The Meson Build System
http://mesonbuild.com/
You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
294 lines
11 KiB
294 lines
11 KiB
--- |
|
short-description: Contributing to Meson |
|
... |
|
|
|
# Contributing to Meson |
|
|
|
A large fraction of Meson is contributed by people outside the core |
|
team. This documentation explains some of the design rationales of |
|
Meson as well as how to create and submit your patches for inclusion |
|
to Meson. |
|
|
|
Thank you for your interest in participating to the development. |
|
|
|
## Submitting patches |
|
|
|
All changes must be submitted as [pull requests to |
|
Github](https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pulls). This causes them |
|
to be run through the CI system. All submissions must pass a full CI |
|
test run before they are even considered for submission. |
|
|
|
## Keeping pull requests up to date |
|
|
|
It is possible that while your pull request is being reviewed, other |
|
changes are committed to master that cause merge conflicts that must |
|
be resolved. The basic rule for this is very simple: keep your pull |
|
request up to date using rebase _only_. |
|
|
|
Do not merge head back to your branch. Any merge commits in your pull |
|
request make it not acceptable for merging into master and you must |
|
remove them. |
|
|
|
## Special procedure for new features |
|
|
|
Every new feature requires some extra steps, namely: |
|
|
|
- Must include a project test under `test cases/`, or if that's not |
|
possible or if the test requires a special environment, it must go |
|
into `run_unittests.py`. |
|
- Must be registered with the [FeatureChecks framework](Release-notes-for-0.47.0.md#Feature_detection_based_on_meson_version_in_project) |
|
that will warn the user if they try to use a new feature while |
|
targetting an older meson version. |
|
- Needs a release note snippet inside `docs/markdown/snippets/` with |
|
a heading and a brief paragraph explaining what the feature does |
|
with an example. |
|
|
|
## Acceptance and merging |
|
|
|
The kind of review and acceptance any merge proposal gets depends on |
|
the changes it contains. All pull requests must be reviewed and |
|
accepted by someone with commit rights who is not the original |
|
submitter. Merge requests can be roughly split into three different |
|
categories. |
|
|
|
The first one consists of MRs that only change the markdown |
|
documentation under `docs/markdown`. Anyone with access rights can |
|
push changes to these directly to master. For major changes it is |
|
still recommended to create a MR so other people can comment on it. |
|
|
|
The second group consists of merges that don't change any |
|
functionality, fixes to the CI system and bug fixes that have added |
|
regression tests (see below) and don't change existing |
|
functionality. Once successfully reviewed anyone with merge rights can |
|
merge these to master. |
|
|
|
The final kind of merges are those that add new functionality or |
|
change existing functionality in a backwards incompatible way. These |
|
require the approval of the project lead. |
|
|
|
In a simplified list form the split would look like the following: |
|
|
|
- members with commit access can do: |
|
- documentation changes (directly to master if warranted) |
|
- bug fixes that don't change functionality |
|
- refactorings |
|
- new dependency types |
|
- new tool support (e.g. a new Doxygen-kind of tool) |
|
- support for new compilers to existing languages |
|
- project leader decision is needed for: |
|
- new modules |
|
- new functions in the Meson language |
|
- syntax changes for Meson files |
|
- changes breaking backwards compatibility |
|
- support for new languages |
|
|
|
## Strategy for merging pull requests to trunk |
|
|
|
Meson's merge strategy should fullfill the following guidelines: |
|
|
|
- preserve as much history as possible |
|
|
|
- have as little junk in the repo as possible |
|
|
|
- everything in the "master lineage" should always pass all tests |
|
|
|
These goals are slightly contradictory so the correct thing to do |
|
often requires some judgement on part of the person doing the |
|
merge. Github provides three different merge options, The rules of |
|
thumb for choosing between them goes like this: |
|
|
|
- single commit pull requests should always be rebased |
|
|
|
- a pull request with one commit and one "fixup" commit (such as |
|
testing something to see if it passes CI) should be squashed |
|
|
|
- large branches with many commits should be merged with a merge |
|
commit, especially if one of the commits does not pass all tests |
|
(which happens in e.g. large and difficult refactorings) |
|
|
|
If in doubt, ask for guidance on IRC. |
|
|
|
## Tests |
|
|
|
All new features must come with automatic tests that thoroughly prove |
|
that the feature is working as expected. Similarly bug fixes must come |
|
with a unit test that demonstrates the bug, proves that it has been |
|
fixed and prevents the feature from breaking in the future. |
|
|
|
Sometimes it is difficult to create a unit test for a given bug. If |
|
this is the case, note this in your pull request. We may permit bug |
|
fix merge requests in these cases. This is done on a case by case |
|
basis. Sometimes it may be easier to write the test than convince the |
|
maintainers that one is not needed. Exercise judgment and ask for help |
|
in problematic cases. |
|
|
|
The tests are split into two different parts: unit tests and full |
|
project tests. To run all tests, execute `./run_tests.py`. Unit tests |
|
can be run with `./run_unittests.py` and project tests with |
|
`./run_project_tests.py`. |
|
|
|
Each project test is a standalone project that can be compiled on its |
|
own. They are all in `test cases` subdirectory. The simplest way to |
|
run a single project test is to do something like `./meson.py test\ |
|
cases/common/1\ trivial builddir`. The one exception to this is `test |
|
cases/unit` directory discussed below. |
|
|
|
The test cases in the `common` subdirectory are meant to be run always |
|
for all backends. They should only depend on C and C++, without any |
|
external dependencies such as libraries. Tests that require those are |
|
in the `test cases/frameworks` directory. If there is a need for an |
|
external program in the common directory, such as a code generator, it |
|
should be implemented as a Python script. The goal of test projects is |
|
also to provide sample projects that end users can use as a base for |
|
their own projects. |
|
|
|
All project tests follow the same pattern: they are compiled, tests |
|
are run and finally install is run. Passing means that building and |
|
tests succeed and installed files match the `installed_files.txt` file |
|
in the test's source root. Any tests that require more thorough |
|
analysis, such as checking that certain compiler arguments can be |
|
found in the command line or that the generated pkg-config files |
|
actually work should be done with a unit test. |
|
|
|
Projects needed by unit tests are in the `test cases/unit` |
|
subdirectory. They are not run as part of `./run_project_tests.py`. |
|
|
|
### Skipping integration tests |
|
|
|
Meson uses several continuous integration testing systems that have slightly |
|
different interface. To promote consistent naming policy, use: |
|
|
|
- `[skip ci]` in the commit title if you want to disable all integration tests |
|
- `[skip appveyor]` in the commit title if you want to disable Windows-only tests |
|
|
|
Continuous integration systems currently used: |
|
|
|
- [Travis-CI](https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/customizing-the-build/#Skipping-a-build) |
|
allows `[skip ci]` anywhere in the commit messages. |
|
- [AppVeyor](https://www.appveyor.com/docs/how-to/filtering-commits/#skip-directive-in-commit-message) |
|
requires `[skip ci]` or `[skip appveyor]` in the commit title. |
|
- [Sider](https://sider.review) |
|
runs Flake8 (see below) |
|
|
|
## Documentation |
|
|
|
The `docs` directory contains the full documentation that will be used |
|
to generate [the Meson web site](http://mesonbuild.com). Every change |
|
in functionality must change the documentation pages. In most cases |
|
this means updating the reference documentation page but bigger |
|
changes might need changes in other documentation, too. |
|
|
|
All new functionality needs to have a mention in the release |
|
notes. These features should be written in standalone files in the |
|
`docs/markdown/snippets` directory. The release manager will combine |
|
them into one page when doing the release. |
|
|
|
[Integration tests should be disabled](#skipping-integration-tests) for |
|
documentation-only commits by putting `[skip ci]` into commit title. |
|
Reviewers should ask contributors to put `[skip ci]` into the title because |
|
tests are run again after merge for `master`. |
|
|
|
## Python Coding style |
|
|
|
Meson follows the basic Python coding style. Additional rules are the |
|
following: |
|
|
|
- indent 4 spaces, no tabs ever |
|
- indent meson.build files with two spaces |
|
- try to keep the code as simple as possible |
|
- contact the mailing list before embarking on large scale projects |
|
to avoid wasted effort |
|
|
|
Meson uses Flake8 for style guide enforcement. The Flake8 options for |
|
the project are contained in setup.cfg. |
|
|
|
To run Flake8 on your local clone of Meson: |
|
|
|
```console |
|
$ python3 -m pip install flake8 |
|
$ cd meson |
|
$ flake8 |
|
``` |
|
|
|
To run it automatically before committing: |
|
|
|
```console |
|
$ flake8 --install-hook=git |
|
$ git config --bool flake8.strict true |
|
``` |
|
|
|
## C/C++ coding style |
|
|
|
Meson has a bunch of test code in several languages. The rules for |
|
those are simple. |
|
|
|
- indent 4 spaces, no tabs ever |
|
- brace always on the same line as if/for/else/function definition |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
## External dependencies |
|
|
|
The goal of Meson is to be as easily usable as possible. The user |
|
experience should be "get Python3 and Ninja, run", even on |
|
Windows. Unfortunately this means that we can't have dependencies on |
|
projects outside of Python's standard library. This applies only to |
|
core functionality, though. For additional helper programs etc the use |
|
of external dependencies may be ok. If you feel that you are dealing |
|
with this kind of case, please contact the developers first with your |
|
use case. |
|
|
|
## Turing completeness |
|
|
|
The main design principle of Meson is that the definition language is |
|
not Turing complete. Any change that would make Meson Turing complete |
|
is automatically rejected. In practice this means that defining your |
|
own functions inside `meson.build` files and generalised loops will |
|
not be added to the language. |
|
|
|
## Do I need to sign a CLA in order to contribute? |
|
|
|
No you don't. All contributions are welcome. |
|
|
|
## No lingering state |
|
|
|
Meson operates in much the same way as functional programming |
|
languages. It has inputs, which include `meson.build` files, values of |
|
options, compilers and so on. These are passed to a function, which |
|
generates output build definition. This function is pure, which means that: |
|
|
|
- for any given input the output is always the same |
|
- running Meson twice in a row _always_ produce the same output in both runs |
|
|
|
The latter one is important, because it enforces that there is no way |
|
for "secret state" to pass between consecutive invocations of |
|
Meson. This is the reason why, for example, there is no `set_option` |
|
function even though there is a `get_option` one. |
|
|
|
If this were not the case, we could never know if the build output is |
|
"stable". For example suppose there were a `set_option` function and a |
|
boolean variable `flipflop`. Then you could do this: |
|
|
|
```meson |
|
set_option('flipflop', not get_option('flipflop')) |
|
``` |
|
|
|
This piece of code would never converge. Every Meson run would change |
|
the value of the option and thus the output you get out of this build |
|
definition would be random. |
|
|
|
Meson does not permit this by forbidding these sorts of covert channels. |
|
|
|
There is one exception to this rule. Users can call into external |
|
commands with `run_command`. If the output of that command does not |
|
behave like a pure function, this problem arises. Meson does not try |
|
to guard against this case, it is the responsibility of the user to |
|
make sure the commands they run behave like pure functions. |
|
|
|
## Environment variables |
|
|
|
Environment variables are like global variables, except that they are |
|
also hidden by default. Envvars should be avoided whenever possible, |
|
all functionality should be exposed in better ways such as command |
|
line switches. |
|
|
|
|