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Reviewing and merging Knative pull requests |
Pull request guidelines |
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As a community, we believe in the value of code reviews for all contributions. Code reviews increase both the quality and readability of our code base, which in turn produces high quality software.
This document provides guidelines for how the project's Members review issues and merge pull requests (PRs).
First and foremost: as a potential contributor, your changes and ideas are welcome at any hour of the day or night, weekdays, weekends, and holidays. Please do not ever hesitate to ask a question or submit a PR.
Reviewers are often the first points of contact between new members of the community and are important in shaping the community. We encourage reviewers to read the code of conduct and to go above and beyond the code of conduct to promote a collaborative and respectful community.
The code review process can introduce latency for contributors and additional work for reviewers, frustrating both parties. Consequently, as a community we expect all active participants to also be active reviewers. Participate in the code review process in areas where you have expertise.
Once a PR has been submitted, reviewers should do an initial review to do a quick "triage" (e.g. close duplicates, identify user errors, etc.), and potentially identify which maintainers should be the focal points for the review.
If a PR is closed without accepting the changes, reviewers are expected to provide sufficient feedback to the originator to explain why it is being closed.
During a review, PR authors are expected to respond to comments and questions made within the PR - updating the proposed change as appropriate.
After a review of the proposed changes, reviewers can either approve or reject the PR. To approve, they add an "approved" review to the PR. To reject, they add a "request changes" review along with a full justification for why they are not in favor of the change. If a PR gets a "request changes" vote, the group discusses the issue to resolve their differences.
Reviewers are expected to respond in a timely fashion to PRs that are assigned
to them. Reviewers are expected to respond to active PRs with reasonable
latency. If reviewers fail to respond, those PRs may be assigned to other
reviewers. Active PRs are those that have a proper CLA (cla:yes
) label, are
not works in progress (WIP), are passing tests, and do not need rebase to be
merged. PRs that do not have a proper CLA, are WIP, do not pass tests, or
require a rebase are not considered active PRs.
Any Approver who wants to review a PR but does not have time immediately can put a hold on a PR. If you need more time, say so on the PR discussion and offer an ETA measured in single-digit days at most. Any PR that has a hold will not be merged until the person who requested the hold acks the review, withdraws their hold, or is overruled by a majority of approvers.
Merging of PRs is done by Approvers.
As is the case with many open source projects, becoming an Approver is based on contributions to the project. See our community roles document for information on how this is done.
A PR can be merged only after the following criteria are met:
- It has no "request changes" review from a reviewer.
- It has at least one "approved" review by at least one of the approvers of that repository.
- It has all appropriate corresponding documentation and tests.
This project uses
Prow to
automatically run tests for every PR. PRs with failing tests might not be
merged. If necessary, you can rerun the tests by simply adding the comment
/retest
to your PR.
Prow has several other features that make PR management easier, like running the go linter or assigning labels. For a full list of commands understood by Prow, see the command help page.
Except as otherwise noted, the content of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, and code samples are licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.