mirror of https://github.com/GNOME/gimp.git
132 lines
5.4 KiB
Markdown
132 lines
5.4 KiB
Markdown
# Merge Request tricks
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By default, a Merge Request pipeline would only build GIMP with
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autotools, meson and for Windows 64-bit (similarly to normal commits).
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You might want to actually generate easy-to-install builds, in
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particular if you want it to be testable for non-developers, or various
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other reasons. Making a full flatpak or Windows installer can actually
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be quite time-consuming on a personal computer.
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☣️ We remind that these packages are built on-top of development code
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(i.e. work-in-progress and potentially unstable codebase likely
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containing critical bugs) with additional code which can be contributed
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by anyone (any anonymous person is allowed to propose patches as merge
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requests not only known team members).
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Therefore you should always check the merge request changes before
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running the code and never blindly trust that it is harmless. In any
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case, run these builds at your own risk. ☢️
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## Generating a Windows installer for merge request code
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If you add the label `5. Windows Installer` in a MR, then trigger a
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pipeline (for instance by rebasing), it will add a Windows installer
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creation to the pipeline. Once the pipeline ends, the installer can be
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found by:
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- clicking the pipeline ID.
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- In the "Distribution" stage, click the "win-installer-nightly" job.
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- Then click the "Browse" button.
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- Navigate to `build/installer/_Output/`.
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- Then click the `gimp-<version>-setup.exe` file to download the
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installer.
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## Generating a flatpak for merge request code
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If you add the label `5. Flatpak package` in a MR, then trigger a
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pipeline for instance by rebasing), it will add a flatpak creation to
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the pipeline. Once the pipeline ends, the flatpak can be installed by:
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- clicking the pipeline ID.
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- In the "Gimp" stage, click the "flatpak" job.
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- Then click the "Browse" button.
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- Click the `gimp-git.flatpak` file to download it.
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- Locally run: `flatpak install --user ./gimp-git.flatpak`
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It should propose you to install the flatpak, allowing you to test.
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- After testing, you can uninstall with: `flatpak remove org.gimp.GIMP//master`
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## Reviewing MR branches
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Reviewing merge requests on the Gitlab interface often leads to poor
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review, because:
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- It doesn't show tabs, trailing whitespaces and other space issues
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which a well-configured CLI git would usually emphasize with colors.
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- The commit history is not emphasized, only the final results, but it's
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very important to check individual commits, as well as usable commit
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messages.
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- It's anyway usually much easier to review patches on your usual
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workflow environment rather than in a hard-to-use web interface.
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There are ways to work on your local environments.
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### Fetching MR branches automatically (read-only)
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This first one is more of a trick, but an incredibly useful one.
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Unfortunately it is read-only, so it means you can review but not edit
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the MR yourself. Nevertheless since having to edit a MR should be the
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exception, not the rule, it's actually not too bad.
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Edit your `.git/config` by adding a second "fetch =" rule to the
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"origin" remote. It should read:
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```
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[remote "origin"]
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fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
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fetch = +refs/merge-requests/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/merge-requests/*
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url = git@gitlab.gnome.org:GNOME/gimp.git
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```
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From now on, when you `git pull` or `git fetch` the origin remote, any
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new or updated merge request will also be fetched. \o/
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### Pushing to a third-party MR branch
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There are cases when you want to push to the MR branch. It should stay
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rare occasions, but it can be for instance when the contributor seems
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stuck and doesn't know how to do some things; or maybe one doesn't
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understand instructions; sometimes also some contributors disappear
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after pushing their patch and never answer to review anymore.
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When this happen, you could merge the commit and fix it immediately
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after (but it's never good to leave the repo in a bad state, even for
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just a few minutes). You could also apply, fix and push the fixed
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commits directly, but then the MR has to be closed and it doesn't look
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like it was applied (which is not the end of the world, but it's still
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nicer to show proper status on which patches were accepted or not).
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Moreover you would not be able to pass the CI build.
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So we will fetch the remote yet without naming the remote:
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- Click the "Check out branch" button below the merge request
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description. Gitlab gives you instructions but we will only use the
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first step ("Fetch and check out the branch for this merge request").
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For instance if contributor `xyz` created the branch `fix-bug-123` on
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their own remote, you would run:
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```
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git fetch "git@gitlab.gnome.org:xyz/gimp.git" 'fix-bug-123'
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git checkout -b 'xyz/fix-bug-123' FETCH_HEAD
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```
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- Now that you are in a local branch with their code, make your fix, add
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a local commit.
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- Finally push to the contributor's own remote with the call:
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```
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git push git@gitlab.gnome.org:xyz/gimp.git xyz/fix-bug-123:fix-bug-123
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```
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This assumes that the contributor checked the option "*Allow commits
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from members who can merge to the target branch.*" (which we ask
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contributors to check, and it's set by default)
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- Now check the MR page. It will normally be updated with your new
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commit(s) and a new pipeline should be triggered.
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- Finally if you don't need the local branch anymore, you may delete it
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locally. The nice thing is that since you didn't name the remote, it
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doesn't pollute your git output and all data will be simply disposed
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of the next time `git gc` runs (implicitly or explicitly).
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