by our maintainers. 18 19 The CI system is an automated system. The maintainers are human beings that also 20 work on Docker. You need to understand and work with both the "bots" and the 21 "beings" to review your contribution. 22 23 24 ## How we process your review 25 26 First to review your pull request is Gordon. Gordon is fast. He checks your 27 pull request (PR) for common problems like a missing signature. If Gordon finds a 28 problem, he'll send an email through your GitHub user account: 29 30 ![Gordon](/project/images/gordon.jpeg) 31 32 Our build bot system starts building your changes while Gordon sends any emails. 33 34 The build system double-checks your work by compiling your code with Docker's master 35 code. Building includes running the same tests you ran locally. If you forgot 36 to run tests or missed something in fixing problems, the automated build is our 37 safety check. 38 39 After Gordon and the bots, the "beings" review your work. Docker maintainers look 40 at your pull request and comment on it. The shortest comment you might see is 41 `LGTM` which means **l**ooks-**g**ood-**t**o-**m**e. If you get an `LGTM`, that 42 is a good thing, you passed that review. 43 44 For complex changes, maintainers may ask you questions or ask you to change 45 something about your submission. All maintainer comments on a PR go to the 46 email address associated with your GitHub account. Any GitHub user who 47 "participates" in a PR receives an email to. Participating means creating or 48 commenting on a PR. 49 50 Our maintainers are very experienced Docker users and open source contributors. 51 So, they value your time and will try to work efficiently with you by keeping 52 their comments specific and brief. If they ask you to make a change, you'll 53 need to update your pull request with additional changes. 54 55 ## Update an existing pull request 56 57 To update your existing pull request: 58 59 1. Checkout the PR branch in your local `docker-fork` repository. 60 61 This is the branch associated with your request. 62 63 2. Change one or more files and then stage your changes. 64 65 The command syntax is: 66 67 git add <path_or_filename> 68 69 3. Commit the change. 70 71 $ git commit --amend 72 73 Git opens an editor containing your last commit message. 74 75 4. Adjust your last comment to reflect this new change. 76 77 Added a new sentence per Anaud's suggestion 78 79 Signed-off-by: Mary Anthony <mary@docker.com> 80 81 # Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting 82 # with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts the commit. 83 # On branch 11038-fix-rhel-link 84 # Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/11038-fix-rhel-link'. 85 # 86 # Changes to be committed: 87 # modified: docs/installation/mac.md 88 # modified: docs/installation/rhel.md 89 90 5. Force push the change to your origin. 91 92 The command syntax is: 93 94 git push -f origin <branch_name> 95 96 6. Open your browser to your pull request on GitHub. 97 98 You should see your pull request now contains your newly pushed code. 99 100 7. Add a comment to your pull request. 101 102 GitHub only notifies PR participants when you comment. For example, you can 103 mention that you updated your PR. Your comment alerts the maintainers that 104 you made an update. 105 106 A change requires LGTMs from an absolute majority of an affected component's 107 maintainers. For example, if you change `docs/` and `registry/` code, an 108 absolute majority of the `docs/` and the `registry/` maintainers must approve 109 your PR. Once you get approval, we merge your pull request into Docker's 110 `master` code branch. 111 112 ## After the merge 113 114 It can take time to see a merged pull request in Docker's official release. 115 A master build is available almost immediately though. Docker builds and 116 updates its development binaries after each merge to `master`. 117 118 1. Browse to <a href="https://master.dockerproject.org/" target="_blank">https://master.dockerproject.org/</a>. 119 120 2. Look for the binary appropriate to your system. 121 122 3. Download and run the binary. 123 124 You might want to run the binary in a container though. This 125 will keep your local host environment clean. 126 127 4. View any documentation changes at <a href="http://docs.master.dockerproject.org/" target="_blank">docs.master.dockerproject.org</a>. 128 129 Once you've verified everything merged, feel free to delete your feature branch 130 from your fork. For information on how to do this, 131 <a href="https://help.github.com/articles/deleting-unused-branches/" target="_blank"> 132 see the GitHub help on deleting branches</a>. 133 134 ## Where to go next 135 136 At this point, you have completed all the basic tasks in our contributors guide. 137 If you enjoyed contributing, let us know by completing another beginner 138 issue or two. We really appreciate the help. 139 140 If you are very experienced and want to make a major change, go on to 141 [learn about advanced contributing](/project/advanced-contributing).