* How developers contribute to GNU Emacs Here is how software developers can contribute to Emacs. (Non-developers: see https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Contributing.html or run the shell command 'info "(emacs)Contributing"'.) ** The Emacs repository Emacs development uses Git on Savannah for its main repository. Briefly, the following shell commands build and run Emacs from scratch: git config --global user.name 'Your Name' git config --global user.email 'your.name@example.com' git config --global transfer.fsckObjects true git clone git://git.sv.gnu.org/emacs.git cd emacs ./autogen.sh ./configure make src/emacs For more details, see http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/GitQuickStartForEmacsDevs and http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/GitForEmacsDevs or see the file admin/notes/git-workflow. ** Getting involved with development Discussion about Emacs development takes place on emacs-devel@gnu.org. You can subscribe to the emacs-devel@gnu.org mailing list, paying attention to postings with subject lines containing "emacs-announce", as these discuss important events like feature freezes. See https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-devel for mailing list instructions and archives. You can develop and commit changes in your own copy of the repository, and discuss proposed changes on the mailing list. Frequent contributors to Emacs can request write access there. Bug reports and fixes, feature requests and patches/implementations should be sent to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org, the bug/feature list. This is coupled to the https://debbugs.gnu.org tracker. It is best to use the command 'M-x report-emacs-bug RET' to report issues to the tracker (described below). Be prepared to receive comments and requests for changes in your patches, following your submission. The Savannah info page https://savannah.gnu.org/mail/?group=emacs describes how to subscribe to the mailing lists, or see the list archives. To email a patch you can use a shell command like 'git format-patch -1' to create a file, and then attach the file to your email. This nicely packages the patch's commit message and changes. To send just one such patch without additional remarks, you can use a command like 'git send-email --to=bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org 0001-DESCRIPTION.patch'. ** Issue tracker (a.k.a. "bug tracker") The Emacs issue tracker at https://debbugs.gnu.org lets you view bug reports and search the database for bugs matching several criteria. Messages posted to the bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org mailing list, mentioned above, are recorded by the tracker with the corresponding bugs/issues. GNU ELPA has a 'debbugs' package that allows accessing the tracker database from Emacs. Bugs needs regular attention. A large backlog of bugs is disheartening to the developers, and a culture of ignoring bugs is harmful to users, who expect software that works. Bugs have to be regularly looked at and acted upon. Not all bugs are critical, but at the least, each bug needs to be regularly re-reviewed to make sure it is still reproducible. The process of going through old or new bugs and acting on them is called bug triage. This process is described in the file admin/notes/bug-triage. ** Documenting your changes Any change that matters to end-users should have an entry in etc/NEWS. Doc-strings should be updated together with the code. Think about whether your change requires updating the manuals. If you know it does not, mark the NEWS entry with "---". If you know that *all* the necessary documentation updates have been made as part of your changes or those by others, mark the entry with "+++". Otherwise do not mark it. If your change requires updating the manuals to document new functions/commands/variables/faces, then use the proper Texinfo command to index them; for instance, use @vindex for variables and @findex for functions/commands. For the full list of predefine indices, see https://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/manual/texinfo/html_node/Predefined-Indices.html or run the shell command 'info "(texinfo)Predefined Indices"'. We prefer American English both in doc strings and in the manuals. That includes both spelling (e.g., "behavior", not "behaviour") and the convention of leaving 2 spaces between sentences. For more specific tips on Emacs's doc style, see https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Documentation-Tips.html Use 'checkdoc' to check for documentation errors before submitting a patch. ** Testing your changes Please test your changes before committing them or sending them to the list. If possible, add a new test along with any bug fix or new functionality you commit (of course, some changes cannot be easily tested). Emacs uses ERT, Emacs Lisp Regression Testing, for testing. See https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/ert/ or run 'info "(ert)"' for more information on writing and running tests. If your test lasts longer than some few seconds, mark it in its 'ert-deftest' definition with ":tags '(:expensive-test)". To run tests on the entire Emacs tree, run "make check" from the top-level directory. Most tests are in the directory "test/". From the "test/" directory, run "make " to run the tests for .el(c). See "test/README" for more information. ** Commit messages Ordinarily, a change you commit should contain a log entry in its commit message and should not touch the repository's ChangeLog files. Here is an example commit message (indented): Deactivate shifted region Do not silently extend a region that is not highlighted; this can happen after a shift (Bug#19003). * doc/emacs/mark.texi (Shift Selection): Document the change. * lisp/window.el (handle-select-window): * src/frame.c (Fhandle_switch_frame, Fselected_frame): Deactivate the mark. Occasionally, commit messages are collected and prepended to a ChangeLog file, where they can be corrected. It saves time to get them right the first time, so here are guidelines for formatting them: - Start with a single unindented summary line explaining the change; do not end this line with a period. If that line starts with a semicolon and a space "; ", the commit message will be ignored when generating the ChangeLog file. Use this for minor commits that do not need separate ChangeLog entries, such as changes in etc/NEWS. - After the summary line, there should be an empty line, then unindented ChangeLog entries. - Limit lines in commit messages to 78 characters, unless they consist of a single word of at most 140 characters; this is enforced by a commit hook. It's nicer to limit the summary line to 50 characters; this isn't enforced. If the change can't be summarized so briefly, add a paragraph after the empty line and before the individual file descriptions. - If only a single file is changed, the summary line can be the normal file first line (starting with the asterisk). Then there is no individual files section. - If the commit has more than one author, the commit message should contain separate lines to mention the other authors, like the following: Co-authored-by: Joe Schmoe - If the commit is a tiny change that is exempt from copyright paperwork, the commit message should contain a separate line like the following: Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes - The commit message should contain "Bug#NNNNN" if it is related to bug number NNNNN in the debbugs database. This string is often parenthesized, as in "(Bug#19003)". - Commit messages should contain only printable UTF-8 characters. - Commit messages should not contain the "Signed-off-by:" lines that are used in some other projects. - Any lines of the commit message that start with "; " are omitted from the generated ChangeLog. - Explaining the rationale for a design choice is best done in comments in the source code. However, sometimes it is useful to describe just the rationale for a change; that can be done in the commit message between the summary line and the file entries. - Emacs generally follows the GNU coding standards for ChangeLogs: see https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Change-Logs.html or run 'info "(standards)Change Logs"'. One exception is that commits still sometimes quote `like-this' (as the standards used to recommend) rather than 'like-this' or ‘like this’ (as they do now), as `...' is so widely used elsewhere in Emacs. - Some commenting rules in the GNU coding standards also apply to ChangeLog entries: they must be in English, and be complete sentences starting with a capital and ending with a period (except the summary line should not end in a period). See https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Comments.html or run 'info "(standards)Comments"'. American English is preferred in Emacs; that includes spelling and leaving 2 blanks between sentences. They are preserved indefinitely, and have a reasonable chance of being read in the future, so it's better that they have good presentation. - Use the present tense; describe "what the change does", not "what the change did". - Preferred form for several entries with the same content: * lisp/menu-bar.el (clipboard-yank, clipboard-kill-ring-save) (clipboard-kill-region): * lisp/eshell/esh-io.el (eshell-virtual-targets) (eshell-clipboard-append): Replace option gui-select-enable-clipboard with select-enable-clipboard; renamed October 2014. (Bug#25145) (Rather than anything involving "ditto" and suchlike.) - There is no standard or recommended way to identify revisions in ChangeLog entries. Using Git SHA1 values limits the usability of the references to Git, and will become much less useful if Emacs switches to a different VCS. So we recommend against that. One way to identify revisions is by quoting their summary line. Another is with an action stamp - an RFC3339 date followed by ! followed by the committer's email - for example, "2014-01-16T05:43:35Z!esr@thyrsus.com". Often, "my previous commit" will suffice. - There is no need to mention files such as NEWS and MAINTAINERS, or to indicate regeneration of files such as 'lib/gnulib.mk', in the ChangeLog entry. "There is no need" means you don't have to, but you can if you want to. ** Generating ChangeLog entries - You can use Emacs functions to write ChangeLog entries; see https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Change-Log-Commands.html or run 'info "(emacs)Change Log Commands"'. - If you use Emacs VC, one way to format ChangeLog entries is to create a top-level ChangeLog file manually, and update it with 'C-x 4 a' as usual. Do not register the ChangeLog file under git; instead, use 'C-c C-a' to insert its contents into your *vc-log* buffer. Or if 'log-edit-hook' includes 'log-edit-insert-changelog' (which it does by default), they will be filled in for you automatically. - Alternatively, you can use the vc-dwim command to maintain commit messages. When you create a source directory, run the shell command 'git-changelog-symlink-init' to create a symbolic link from ChangeLog to .git/c/ChangeLog. Edit this ChangeLog via its symlink with Emacs commands like 'C-x 4 a', and commit the change using the shell command 'vc-dwim --commit'. Type 'vc-dwim --help' for more. ** Committing changes by others If committing changes written by someone else, commit in their name, not yours. You can use 'git commit --author="AUTHOR"' to specify a change's author. ** Branches Future development normally takes place on the master branch. Sometimes specialized features are developed on other branches before possibly being merged to the master. Release branches are named "emacs-NN" where NN is the major version number, and are mainly intended for more-conservative changes such as bug fixes. Typically, collective development is active on the master branch and possibly on the current release branch. Periodically, the current release branch is merged into the master, using the gitmerge function described in admin/notes/git-workflow. If you are fixing a bug that exists in the current release, be sure to commit it to the release branch; it will be merged to the master branch later by the gitmerge function. Documentation fixes (in doc strings, in manuals, and in comments) should always go to the release branch, if the documentation to be fixed exists and is relevant to the release-branch codebase. Doc fixes are always considered "safe" -- even when a release branch is in feature freeze, it can still receive doc fixes. When you know that the change will be difficult to merge to the master (e.g., because the code on master has changed a lot), you can apply the change to both master and branch yourself. It could also happen that a change is cherry-picked from master to the release branch, and so doesn't need to be merged back. In these cases, say in the release branch commit message that there is no need to merge the commit to master, by starting the commit message with "Backport:". The gitmerge function excludes these commits from the merge to the master. Some changes should not be merged to master at all, for whatever reasons. These should be marked by including something like "Do not merge to master" or anything that matches gitmerge-skip-regexp (see admin/gitmerge.el) in the commit message. ** GNU ELPA This repository does not contain the Emacs Lisp package archive (elpa.gnu.org). See admin/notes/elpa for how to access the GNU ELPA repository. ** Understanding Emacs internals The best way to understand Emacs internals is to read the code. Some source files, such as xdisp.c, have extensive comments describing the design and implementation. The following resources may also help: https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Tips.html https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/GNU-Emacs-Internals.html or run 'info "(elisp)Tips"' or 'info "(elisp)GNU Emacs Internals"'. The file etc/DEBUG describes how to debug Emacs bugs. *** Non-ASCII characters in Emacs files If you introduce non-ASCII characters into Emacs source files, use the UTF-8 encoding unless it cannot do the job for some good reason. Although it is generally a good idea to add 'coding:' cookies to non-ASCII source files, cookies are not needed in UTF-8-encoded *.el files intended for use only with Emacs version 24.5 and later. *** Useful files in the admin/ directory See all the files in admin/notes/* . In particular, see admin/notes/newfile, see admin/notes/repo. The file admin/MAINTAINERS records the areas of interest of frequent Emacs contributors. If you are making changes in one of the files mentioned there, it is a good idea to consult the person who expressed an interest in that file, and/or get his/her feedback for the changes. If you are a frequent contributor and have interest in maintaining specific files, please record those interests in that file, so that others could be aware of that. *** git vs rename Git does not explicitly represent a file renaming; it uses a percent changed heuristic to deduce that a file was renamed. So if you are planning to make extensive changes to a file after renaming it (or moving it to another directory), you should: - Create a feature branch. - Commit the rename without any changes. - Make other changes. - Merge the feature branch to the master branch, instead of squashing the commits into one. The commit message on this merge should summarize the renames and all the changes. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs. If not, see . 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