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# Adding new projects to WrapDB
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## How it works
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Each wrap repository has a master branch with only one initial commit
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and *no* wrap files. And that is the only commit ever made on that
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branch.
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For every release of a project a new branch is created. The new branch
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is named after the the upstream release number (e.g. `1.0.0`). This
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branch holds a wrap file for this particular release.
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There are two types of wraps on WrapDB - regular wraps and wraps with
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Meson build definition patches. A wrap file in a repository on WrapDB
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must have a name `upstream.wrap`.
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Wraps with Meson build definition patches work in much the same way as
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Debian: we take the unaltered upstream source package and add a new
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build system to it as a patch. These build systems are stored as Git
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repositories on GitHub. They only contain build definition files. You
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may also think of them as an overlay to upstream source.
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Whenever a new commit is pushed into GitHub's project branch, a new
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wrap is generated with an incremented version number. All the old
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releases remain unaltered. New commits are always done via GitHub
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merge requests and must be reviewed by someone other than the
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submitter.
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Note that your Git repo with wrap must not contain the subdirectory of
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the source release. That gets added automatically by the service. You
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also must not commit any source code from the original tarball into
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the wrap repository.
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## Choosing the repository name
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Wrapped subprojects are used much like external dependencies. Thus
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they should have the same name as the upstream projects.
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NOTE: Repo names must fully match this regexp: `[a-z0-9._]+`.
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If the project provides a pkg-config file, then the repository name
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should be the same as the pkg-config name. Usually this is the name of
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the project, such as `libpng`. Sometimes it is slightly different,
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however. As an example the libogg project's chosen pkg-config name is
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`ogg` instead of `libogg`, which is the reason why the repository is
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named plain `ogg`.
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If there is no a pkg-config file, the name the project uses/promotes
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should be used, lowercase only (Catch2 -> catch2).
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If the project name is too generic or ambiguous (e.g. `benchmark`),
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consider using `organization-project` naming format (e.g.
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`google-benchmark`).
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## How to contribute a new wrap
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If the project already uses Meson build system, then only a wrap file
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- `upstream.wrap` should be provided. In other case a Meson build
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definition patch - a set of `meson.build` files - should be also
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provided.
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### Request a new repository
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*Note:* you should only do this if you have written the build files
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and want to contribute them for inclusion to WrapDB. The maintainers
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have only limited reesources and unfortunately can not take requests
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to write Meson build definitions for arbitrary projects.
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The submission starts by creating an issue on the [wrapdb bug
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tracker](https://github.com/mesonbuild/wrapdb/issues) using *Title*
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and *Description* below as a template.
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*Title:* `new wrap: <project_name>`
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*Description:*
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```
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upstream url: <link_to_updastream>
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version: <version_you_have_a_wrap_for>
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```
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Wait until the new repository or branch is created. A link to the new
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repository or branch will be posted in a comment to this issue. After
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this you can createa a merge request in that repository for your build
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files.
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NOTE: Requesting a branch is not necessary. WrapDB maintainer can
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create the branch and modify the PR accordingly if the project
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repository exists.
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### Creating the wrap contents
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Setting up the contents might seem a bit counterintuitive at first.
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Just remember that the outcome needs to have one (and only one) commit
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that has all the build definition files (i.e. `meson.build` and
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`meson_options.txt` files) and _nothing else_. It is good practice to
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have this commit in a branch whose name matches the release as
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described above.
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First you need to fork the repository to your own page using GitHub's
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fork button. Then you can clone the repo to your local machine.
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```
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git clone git@github.com:yourusername/libfoo.git foo-wrap
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```
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Create a new branch for your work:
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```
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git checkout -b 1.0.0
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```
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If you are adding new changes to an existing branch, leave out the
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`-b` argument.
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Now you need to copy the source code for the original project to this
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directory. If you already have it extracted somewhere, you'd do
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something like this:
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```
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cd /path/to/source/extract/dir
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cp -r * /path/to/foo-wrap
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```
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Now all the files should be in the wrap directory. Do _not_ add them
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to Git, though. Neither now or at any time during this process. The
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repo must contain only the newly created build files.
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New release branches require an `upstream.wrap` file, so create one if
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needed.
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```
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${EDITOR} upstream.wrap
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```
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The file format is simple, see any existing wrapdb repo for the
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content. The checksum is SHA-256 and can be calculated with the
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following command on most unix-like operating systems:
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```
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sha256sum path/to/libfoo-1.0.0.tar.gz
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```
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Under macOS the command is the following:
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```
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shasum -a 256 path/to/libfoo-1.0.0.tar.gz
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```
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Next you need to add the entries that define what dependencies the
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current project provides. This is important, as it is what makes
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Meson's automatic dependency resolver work. It is done by adding a
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`provide` entry at the end of the `upstream.wrap` file. Using the Ogg
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library as an example, this is what it would look like:
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```ini
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[provide]
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ogg = ogg_dep
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```
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The `ogg` part on the left refers to the dependency name, which should
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be the same as its Pkg-Config name. `ogg_dep` on the right refers to
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the variable in the build definitions that provides the dependency.
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Most commonly it holds the result of a `declare_dependency` call. If a
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variable of that name is not defined, Meson will exit with a hard
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error. For further details see [the main Wrap
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manual](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md).
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Now you can create the build files and work on them until the project
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builds correctly.
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```
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${EDITOR} meson.build meson_options.txt
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```
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When you are satisfied with the results, add the build files to Git
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and push the result to GitHub.
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```
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<verify that your project builds and runs>
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git add upstream.wrap meson.build
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git commit -a -m 'Add wrap files for libfoo-1.0.0'
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git push -u origin 1.0.0
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```
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Now you should create a pull request on GitHub. Try to create it
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against the correct branch rather than master (`1.0.0` branch in this
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example). GitHub should do this automatically.
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If the branch doesn't exist file a pull request against master.
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WrapDB maintainers can fix it before merging.
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If packaging review requires you to do changes, use the `--amend`
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argument to `commit` so that your branch will continue to have only
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one commit.
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```
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${EDITOR} meson.build
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git commit -a --amend
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git push --force
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```
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### Request a new release version to an existing repository
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Adding new releases to an existing repo is straightforward. All you
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need to do is to follow the rules discussed above but when you create
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the merge request, file it against the master branch. The repository
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reviewer will create the necessary branch and retarget your merge
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request accordingly.
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## What is done by WrapDB maintainers
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[mesonwrap tools](Wrap-maintainer-tools.md) must be used for the tasks
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below.
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### Adding new project to the Wrap provider service
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Each project gets its own repo. It is initialized like this:
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```
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mesonwrap new_repo --homepage=$HOMEPAGE --directory=$NEW_LOCAL_PROJECT_DIR $PROJECT_NAME
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```
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The command creates a new repository and uploads it to GitHub.
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`--version` flag may be used to create a branch immediately.
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### Adding a new branch to an existing project
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Create a new branch whose name matches the upstream release number.
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```
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git checkout master
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git checkout -b 1.0.0
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git push origin 1.0.0
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(or from GitHub web page, remember to branch from master)
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```
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Branch names must fully match this regexp: `[a-z0-9._]+`.
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## Changes to original source
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The point of a wrap is to provide the upstream project with as few
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changes as possible. Most projects should not contain anything more
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than a few Meson definition files. Sometimes it may be necessary to
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add a template header file or something similar. These should be held
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at a minimum.
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It should especially be noted that there must **not** be any patches
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to functionality. All such changes must be submitted to upstream. You
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may also host your own Git repo with the changes if you wish. The Wrap
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system has native support for Git subprojects.
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## Reviewing wraps
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See [Wrap review guidelines](Wrap-review-guidelines.md), especially
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the part about tooling that you can use to check for the most common
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problems yourself. Fixing all issues reported by the tool is a
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mandatory requirement for getting your MR accepted, so doing this
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proactively makes the review process smoother.
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