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= Basic Gerrit Walkthrough -- For GitHub Users
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[NOTE]
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====
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This document aims to provide a concise description of the core principles of
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code review in Gerrit for people that were previously using Pull Requests on
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Github or similar concepts. Nothing in this document is meant to state that
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one or the other might be better, but only aims to help new users understand
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Gerrit more readily. We use Github as the point of comparison since it seems
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to be the most popular service.
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====
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To illustrate the differences in a meaningful order, we will walk you through
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the process of cloning a repo, making a change, asking for code review,
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iterating on the code and finally having it submitted to the code base. This
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document also does not aim to describe all features of Gerrit. Please refer to
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the link:intro-gerrit-walkthrough.html[Basic Gerrit Walkthrough] or
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link:index.html[the rest of the documentation] for a more complete overview and additional pointers.
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[[tldr]]
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== tl;dr
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Here’s how getting code reviewed and submitted with Gerrit is different from
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doing the same with GitHub:
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* You need the add a commit-msg hook script when you clone a repo for the first
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time using a snippet you can find e.g. https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/admin/repos/gerrit[here,role=external,window=_blank];
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* Your review will be on a single commit instead of a branch. You use
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`git commit --amend` to modify a code change.
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* Instead of using the Web UI to create a pull request, you use
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`git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master` to upload new local commits that are
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ready for review to Gerrit. You will find the URL to the review in the output of
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the push command.
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* As a reviewer, Gerrit offers a number of so-called labels to vote on, one of
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which is Code-Review. You indicate a negative, neutral or positive review using
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a -1, 0 or +1 vote.
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* To be able to submit (== merge) a change, you usually need a +2 Code-Review
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vote and possibly additional positive votes, depending on the configuration of
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the project you are contributing to.
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[[clone]]
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== 1. Cloning a Repository
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[NOTE]
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====
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Both GitHub and Gerrit provide simple Git repository hosting (of course both can
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do much more). In the simplest setup, you could just use both as such without
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any code review to push code. We will assume that this is not what you want to
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do and focus on the use case where your change requires a review.
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====
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The first step to working with the code is to clone the repo. For both, Gerrit
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and GitHub, you can simply use the `git clone` command.
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For Gerrit, there is an additional step before you can start making changes. For
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reasons we explain below, you’ll have to add a https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/user-changeid.html[commit-msg hook,role=external,window=_blank] script. This will
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append the Gerrit Change-Id to every commit message such that Gerrit can track
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commits through the review process. To make this process a little easier in
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Gerrit, you can find a command snippet for cloning and adding the commit-msg
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hook on the repository page (e.g. https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/admin/repos/gerrit[here,role=external,window=_blank]).
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[[create-change]]
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== 2. Making a Change
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*Branches*
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Now that you have the code in the git repo on your machine, you can start making
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changes. With GitHub, you would usually create a new branch and then start
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committing to it. This branch would then contain all the changes you share with
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your code reviewers in the next step. Your local branch will usually also be
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pushed to the remote server. This can be handy to back up your work or hand-off
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work to another device or developer.
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With Gerrit, you can also create a new local branch to develop in. While not
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required, it can be considered a best practice to sandbox this change from other
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changes you might be making. In contrast to the GitHub model, your local branch
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will not have to be pushed to the remote in Gerrit, at least not for the
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purposes of code review.
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*Commits*
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In Gerrit, a single commit is the unit of code that will be reviewed. With
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GitHub, you can commit to your branch as much as you like and the sum of all
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your commits on that branch will get reviewed. As a single commit gets reviewed
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in Gerrit, you need to `git commit --amend` when you iterate on the same change as
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opposed to only using `git commit` with GitHub (see Section 5 for more). You can,
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however, also add another commit on top of your existing commit in Gerrit, which
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will create a second change (and thus another review) that is based on your
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first change. Gerrit will show the relationship between these two changes as a
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so-called relation chain. This also means that your second change can only be
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submitted after the first was successfully merged. In many basic use cases, this
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situation is however not what you want.
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image::images/user-review-ui-change-relation-chain.png[Relation chain display on the change page.]
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With GitHub, you may be pushing your branch to the remote for non-code-review
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purposes, as mentioned above. You usually do not do this with Gerrit, as
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Gerrit-managed repos often only have one or a few branches on the server that
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can only be merged into via code review.
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[[request-review]]
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== 3. Asking for Code Review
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After you are satisfied with the changes you made, you’ll usually want/need to
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get your code reviewed. In GitHub, you would push your branch to the remote, go
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to the Web UI and create a pull request. In Gerrit, you need to push your commit
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(or the series of changes/commits) to the remote first, since you usually
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develop in a local branch only. While you can often just use git push with
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GitHub, you need to do a slightly different thing for Gerrit. Gerrit uses a
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“magic” branch that tells the server that this code is supposed to be reviewed.
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To send the changes you made on your local branch to review and being eventually
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merged into the remote’s master branch, you use
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`git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master`. There are also link:user-upload.html#_git_push[a number of Gerrit change
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options] you can trigger from the CLI this way.
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After successfully pushing your change to Gerrit, you will already find the URL
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for viewing your change in Gerrit’s Web UI in the response you get from the
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server. The description of the Gerrit code review that was just created is equal
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to the commit message of that one commit the change is based on. In GitHub, you
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might have described your change in the message you can create when creating the
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pull request in the GitHub Web UI.
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Next, you would go and visit your Gerrit change in the Web UI to get your change
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ready for review (choose reviewers, cc people, check for failing CI builds or
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tests, etc.), very similar to what you do on Github. Reviewers will be notified
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via email once you add them. By default, anyone can add reviewers to a Gerrit
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change. In GitHub, this ability is reserved for certain users, so you may have
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relied on others adding reviewers for you before. This can be the case in a
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Gerrit project, but it is also often expected that the change owner (usually the
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creator of the change) adds reviewers to get the review process started.
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[[reviewing]]
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== 4. Reviewing a Change
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Switching perspectives briefly, reviewing a change is fairly similar between
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GitHub and Gerrit. You, as a reviewer, will be notified of a change you have
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been added to via email or see an “incoming” change on your Gerrit dashboard.
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The dashboard is the central overview of changes going on within a Gerrit
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instance. By default, the dashboard shows changes that you are involved in, in
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any way. You can also see all changes on a Gerrit server by using the top menu
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(“Changes” -> “Open”). This view is more similar to what you see on Github, when
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you navigate to the Pull Requests tab of the project/repository you are working
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on. Note, however, that a single Gerrit instance can host multiple projects
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(also referred to as repositories; a list can be found, for example, https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/admin/repos[here,role=external,window=_blank]). Your
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dashboard and other lists of changes will show all changes across the
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projects/repositories by default.
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Back to your dashboard, you can click on the change you want to review. You can
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also access this from the email you received. You will see the same view that
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you saw as an author. In the middle of the change page, you can find the list of
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files that have been modified, just like what you find in the “Files changed”
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tab of GitHub. Also similarly, you can leave comments by highlighting a piece of
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the code and pressing ‘c’. All comments you make are in a draft state and thus
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only visible to you, like on GitHub. When you are done with your review, you
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need to click the “Reply” button at the top of the change page to send your
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assessment to the change owner alongside a “change message” summarizing your
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findings and/or adding higher level comments. Replying to a change makes your
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draft comments and the change message visible on the change page for everyone
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that has view access to this change. This again is fairly similar to GitHub,
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except for Gerrit’s voting labels.
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image::images/user-review-ui-change-reply-dialogue.png[Reply dialogue for a Gerrit change.]
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As you can see in the screenshot of the reply dialogue, the voting labels are in
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the bottom part of the dialogue. They can be fairly simple as in this case, but
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there can also be a larger number of labels you might be able to vote on. Labels
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can be used to distinguish different aspects of a review (e.g. whether or not
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the licensing of included libraries is okay), outcome of CI systems (e.g.
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whether or not a format checker passed, a build completed successfully, etc.) or
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as a flag that is read by bots to do something with a change. An example of a
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more complex label setup can be seen in this screenshot from the Android Gerrit
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instance.
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image::images/user-review-ui-change-complex-reply-dialogue.png[Reply dialogue for a change on the Android project.]
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In the simplest case shown above, voting -1 on the Code-Review label equals
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requesting changes on a GitHub pull request, 0 equals just having comments and
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+1 means that you think this change looks good. Usually, Gerrit changes require
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a +2 vote on the Code-Review label to be submitted (merged in GitHub terms, see
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Section 6 below). Being able to vote +2 on Code-Review is often restricted to
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maintainers of a given project, so they can have a final say on a change. These
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practices can however vary between projects, as labels and voting permissions
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are configurable.
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[[iterate]]
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== 5. Iterating on the Change
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After your reviewers got back to you as a change owner, you realize that you
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need to make a few updates to the code in your change. As mentioned in Section 2
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(Making a Change), you’ll have to amend the commit that this review was based
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on. To do that, you might have to checkout the respective commit first if it is
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not at the tip of your local branch, for example if you stacked multiple changes
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on top of each other. Another common use case is to not have a local branch but
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to work in the so-called https://www.git-tower.com/learn/git/faq/detached-head-when-checkout-commit["detached HEAD",role=external,window=_blank] mode. In that case you can use the
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“Download” button on the files tab to copy a command that fetches and checks out
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the commit underlying your change. Make sure to select the latest patchset,
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though!
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image::images/user-review-ui-change-page-download.png[Using the “Download” button to copy a command that checks out a given patchset for a change.]
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After checking out the commit, you then make the changes as usual. When you
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think you are done, you can commit with the `--amend` flag to change the commit
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you currently have checked out.
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When you `git commit --amend` to iterate on your change, you might be worried that
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you are changing your previous commit and may thus lose that state of your work.
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However, here the Change-Id appended to your commit message comes into play.
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While the SHA1 hash of your change (the commit ID used by Git) might change, the
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Change-Id stays the same (in fact it is the SHA1 hash of the very first version
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of that commit). When this amended commit is uploaded to the Gerrit server,
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Gerrit knows that this commit is really an iteration of that previous commit
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(and the associated review) and will preserve both, the old and the new state.
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All previous states of your commit will be visible in the Gerrit UI as so-called
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patchsets (and link:intro-user.html#change-ref[from the Git repo]).
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image::images/user-review-ui-change-page-patchset-dropdown.png[Screenshot of the patchset dropdown above the file list, showing all iterations a commit went through.]
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After iterating as much as needed, your reviewers will finally be satisfied.
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With GitHub, you would have a string of additional commits in the branch you
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used for opening the pull request. In Gerrit, you still only have that one
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commit in your local branch. All the iterations are available as patchsets in
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the Web UI as well as from the special branch mentioned above.
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[[submit]]
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== 6. Submitting a Change
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Finally, it is time to submit your change. As mentioned above, the precondition
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for this in Gerrit is usually at least a +2 vote on the Code-Review label. With
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GitHub, an authorized person must have given an “Approve” vote. Once this
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precondition has been met, anyone with submit permission can submit the change
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in Gerrit. To do that, you click the “Submit” button in the Gerrit Web UI just
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as you would click the “Merge Pull Request” button in GitHub. Both, Gerrit and
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GitHub, allow different merge strategies, that can be enabled by project
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administrators. In Gerrit, a merge strategy is configured for each project and
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cannot be changed at submit time while this may be possible with GitHub,
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depending on project configuration.
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A merge can fail due to conflicts with competing edits on the target branch.
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With GitHub, you may be able to resolve some simple conflicts directly from the
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Web UI. In Gerrit, you can attempt to rebase a change from the Web UI. If there
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are no conflicts, a new patchset will automatically appear. Otherwise, similar
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to GitHub, you need to resolve conflicts on the command line with your local
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clone of the repository. While you resolve conflicts that arise from a
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`git merge` for GitHub, you will need to link:intro-user.html#rebase[use `git rebase` with your change] on
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Gerrit.
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After resolving locally, with GitHub, you end up with another commit on your
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pull request branch and push it to the server, which should then allow you to
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finish merging the change. With Gerrit, resolving the conflict through rebasing
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your commit/change results in another amended version of that same commit and
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you upload it to Gerrit, resulting in a new patchset just like your previous
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iterations addressing reviewer comments. This new patchset will usually require
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another round of reviewer votes, as Gerrit will not copy votes from a previous
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patchset by default.
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GERRIT
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------
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Part of link:index.html[Gerrit Code Review]
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SEARCHBOX
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---------
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