= Contributing to Wayland = == Sending patches == Patches should be sent to wayland-devel@lists.freedesktop.org, using git send-email. See git's documentation for help [1]. The first line of a commit message should contain a prefix indicating what part is affected by the patch followed by one sentence that describes the change. For examples: protocol: Support scaled outputs and surfaces and doc: generate server documentation from XML too If in doubt what prefix to use, look at other commits that change the same file(s) as the patch being sent. The body of the commit message should describe what the patch changes and why, and also note any particular side effects. This shouldn't be empty on most of the cases. It shouldn't take a lot of effort to write a commit message for an obvious change, so an empty commit message body is only acceptable if the questions "What?" and "Why?" are already answered on the one-line summary. The lines of the commit message should have at most 76 characters, to cope with the way git log presents them. See [2] for a recommended reading on writing commit messages. Your patches should also include a Signed-off-by line with your name and email address. If you're not the patch's original author, you should also gather S-o-b's by them (and/or whomever gave the patch to you.) The significance of this is that it certifies that you created the patch, that it was created under an appropriate open source license, or provided to you under those terms. This lets us indicate a chain of responsibility for the copyright status of the code. We won't reject patches that lack S-o-b, but it is strongly recommended. == Tracking patches and following up == Patchwork is used for tracking patches to Wayland and Weston: http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/project/wayland/list/ Xwayland patches are tracked with the Xorg project, not here. Libinput patches, even though they use the same mailing list as Wayland, are not tracked in the Wayland Patchwork. The following applies only to Wayland and Weston. If a patch is not found in Patchwork, there is a high possibility for it to be forgotten. Patches attached to bug reports or not arriving to the mailing list because of e.g. subscription issues will not be in Patchwork because Patchwork only collects patches sent to the list. When you send a revised version of a patch, it would be very nice to mark your old patch as superseded (or rejected, if that is applicable). You can change the status of your own patches by registering to Patchwork - ownership is identified by email address you use to register. Updating your patch status appropriately will help maintainer work. The following patch states are found in Patchwork: New Patches under discussion or not yet processed. Under review Mostly unused state. Accepted The patch is merged in the master branch upstream, as is or slightly modified. Rejected The idea or approach is rejected and cannot be fixed by revising the patch. RFC Request for comments, not meant to be merged as is. Not applicable The email was not actually a patch, or the patch is not for Wayland or Weston. Libinput patches are usually automatically ignored by Wayland Patchwork, but if they get through, they will be marked as Not applicable. Changes requested Reviewers determined that changes to the patch are needed. The submitter is expected to send a revised version. (You should not wait for your patch to be set to this state before revising, though.) Awaiting upstream Mostly unused as the patch is waiting for upstream actions but is not shown in the default list, which means it is easy to overlook. Superseded A revised version of the patch has been submitted. Deferred Used mostly during freeze periods before releases, to temporarily hide patches that cannot be merged during a freeze. Note, that in the default listing, only patches in New or Under review are shown. There is also a command line interface to Patchwork called 'pwclient', see http://patchwork.freedesktop.org/project/wayland/ for links where to get it and the sample .pwclientrc for Wayland/Weston. == Coding style == You should follow the style of the file you're editing. In general, we try to follow the rules below. - indent with tabs, and a tab is always 8 characters wide - opening braces are on the same line as the if statement; - no braces in an if-body with just one statement; - if one of the branches of an if-else condition has braces, then the other branch should also have braces; - there is always an empty line between variable declarations and the code; static int my_function(void) { int a = 0; if (a) b(); else c(); if (a) { b(); c(); } else { d(); } } - lines should be less than 80 characters wide; - when breaking lines with functions calls, the parameters are aligned with the opening parentheses; - when assigning a variable with the result of a function call, if the line would be longer we break it around the equal '=' sign if it makes sense; long_variable_name = function_with_a_really_long_name(parameter1, parameter2, parameter3, parameter4); x = function_with_a_really_long_name(parameter1, parameter2, parameter3, parameter4); == Licensing == Wayland is licensed with the intention to be usable anywhere X.org is. Originally, X.org was covered under the MIT X11 license, but changed to the MIT Expat license. Similarly, Wayland was covered initially as MIT X11 licensed, but changed to the MIT Expat license, following in X.org's footsteps. Other than wording, the two licenses are substantially the same, with the exception of a no-advertising clause in X11 not included in Expat. New source code files should specify the MIT Expat license in their boilerplate, as part of the copyright statement. == References == [1] http://git-scm.com/documentation [2] http://who-t.blogspot.de/2009/12/on-commit-messages.html