Nautilus is part of the GNOME git repository. At the current time, any person with write access to the GNOME repository, can make changes to Nautilus. This is a good thing, in that it encourages many people to work on Nautilus, and progress can be made quickly. However, we'd like to ask people committing to Nautilus to follow a few rules: 0) Ask first. If your changes are major, or could possibly break existing code, you should always ask. If your change is minor and you've been working on Nautilus for a while it probably isn't necessary to ask. But when in doubt, ask. Even if your change is correct, somebody may know a better way to do things. If you are making changes to Nautilus, you should be subscribed to nautilus-list@gnome.org. (Subscription address: nautilus-list-request@gnome.org.) This is a good place to ask about intended changes. #nautilus on GIMPNet (irc.gimp.org, irc.us.gimp.org, irc.eu.gimp.org, ...) is also a good place to find Nautilus developers to discuss changes with. 1) Ask _first_. 2) With git, we no longer maintain a ChangeLog file, but you are expected to produce a meaningful commit message. Changes without a sufficient commit message will be reverted. See below for the expected format of commit messages. 3) Try to separate each change into multiple small commits that are independent ("micro commits" in git speak). This way its easier to see what each change does, making it easier to review, to cherry pick to other branches, to revert, and to bisect. Notes: * When developing larger features or complicated bug fixes, it is advisable to work in a branch in your own cloned Nautilus repository. You may even consider making your repository publically available so that others can easily test and review your changes. * The expected format for git commit messages is as follows: === begin example commit === Short explanation of the commit Longer explanation explaining exactly what's changed, whether any external or private interfaces changed, what bugs were fixed (with bug tracker reference if applicable) and so forth. Be concise but not too brief. === end example commit === - Always add a brief description of the commit to the _first_ line of the commit and terminate by two newlines (it will work without the second newline, but that is not nice for the interfaces). - First line (the brief description) must only be one sentence and should start with a capital letter unless it starts with a lowercase symbol or identifier. Don't use a trailing period either. Don't exceed 72 characters. - The main description (the body) is normal prose and should use normal punctuation and capital letters where appropriate. Normally, for patches sent to a mailing list it's copied from there. - When committing code on behalf of others use the --author option, e.g. git commit -a --author "Joe Coder " and --signoff. Alexander Larsson 17 Apr 2009