1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause 2 Copyright 2018 The DPDK contributors 3 4.. submitting_patches: 5 6Contributing Code to DPDK 7========================= 8 9This document outlines the guidelines for submitting code to DPDK. 10 11The DPDK development process is modeled (loosely) on the Linux Kernel development model so it is worth reading the 12Linux kernel guide on submitting patches: 13`How to Get Your Change Into the Linux Kernel <https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html>`_. 14The rationale for many of the DPDK guidelines is explained in greater detail in the kernel guidelines. 15 16 17The DPDK Development Process 18---------------------------- 19 20The DPDK development process has the following features: 21 22* The code is hosted in a public git repository. 23* There is a mailing list where developers submit patches. 24* There are maintainers for hierarchical components. 25* Patches are reviewed publicly on the mailing list. 26* Successfully reviewed patches are merged to the repository. 27* Patches should be sent to the target repository or sub-tree, see below. 28 29The mailing list for DPDK development is `dev@dpdk.org <https://mails.dpdk.org/archives/dev/>`_. 30Contributors will need to `register for the mailing list <https://mails.dpdk.org/listinfo/dev>`_ in order to submit patches. 31It is also worth registering for the DPDK `Patchwork <https://patches.dpdk.org/project/dpdk/list/>`_ 32 33If you are using the GitHub service, pushing to a branch will trigger GitHub 34Actions to automatically build your changes and run unit tests and ABI checks. 35 36The development process requires some familiarity with the ``git`` version control system. 37Refer to the `Pro Git Book <http://www.git-scm.com/book/>`_ for further information. 38 39Source License 40-------------- 41 42The DPDK uses the Open Source BSD-3-Clause license for the core libraries and 43drivers. The kernel components are GPL-2.0 licensed. DPDK uses single line 44reference to Unique License Identifiers in source files as defined by the Linux 45Foundation's `SPDX project <http://spdx.org/>`_. 46 47DPDK uses first line of the file to be SPDX tag. In case of *#!* scripts, SPDX 48tag can be placed in 2nd line of the file. 49 50For example, to label a file as subject to the BSD-3-Clause license, 51the following text would be used: 52 53``SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause`` 54 55To label a file as dual-licensed with BSD-3-Clause and GPL-2.0 (e.g., for code 56that is shared between the kernel and userspace), the following text would be 57used: 58 59``SPDX-License-Identifier: (BSD-3-Clause OR GPL-2.0)`` 60 61Refer to ``licenses/README`` for more details. 62 63Maintainers and Sub-trees 64------------------------- 65 66The DPDK maintenance hierarchy is divided into a main repository ``dpdk`` and sub-repositories ``dpdk-next-*``. 67 68There are maintainers for the trees and for components within the tree. 69 70Trees and maintainers are listed in the ``MAINTAINERS`` file. For example:: 71 72 Crypto Drivers 73 -------------- 74 M: Some Name <some.name@email.com> 75 T: git://dpdk.org/next/dpdk-next-crypto 76 77 Intel AES-NI GCM PMD 78 M: Some One <some.one@email.com> 79 F: drivers/crypto/aesni_gcm/ 80 F: doc/guides/cryptodevs/aesni_gcm.rst 81 82Where: 83 84* ``M`` is a tree or component maintainer. 85* ``T`` is a repository tree. 86* ``F`` is a maintained file or directory. 87 88Additional details are given in the ``MAINTAINERS`` file. 89 90The role of the component maintainers is to: 91 92* Review patches for the component or delegate the review. 93 The review should be done, ideally, within 1 week of submission to the mailing list. 94* Add an ``acked-by`` to patches, or patchsets, that are ready for committing to a tree. 95* Reply to questions asked about the component. 96 97Component maintainers can be added or removed by submitting a patch to the ``MAINTAINERS`` file. 98Maintainers should have demonstrated a reasonable level of contributions or reviews to the component area. 99The maintainer should be confirmed by an ``ack`` from an established contributor. 100There can be more than one component maintainer if desired. 101 102The role of the tree maintainers is to: 103 104* Maintain the overall quality of their tree. 105 This can entail additional review, compilation checks or other tests deemed necessary by the maintainer. 106* Commit patches that have been reviewed by component maintainers and/or other contributors. 107 The tree maintainer should determine if patches have been reviewed sufficiently. 108* Ensure that patches are reviewed in a timely manner. 109* Prepare the tree for integration. 110* Ensure that there is a designated back-up maintainer and coordinate a handover for periods where the 111 tree maintainer can't perform their role. 112 113Tree maintainers can be added or removed by submitting a patch to the ``MAINTAINERS`` file. 114The proposer should justify the need for a new sub-tree and should have demonstrated a sufficient level of contributions in the area or to a similar area. 115The maintainer should be confirmed by an ``ack`` from an existing tree maintainer. 116Disagreements on trees or maintainers can be brought to the Technical Board. 117 118The backup maintainer for the main tree should be selected 119from the existing sub-tree maintainers of the project. 120The backup maintainer for a sub-tree should be selected from among the component maintainers within that sub-tree. 121 122 123Getting the Source Code 124----------------------- 125 126The source code can be cloned using either of the following: 127 128main repository:: 129 130 git clone git://dpdk.org/dpdk 131 git clone https://dpdk.org/git/dpdk 132 133sub-repositories (`list <https://git.dpdk.org/next>`_):: 134 135 git clone git://dpdk.org/next/dpdk-next-* 136 git clone https://dpdk.org/git/next/dpdk-next-* 137 138Make your Changes 139----------------- 140 141Make your planned changes in the cloned ``dpdk`` repo. Here are some guidelines and requirements: 142 143* Follow the :ref:`coding_style` guidelines. 144 145* If you are a new contributor, or if your mail address changed, 146 you may update the ``.mailmap`` file. 147 Otherwise the new name or address will be added by a maintainer. 148 Keeping this file up-to-date will help when someone wants to contact you 149 about the changes you contributed to. 150 151* If you add new files or directories you should add your name to the ``MAINTAINERS`` file. 152 153* Initial submission of new PMDs should be prepared against a corresponding repo. 154 155 * Thus, for example, initial submission of a new network PMD should be 156 prepared against dpdk-next-net repo. 157 158 * Likewise, initial submission of a new crypto or compression PMD should be 159 prepared against dpdk-next-crypto repo. 160 161 * For other PMDs and more info, refer to the ``MAINTAINERS`` file. 162 163* New external functions should be added to the local ``version.map`` file. See 164 the :doc:`ABI policy <abi_policy>` and :ref:`ABI versioning <abi_versioning>` 165 guides. New external functions should also be added in alphabetical order. 166 167* Any new API function should be used in ``/app`` test directory. 168 169* When introducing a new device API, at least one driver should implement it. 170 171* Important changes will require an addition to the release notes in ``doc/guides/rel_notes/``. 172 See the :ref:`Release Notes section of the Documentation Guidelines <doc_guidelines>` for details. 173 174* Test the compilation works with different targets, compilers and options, see :ref:`contrib_check_compilation`. 175 176* Don't break compilation between commits with forward dependencies in a patchset. 177 Each commit should compile on its own to allow for ``git bisect`` and continuous integration testing. 178 179* Add tests to the ``app/test`` unit test framework where possible. 180 181* Add documentation, if relevant, in the form of Doxygen comments or a User Guide in RST format. 182 See the :ref:`Documentation Guidelines <doc_guidelines>`. 183 184* Code and related documentation must be updated atomically in the same patch. 185 186Once the changes have been made you should commit them to your local repo. 187 188For small changes, that do not require specific explanations, it is better to keep things together in the 189same patch. 190Larger changes that require different explanations should be separated into logical patches in a patchset. 191A good way of thinking about whether a patch should be split is to consider whether the change could be 192applied without dependencies as a backport. 193 194As a guide to how patches should be structured run ``git log`` on similar files. 195 196 197Commit Messages: Subject Line 198----------------------------- 199 200The first, summary, line of the git commit message becomes the subject line of the patch email. 201Here are some guidelines for the summary line: 202 203* The summary line must capture the area and the impact of the change. 204 205* The summary line should be around 50 characters. 206 207* The summary line should be lowercase apart from acronyms. 208 209* It should be prefixed with the component name (use git log to check existing components). 210 For example:: 211 212 ixgbe: fix offload config option name 213 214 config: increase max queues per port 215 216* Use the imperative of the verb (like instructions to the code base). 217 218* Don't add a period/full stop to the subject line or you will end up two in the patch name: ``dpdk_description..patch``. 219 220The actual email subject line should be prefixed by ``[PATCH]`` and the version, if greater than v1, 221for example: ``PATCH v2``. 222The is generally added by ``git send-email`` or ``git format-patch``, see below. 223 224If you are submitting an RFC draft of a feature you can use ``[RFC]`` instead of ``[PATCH]``. 225An RFC patch doesn't have to be complete. 226It is intended as a way of getting early feedback. 227 228 229Commit Messages: Body 230--------------------- 231 232Here are some guidelines for the body of a commit message: 233 234* The body of the message should describe the issue being fixed or the feature being added. 235 It is important to provide enough information to allow a reviewer to understand the purpose of the patch. 236 237* When the change is obvious the body can be blank, apart from the signoff. 238 239* The commit message must end with a ``Signed-off-by:`` line which is added using:: 240 241 git commit --signoff # or -s 242 243 The purpose of the signoff is explained in the 244 `Developer's Certificate of Origin <https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#developer-s-certificate-of-origin-1-1>`_ 245 section of the Linux kernel guidelines. 246 247 .. Note:: 248 249 All developers must ensure that they have read and understood the 250 Developer's Certificate of Origin section of the documentation prior 251 to applying the signoff and submitting a patch. 252 253* The signoff must be a real name and not an alias or nickname. 254 More than one signoff is allowed. 255 256* The text of the commit message should be wrapped at 72 characters. 257 258* When fixing a regression, it is required to reference the id of the commit 259 which introduced the bug, and put the original author of that commit on CC. 260 You can generate the required lines using the following git alias, which prints 261 the commit SHA and the author of the original code:: 262 263 git config alias.fixline "log -1 --abbrev=12 --format='Fixes: %h (\"%s\")%nCc: %ae'" 264 265 The output of ``git fixline <SHA>`` must then be added to the commit message:: 266 267 doc: fix some parameter description 268 269 Update the docs, fixing description of some parameter. 270 271 Fixes: abcdefgh1234 ("doc: add some parameter") 272 273 Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 274 --- 275 Cc: author@example.com 276 277* When fixing an error or warning it is useful to add the error message and instructions on how to reproduce it. 278 279* Use correct capitalization, punctuation and spelling. 280 281In addition to the ``Signed-off-by:`` name the commit messages can also have 282tags for who reported, suggested, tested and reviewed the patch being 283posted. Please refer to the `Tested, Acked and Reviewed by`_ section. 284 285Patch Fix Related Issues 286~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 287 288`Coverity <https://scan.coverity.com/projects/dpdk-data-plane-development-kit>`_ 289is a tool for static code analysis. 290It is used as a cloud-based service used to scan the DPDK source code, 291and alert developers of any potential defects in the source code. 292When fixing an issue found by Coverity, the patch must contain a Coverity issue ID 293in the body of the commit message. For example:: 294 295 296 doc: fix some parameter description 297 298 Update the docs, fixing description of some parameter. 299 300 Coverity issue: 12345 301 Fixes: abcdefgh1234 ("doc: add some parameter") 302 303 Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 304 --- 305 Cc: author@example.com 306 307 308`Bugzilla <https://bugs.dpdk.org>`_ 309is a bug- or issue-tracking system. 310Bug-tracking systems allow individual or groups of developers 311effectively to keep track of outstanding problems with their product. 312When fixing an issue raised in Bugzilla, the patch must contain 313a Bugzilla issue ID in the body of the commit message. 314For example:: 315 316 doc: fix some parameter description 317 318 Update the docs, fixing description of some parameter. 319 320 Bugzilla ID: 12345 321 Fixes: abcdefgh1234 ("doc: add some parameter") 322 323 Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 324 --- 325 Cc: author@example.com 326 327Patch for Stable Releases 328~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 329 330All fix patches to the main branch that are candidates for backporting 331should also be CCed to the `stable@dpdk.org <https://mails.dpdk.org/listinfo/stable>`_ 332mailing list. 333In the commit message body the Cc: stable@dpdk.org should be inserted as follows:: 334 335 doc: fix some parameter description 336 337 Update the docs, fixing description of some parameter. 338 339 Fixes: abcdefgh1234 ("doc: add some parameter") 340 Cc: stable@dpdk.org 341 342 Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 343 344For further information on stable contribution you can go to 345:doc:`Stable Contribution Guide <stable>`. 346 347Patch Dependencies 348~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 349 350Sometimes a patch or patchset can depend on another one. 351To help the maintainers and automation tasks, please document this dependency in commit log or cover letter 352with the following syntax: 353 354``Depends-on: series-NNNNN ("Title of the series")`` or ``Depends-on: patch-NNNNN ("Title of the patch")`` 355 356Where ``NNNNN`` is patchwork ID for patch or series:: 357 358 doc: fix some parameter description 359 360 Update the docs, fixing description of some parameter. 361 362 Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 363 --- 364 Depends-on: series-10000 ("Title of the series") 365 366Tag order 367~~~~~~~~~ 368 369There is a pattern indicating how certain tags should relate to each other. 370 371Example of proper tag sequence:: 372 373 Coverity issue: 374 Bugzilla ID: 375 Fixes: 376 Cc: 377 378 Reported-by: 379 Suggested-by: 380 Signed-off-by: 381 Acked-by: 382 Reviewed-by: 383 Tested-by: 384 385Between first and second tag section there is and empty line. 386 387While ``Signed-off-by:`` is an obligatory tag and must exist in each commit, 388all other tags are optional. 389Any tag, as long as it is in proper location to other adjacent tags (if present), 390may occur multiple times. 391 392Tags after the first occurrence of ``Signed-off-by:`` shall be laid out 393in a chronological order. 394 395 396Creating Patches 397---------------- 398 399It is possible to send patches directly from git but for new contributors it is recommended to generate the 400patches with ``git format-patch`` and then when everything looks okay, and the patches have been checked, to 401send them with ``git send-email``. 402 403Here are some examples of using ``git format-patch`` to generate patches: 404 405.. code-block:: console 406 407 # Generate a patch from the last commit. 408 git format-patch -1 409 410 # Generate a patch from the last 3 commits. 411 git format-patch -3 412 413 # Generate the patches in a directory. 414 git format-patch -3 -o ~/patch/ 415 416 # Add a cover letter to explain a patchset. 417 git format-patch -3 -o ~/patch/ --cover-letter 418 419 # Add a prefix with a version number. 420 git format-patch -3 -o ~/patch/ -v 2 421 422 423Cover letters are useful for explaining a patchset and help to generate a logical threading to the patches. 424Smaller notes can be put inline in the patch after the ``---`` separator, for example:: 425 426 Subject: [PATCH] fm10k/base: add FM10420 device ids 427 428 Add the device ID for Boulder Rapids and Atwood Channel to enable 429 drivers to support those devices. 430 431 Signed-off-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 432 --- 433 434 ADD NOTES HERE. 435 436 drivers/net/fm10k/base/fm10k_api.c | 6 ++++++ 437 drivers/net/fm10k/base/fm10k_type.h | 6 ++++++ 438 2 files changed, 12 insertions(+) 439 ... 440 441Version 2 and later of a patchset should also include a short log of the changes so the reviewer knows what has changed. 442This can be added to the cover letter or the annotations. 443For example:: 444 445 --- 446 v3: 447 * Fixed issued with version.map. 448 449 v2: 450 * Added i40e support. 451 * Renamed ethdev functions from rte_eth_ieee15888_*() to rte_eth_timesync_*() 452 since 802.1AS can be supported through the same interfaces. 453 454 455.. _contrib_checkpatch: 456 457Checking the Patches 458-------------------- 459 460Patches should be checked for formatting and syntax issues using the ``checkpatches.sh`` script in the ``devtools`` 461directory of the DPDK repo. 462This uses the Linux kernel development tool ``checkpatch.pl`` which can be obtained by cloning, and periodically, 463updating the Linux kernel sources. 464 465The path to the original Linux script must be set in the environment variable ``DPDK_CHECKPATCH_PATH``. 466 467Spell checking of commonly misspelled words is enabled 468by default if installed in ``/usr/share/codespell/dictionary.txt``. 469A different dictionary path can be specified 470in the environment variable ``DPDK_CHECKPATCH_CODESPELL``. 471 472There is a DPDK script to build an adjusted dictionary 473from the multiple codespell dictionaries:: 474 475 git clone https://github.com/codespell-project/codespell.git 476 devtools/build-dict.sh codespell/ > codespell-dpdk.txt 477 478Environment variables required by the development tools, 479are loaded from the following files, in order of preference:: 480 481 .develconfig 482 ~/.config/dpdk/devel.config 483 /etc/dpdk/devel.config. 484 485Once the environment variable is set, the script can be run as follows:: 486 487 devtools/checkpatches.sh ~/patch/ 488 489The script usage is:: 490 491 checkpatches.sh [-h] [-q] [-v] [-nX|-r range|patch1 [patch2] ...] 492 493Then the git logs should be checked using the ``check-git-log.sh`` script. 494 495The script usage is:: 496 497 check-git-log.sh [-h] [-nX|-r range] 498 499For both of the above scripts, the -n option is used to specify a number of commits from HEAD, 500and the -r option allows the user specify a ``git log`` range. 501 502Additionally, when contributing to the DTS tool, patches should also be checked using 503the ``dts-check-format.sh`` script in the ``devtools`` directory of the DPDK repo. 504To run the script, extra :ref:`Python dependencies <dts_deps>` are needed. 505 506.. _contrib_check_compilation: 507 508Checking Compilation 509-------------------- 510 511Compilation of patches is to be tested with ``devtools/test-meson-builds.sh`` script. 512 513The script internally checks for dependencies, then builds for several 514combinations of compilation configuration. 515By default, each build will be put in a subfolder of the current working directory. 516However, if it is preferred to place the builds in a different location, 517the environment variable ``DPDK_BUILD_TEST_DIR`` can be set to that desired location. 518For example, setting ``DPDK_BUILD_TEST_DIR=__builds`` will put all builds 519in a single subfolder called "__builds" created in the current directory. 520Setting ``DPDK_BUILD_TEST_DIR`` to an absolute directory path e.g. ``/tmp`` is also supported. 521 522 523.. _integrated_abi_check: 524 525Checking ABI compatibility 526-------------------------- 527 528By default, ABI compatibility checks are disabled. 529 530To enable them, a reference version must be selected via the environment 531variable ``DPDK_ABI_REF_VERSION``. Contributors should ordinarily reference the 532git tag of the most recent release of DPDK in ``DPDK_ABI_REF_VERSION``. 533 534The ``devtools/test-meson-builds.sh`` script then build this reference version 535in a temporary directory and store the results in a subfolder of the current 536working directory. 537The environment variable ``DPDK_ABI_REF_DIR`` can be set so that the results go 538to a different location. 539 540Sample:: 541 542 DPDK_ABI_REF_VERSION=v19.11 DPDK_ABI_REF_DIR=/tmp ./devtools/test-meson-builds.sh 543 544 545Sending Patches 546--------------- 547 548Patches should be sent to the mailing list using ``git send-email``. 549You can configure an external SMTP with something like the following:: 550 551 [sendemail] 552 smtpuser = name@domain.com 553 smtpserver = smtp.domain.com 554 smtpserverport = 465 555 smtpencryption = ssl 556 557See the `Git send-email <https://git-scm.com/docs/git-send-email>`_ documentation for more details. 558 559The patches should be sent to ``dev@dpdk.org``. 560If the patches are a change to existing files then you should send them TO the maintainer(s) and CC ``dev@dpdk.org``. 561The appropriate maintainer can be found in the ``MAINTAINERS`` file:: 562 563 git send-email --to maintainer@some.org --cc dev@dpdk.org 000*.patch 564 565Script ``get-maintainer.sh`` can be used to select maintainers automatically:: 566 567 git send-email --to-cmd ./devtools/get-maintainer.sh --cc dev@dpdk.org 000*.patch 568 569New additions can be sent without a maintainer:: 570 571 git send-email --to dev@dpdk.org 000*.patch 572 573You can test the emails by sending it to yourself or with the ``--dry-run`` option. 574 575If the patch is in relation to a previous email thread you can add it to the same thread using the Message ID:: 576 577 git send-email --to dev@dpdk.org --in-reply-to <1234-foo@bar.com> 000*.patch 578 579The Message ID can be found in the raw text of emails or at the top of each Patchwork patch, 580`for example <https://patches.dpdk.org/patch/7646/>`_. 581Shallow threading (``--thread --no-chain-reply-to``) is preferred for a patch series. 582 583Once submitted your patches will appear on the mailing list and in Patchwork. 584 585Experienced committers may send patches directly with ``git send-email`` without the ``git format-patch`` step. 586The options ``--annotate`` and ``confirm = always`` are recommended for checking patches before sending. 587 588 589Backporting patches for Stable Releases 590~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 591 592Sometimes a maintainer or contributor wishes, or can be asked, to send a patch 593for a stable release rather than mainline. 594In this case the patch(es) should be sent to ``stable@dpdk.org``, 595not to ``dev@dpdk.org``. 596 597Given that there are multiple stable releases being maintained at the same time, 598please specify exactly which branch(es) the patch is for 599using ``git send-email --subject-prefix='PATCH 16.11' ...`` 600and also optionally in the cover letter or in the annotation. 601 602 603The Review Process 604------------------ 605 606Patches are reviewed by the community, relying on the experience and 607collaboration of the members to double-check each other's work. There are a 608number of ways to indicate that you have checked a patch on the mailing list. 609 610 611Tested, Acked and Reviewed by 612~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 613 614To indicate that you have interacted with a patch on the mailing list you 615should respond to the patch in an email with one of the following tags: 616 617 * Reviewed-by: 618 * Acked-by: 619 * Tested-by: 620 * Reported-by: 621 * Suggested-by: 622 623The tag should be on a separate line as follows:: 624 625 tag-here: Name Surname <email@address.com> 626 627Each of these tags has a specific meaning. In general, the DPDK community 628follows the kernel usage of the tags. A short summary of the meanings of each 629tag is given here for reference: 630 631.. _statement: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#reviewer-s-statement-of-oversight 632 633``Reviewed-by:`` is a strong statement_ that the patch is an appropriate state 634for merging without any remaining serious technical issues. Reviews from 635community members who are known to understand the subject area and to perform 636thorough reviews will increase the likelihood of the patch getting merged. 637 638``Acked-by:`` is a record that the person named was not directly involved in 639the preparation of the patch but wishes to signify and record their acceptance 640and approval of it. 641 642``Tested-by:`` indicates that the patch has been successfully tested (in some 643environment) by the person named. 644 645``Reported-by:`` is used to acknowledge person who found or reported the bug. 646 647``Suggested-by:`` indicates that the patch idea was suggested by the named 648person. 649 650 651 652Steps to getting your patch merged 653~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 654 655The more work you put into the previous steps the easier it will be to get a 656patch accepted. The general cycle for patch review and acceptance is: 657 658#. Submit the patch. 659 660#. Check the automatic test reports in the coming hours. 661 662#. Wait for review comments. While you are waiting review some other patches. 663 664#. Fix the review comments and submit a ``v n+1`` patchset:: 665 666 git format-patch -3 -v 2 667 668#. Update Patchwork to mark your previous patches as "Superseded". 669 670#. If the patch is deemed suitable for merging by the relevant maintainer(s) or other developers they will ``ack`` 671 the patch with an email that includes something like:: 672 673 Acked-by: Alex Smith <alex.smith@example.com> 674 675 **Note**: When acking patches please remove as much of the text of the patch email as possible. 676 It is generally best to delete everything after the ``Signed-off-by:`` line. 677 678#. Having the patch ``Reviewed-by:`` and/or ``Tested-by:`` will also help the patch to be accepted. 679 680#. If the patch isn't deemed suitable based on being out of scope or conflicting with existing functionality 681 it may receive a ``nack``. 682 In this case you will need to make a more convincing technical argument in favor of your patches. 683 684#. In addition a patch will not be accepted if it doesn't address comments from a previous version with fixes or 685 valid arguments. 686 687#. It is the responsibility of a maintainer to ensure that patches are reviewed and to provide an ``ack`` or 688 ``nack`` of those patches as appropriate. 689 690#. Once a patch has been acked by the relevant maintainer, reviewers may still comment on it for a further 691 two weeks. After that time, the patch should be merged into the relevant git tree for the next release. 692 Additional notes and restrictions: 693 694 * Patches should be acked by a maintainer at least two days before the release merge 695 deadline, in order to make that release. 696 * For patches acked with less than two weeks to go to the merge deadline, all additional 697 comments should be made no later than two days before the merge deadline. 698 * After the appropriate time for additional feedback has passed, if the patch has not yet 699 been merged to the relevant tree by the committer, it should be treated as though it had, 700 in that any additional changes needed to it must be addressed by a follow-on patch, rather 701 than rework of the original. 702 * Trivial patches may be merged sooner than described above at the tree committer's 703 discretion. 704 705 706Milestones definition 707--------------------- 708 709Each DPDK release has milestones that help everyone to converge to the release date. 710The following is a list of these milestones together with 711concrete definitions and expectations for a typical release cycle. 712An average cycle lasts 3 months and have 4 release candidates in the last month. 713Test reports are expected to be received after each release candidate. 714The number and expectations of release candidates might vary slightly. 715The schedule is updated in the `roadmap <https://core.dpdk.org/roadmap/#dates>`_. 716 717.. note:: 718 Sooner is always better. Deadlines are not ideal dates. 719 720 Integration is never guaranteed but everyone can help. 721 722Roadmap 723~~~~~~~ 724 725* Announce new features in libraries, drivers, applications, and examples. 726* To be published before the previous release. 727 728Proposal Deadline 729~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 730 731* Must send an RFC (Request For Comments) or a complete patch of new features. 732* Early RFC gives time for design review before complete implementation. 733* Should include at least the API changes in libraries and applications. 734* Library code should be quite complete at the deadline. 735* Nice to have: driver implementation, example code, and documentation. 736 737rc1 738~~~ 739 740* Priority: libraries. No library feature should be accepted after -rc1. 741* API changes or additions must be implemented in libraries. 742* The API must include Doxygen documentation 743 and be part of the relevant .rst files (library-specific and release notes). 744* API should be used in a test application (``/app``). 745* At least one PMD should implement the API. 746 It may be a draft sent in a separate series. 747* The above should be sent to the mailing list at least 2 weeks before -rc1 748 to give time for review and maintainers approval. 749* If no review after 10 days, a reminder should be sent. 750* Nice to have: example code (``/examples``) 751 752rc2 753~~~ 754 755* Priority: drivers. No driver feature should be accepted after -rc2. 756* A driver change must include documentation 757 in the relevant .rst files (driver-specific and release notes). 758* Driver changes should be sent to the mailing list before -rc1 is released. 759 760rc3 761~~~ 762 763* Priority: applications. No application feature should be accepted after -rc3. 764* New functionality that does not depend on libraries update 765 can be integrated as part of -rc3. 766* The application change must include documentation in the relevant .rst files 767 (application-specific and release notes if significant). 768* Libraries and drivers cleanup are allowed. 769* Small driver reworks. 770 771rc4 772~~~ 773 774* Documentation updates. 775* Critical bug fixes only. 776 777.. note:: 778 Bug fixes are integrated as early as possible at any stage. 779