ebeb15460c
Asciidoc may fail to render link attributes for external links supposed to open in a new window correctly. This change adds :linkattrs: to the beginning of such files to force parsing link attributes correctly. Bug: Issue 12068 Change-Id: If18be60de646ff78f672239dd4fa435fd4fd92ab
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254 lines
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:linkattrs:
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= Gerrit Code Review - Contributing
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[[cla]]
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== Contributor License Agreement
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In order to contribute to Gerrit a link:dev-cla.html[Contributor
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License Agreement] must be completed before contributions are accepted.
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[[contribution-processes]]
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== Contribution Processes
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The Gerrit project offers two contribution processes:
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* link:#lightweight-contribution-process[Lightweight Contribution
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Process]
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* link:#design-driven-contribution-process[Design-Driven Contribution
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Process]
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The lightweight contribution process has little overhead and is best
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suited for small contributions (documentation updates, bug fixes, small
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features). Contributions are pushed as changes and
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link:dev-roles.html#maintainer[maintainers] review them adhoc.
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For large/complex features, it is required to follow the
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link:#design-driven-contribution-process[design-driven contribution
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process] and specify the feature in a link:dev-design-docs.html[design
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doc] before starting with the implementation.
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If link:dev-roles.html#contributor[contributors] choose the
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lightweight contribution process and during the review it turns out
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that the feature is too large or complex,
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link:dev-roles.html#maintainer[maintainers] can require to follow the
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design-driven contribution process instead.
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If you are in doubt which process is right for you, consult the
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link:https://groups.google.com/d/forum/repo-discuss[repo-discuss,role=external,window=_blank]
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mailing list.
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These contribution processes apply to everyone who contributes code to
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the Gerrit project, including link:dev-roles.html#maintainer[
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maintainers]. When reading this document, keep in mind that maintainers
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are also contributors when they contribute code.
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If a new feature is large or complex, it is often difficult to find a
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maintainer who can take the time that is needed for a thorough review,
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and who can help with getting the changes submitted. To avoid that this
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results in unpredictable long waiting times during code review,
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contributors can ask for link:#mentorship[mentor support]. A mentor
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helps with timely code reviews and technical guidance. Doing the
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implementation is still the responsibility of the contributor.
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[[comparison]]
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=== Quick Comparison
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[options="header"]
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|======================
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| |Lightweight Contribution Process|Design-Driven Contribution Process
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|Overhead|low (write good commit message, address review comments)|
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high (write link:dev-design-docs.html[design doc] and get it approved)
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|Technical Guidance|by reviewer|during the design review and by
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reviewer/mentor
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|Review |adhoc (when reviewer is available)|by a dedicated mentor (if
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a link:#mentorship[mentor] was assigned)
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|Caveats |features may get vetoed after the implementation was already
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done, maintainers may make the design-driven contribution process
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required if a change gets too complex/large|design doc must stay open
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for a minimum of 10 calendar days, a mentor may not be available
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immediately
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|Applicable to|documentation updates, bug fixes, small features|
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large/complex features
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|======================
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[[lightweight-contribution-process]]
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=== Lightweight Contribution Process
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The lightweight contribution process has little overhead and is best
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suited for small contributions (documentation updates, bug fixes, small
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features). For large/complex features the
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link:#design-driven-contribution-process[design-driven contribution
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process] is required.
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As Gerrit is a code review tool, naturally contributions will
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be reviewed before they will get submitted to the code base. To
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start your contribution, please make a git commit and upload it
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for review to the link:https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/[
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gerrit-review.googlesource.com,role=external,window=_blank] Gerrit server. To help speed up the
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review of your change, review these link:dev-crafting-changes.html[
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guidelines] before submitting your change. You can view the pending
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Gerrit contributions and their statuses
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link:https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/#/q/status:open+project:gerrit[here,role=external,window=_blank].
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Depending on the size of that list it might take a while for
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your change to get reviewed. Naturally there are fewer
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link:dev-roles.html#maintainer[maintainers], that can approve changes,
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than link:dev-roles.html#contributor[contributors]; so anything that
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you can do to ensure that your contribution will undergo fewer
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revisions will speed up the contribution process. This includes
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helping out reviewing other people's changes to relieve the load from
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the maintainers. Even if you are not familiar with Gerrit's internals,
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it would be of great help if you can download, try out, and comment on
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new features. If it works as advertised, say so, and if you have the
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privileges to do so, go ahead and give it a `+1 Verified`. If you
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would find the feature useful, say so and give it a `+1 Code Review`.
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And finally, the quicker you respond to the comments of your reviewers,
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the quicker your change might get merged! Try to reply to every
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comment after submitting your new patch, particularly if you decided
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against making the suggested change. Reviewers don't want to seem like
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nags and pester you if you haven't replied or made a fix, so it helps
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them know if you missed it or decided against it.
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[[design-driven-contribution-process]]
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=== Design-driven Contribution Process
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The design-driven contribution process applies to large/complex
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features.
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For large/complex features it is important to:
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* agree on the functionality and scope before spending too much time
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on the implementation
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* ensure that they are in line with Gerrit's project scope and vision
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* ensure that they are well aligned with other features
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* think about possibilities how the feature could be evolved over time
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This is why for large/complex features it is required to describe the
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feature in a link:dev-design-docs.html[design doc] and get it approved
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by the link:dev-processes.html#steering-committee[steering committee],
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before starting the implementation.
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The design-driven contribution process has the following steps:
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* A link:dev-roles.html#contributor[contributor]
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link:dev-design-docs.html#propose[proposes] a new feature by
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uploading a change with a link:dev-design-docs.html[design doc].
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* The design doc is link:dev-design-docs.html#review[reviewed] by
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interested parties from the community. The design review is public
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and everyone can comment and raise concerns.
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* Design docs should stay open for a minimum of 10 calendar days so
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that everyone has a fair chance to join the review.
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* Within 14 calendar days the contributor should hear back from the
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link:dev-processes.html#steering-committee[steering committee]
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whether the proposed feature is in scope of the project and if it can
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be accepted.
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* To be submitted, the design doc needs to be approved by the
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link:dev-processes.html#steering-committee[steering committee].
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* After the design was approved, the implementation is done by pushing
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changes for review, see link:#lightweight-contribution-process[
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lightweight contribution process]. Changes that are associated with
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a design should all share a common hashtag. The contributor is the
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main driver of the implementation and responsible that it is done.
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Others from the Gerrit community are usually much welcome to help
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with the implementation.
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In order to be accepted/submitted, it is not necessary that the design
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doc fully specifies all the details, but the idea of the feature and
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how it fits into Gerrit should be sufficiently clear (judged by the
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steering committee). Contributors are expected to keep the design doc
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updated and fill in gaps while they go forward with the implementation.
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We expect that implementing the feature and updating the design doc
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will be an iterative process.
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While the design doc is still in review, contributors may already start
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with the implementation (e.g. do some prototyping to demonstrate parts
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of the proposed design), but those changes should not be submitted
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while the design wasn't approved yet.
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By approving a design, the steering committee commits to:
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* Accepting the feature when it is implemented.
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* Supporting the feature by assigning a link:dev-roles.html#mentor[
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mentor] (if requested, see link:#mentorship[mentorship]).
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If the implementation of a feature gets stuck and it's unclear whether
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the feature gets fully done, it should be discussed with the steering
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committee how to proceed. If the contributor cannot commit to finish
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the implementation and no other contributor can take over, changes that
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have already been submitted for the feature might get reverted so that
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there is no unused or half-finished code in the code base.
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For contributors, the design-driven contribution process has the
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following advantages:
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* By writing a design doc, the feature gets more attention. During the
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design review, feedback from various sides can be collected, which
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likely leads to improvements of the feature.
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* Once a design was approved by the
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link:dev-processes.html#steering-committee[steering committee], the
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contributor can be almost certain that the feature will be accepted.
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Hence, there is only a low risk to invest into implementing a feature
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and see it being rejected later during the code review, as it can
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happen with the lightweight contribution process.
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* The contributor can link:#mentorship[get a dedicated mentor assigned]
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who provides timely reviews and serves as a contact person for
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technical questions and discussing details of the design.
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[[mentorship]]
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== Mentorship
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For features for which a link:dev-design-docs.html[design] has been
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approved (see link:#design-driven-contribution-process[design-driven
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contribution process]), contributors can gain the support of a mentor
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if they are committed to implement the feature.
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A link:dev-roles.html#mentor[mentor] helps with:
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* doing timely reviews
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* providing technical guidance during code reviews
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* discussing details of the design
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* ensuring that the quality standards are met (well documented,
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sufficient test coverage, backwards compatible etc.)
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A feature can have more than one mentor. To be able to deliver the
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promised support, at least one of the mentors must be a
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link:dev-roles.html#maintainer[maintainer].
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Mentors are assigned by the link:dev-processes.html#steering-committee[
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steering committee]. To gain a mentor, ask for a mentor in the
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link:dev-design-doc-template.html#implementation-plan[Implementation
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Plan] section of the design doc or ask the steering committee after the
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design has been approved.
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Mentors may not be available immediately. In this case, the steering
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committee should include the approved feature into the roadmap or
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prioritize it in the backlog. This way, it is transparent for the
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contributor when they can expect to be able to work on the feature with
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mentor support.
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Once the implementation phase starts, the contributor is expected to do
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the implementation in a timely manner.
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For every mentorship, the end must be clearly defined. The design doc
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must specify:
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* a maximum time frame for the mentorship, after which the mentorship
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automatically ends, even if the feature is not done yet
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* done criteria that define when the feature is done and the mentorship
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ends
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If a feature is not finished in time, it should be discussed with the
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steering committee how to proceed. If the contributor cannot commit to
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finish the implementation in time and no other contributor can take
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over, changes that have already been submitted for the feature might
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get reverted so that there is no unused or half-finished code in the
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code base.
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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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