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authorStefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>2013-02-20 22:14:55 +0100
committerStefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>2013-02-20 22:14:55 +0100
commit5daad7029bfc62932b84517b49c73b38bd5c750c (patch)
treea6c6afd1639da3ffa3f4281209a9677945bfd325 /HACKING
parent9829cf24dad4310de0dbfbc3732f6c439b8e6931 (diff)
parentb7ac9a37b3c7c78db1ba2beb32cf10bda9db996b (diff)
downloadautomake-5daad7029bfc62932b84517b49c73b38bd5c750c.tar.gz
Merge branch 'branch-1.13.2' into maint
* branch-1.13.2: coverage: expose automake bug#13760 tests: refactor/enhance tests about make dry-run mode maint: describe new versioning and branching scheme, and adjust to it Signed-off-by: Stefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'HACKING')
-rw-r--r--HACKING85
1 files changed, 74 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/HACKING b/HACKING
index a4f89bd66..b52660089 100644
--- a/HACKING
+++ b/HACKING
@@ -100,6 +100,48 @@
The use of & prevents prototypes from being checked.
============================================================================
+= Automake versioning and compatibility scheme
+
+* There are three kinds of automake releases:
+
+ - new major releases (e.g., 2.0, 5.0)
+ - new minor releases (e.g., 1.14, 2.1)
+ - micro a.k.a. "bug-fixing" releases (e.g., 1.13.2, 2.0.1, 3.5.17).
+
+ A new major release should have the major version number bumped, and
+ the minor and micro version numbers reset to zero. A new minor release
+ should have the major version number unchanged, the minor version number
+ bumped, and the micro version number reset to zero. Finally, a new
+ micro version should have the major and minor version numbers unchanged,
+ and the micro version number bumped.
+
+ For example, the first minor version after 1.13.2 will be 1.14; the
+ first bug-fixing version after 1.14 that will be 1.14.1; the first
+ new major version after all such releases will be 2.0; the first
+ bug-fixing version after 2.0 will be 2.0.1; and a further bug-fixing
+ version after 2.0.1 will be 2.0.2.
+
+* Micro releases should be just bug-fixing releases; no new features
+ should be added, and ideally, only trivial bugs, recent regressions,
+ or documentation issues should be addressed by them.
+
+* Minor releases can introduce new "safe" features, do non-trivial
+ but mostly safe code clean-ups, and even add new runtime warnings
+ (rigorously non-fatal); but they shouldn't include any backward
+ incompatible change, nor contain any potentially destabilizing
+ refactoring or sweeping change, nor introduce new features whose
+ implementation might be liable to cause bugs or regressions in
+ existing code.
+
+* Major releases can introduce backward-incompatibilities (albeit
+ such incompatibilities should be announced well in advance, and
+ a smooth transition plan prepared for them), and try more risking
+ and daring refactorings and code cleanups.
+
+* For more information, refer to the extensive discussion associated
+ with automake bug#13578.
+
+============================================================================
= Working with git
* To regenerate dependent files created by aclocal and automake,
@@ -110,22 +152,43 @@
latest stable version of Autoconf installed and available early
in your PATH.
-* The Automake git tree currently carries two basic branches: 'master' for
- the current development, and 'maint' for maintenance and bug fixes. The
- maint branch should be kept regularly merged into the master branch.
- It is advisable to merge only after a set of related commits have been
- applied, to avoid introducing too much noise in the history.
+* The Automake git tree currently carries three basic branches: 'maint',
+ 'master' and 'next'.
+
+* The 'maint' branch, reserved to changes that should go into the next
+ micro release; so it will just see fixes for regressions, trivial
+ bugs, or documentation issues, and no "active" development whatsoever.
+ Since emergency regression-fixing or security releases could be cut
+ from this branch at any time, it should always be kept in a releasable
+ state.
+
+* The 'master' branch is where the development of the next minor release
+ takes place. It should be kept in a stable, almost-releasable state,
+ to simplify testing and deploying of new minor version. Note that
+ this is not a hard rule, and such "stability" is not expected to be
+ absolute (emergency releases are cut from maint anyway).
+
+* The 'next' branch is reserved for the development of the next major
+ release. Experimenting a little here is OK, but don't let the branch
+ grow too unstable; if you need to do exploratory programming
+ or over-arching change, you should use a dedicated topic branch, and
+ only merge that back once it is reasonably stable.
+
+* The 'maint' branch should be kept regularly merged into the 'master'
+ branch, and the 'master' branch into the 'next' branch. It is advisable
+ to merge only after a set of related commits have been applied, to avoid
+ introducing too much noise in the history.
* There may be a number of longer-lived feature branches for new
developments. They should be based off of a common ancestor of all
active branches to which the feature should or might be merged later.
- In the future, we might introduce a special branch named 'next' that
- may serve as common ground for feature merging and testing, should
- they not yet be ready for master.
-* After a major release is done, the master branch is to be merged into
- the maint branch, and then a "new" master branch created stemming
- from the resulting commit.
+* After a new minor release is done, the 'master' branch is to be merged
+ into the 'maint' branch, and then a "new" 'master' branch created
+ stemming from the resulting commit.
+ Similarly, after a new major release is done, the 'next' branch is to
+ be merged into both the 'master' and 'maint' branch, and then "new"
+ 'master' and 'next' branches created stemming from the resulting commit.
* When fixing a bug (especially a long-standing one), it may be useful
to commit the fix to a new temporary branch based off the commit that