ITK/Git/Develop
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This page documents how to develop ITK through Git. See our table of contents for more information.
Git is an extremely powerful version control tool that supports many different "workflows" for indivudal development and collaboration. Here we document procedures used by the ITK development community. In the interest of simplicity and brevity we do not provide an explanation of why we use this approach. Furthermore, this is not a Git tutorial. Please see our Git resource links for third-party documentation, such as the ProGit Book.
Setup
Before you begin, perform initial setup:
1. Register Gerrit access and possibly Git push access. | |
2. Optionally download our one page PDF desk reference. | |
3. Follow the download instructions to create a local ITK clone: | |
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4. Run the developer setup script to prepare your ITK work tree and create Git command aliases used below: | |
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Note that if you answer 'y' to the question "Do you want to test push access to itk.org? [y/N]:", you will most likely receive the following error message: "Permission denied (publickey). fatal: Could not read from remote repository.". Only a few experienced contributors have push access. Having push access is not necessary to contribute to ITK.
Workflow
ITK development uses a branchy workflow based on topic branches. Our collaboration workflow consists of three main steps:
1. Local Development | |
2. Code Review | |
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3. Integrate Changes | |
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Update
Update your local master branch: | |
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Create a Topic
All new work must be committed on topic branches. Name topics like you might name functions: concise but precise. A reader should have a general idea of the feature or fix to be developed given just the branch name.
To start a new topic branch: | |||
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Edit files and create commits (repeat as needed). Add a prefix to your commit message (see below). | |||
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(If your change modifies the " | |||
Standard prefixes for ITK commit messages :
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When a topic is ready for review and possible inclusion, share it by pushing to Gerrit. Be sure you have registered for Gerrit access.
Checkout the topic if it is not your current branch: | |
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Check what commits will be pushed to Gerrit for review: | |
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Push commits in your topic branch for review by the community: | |
or if you started the topic from the release branch:
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Connection refused?
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Find your change in the ITK Gerrit instance and add reviewers.
Revise a Topic
If a topic is approved during Gerrit review, skip to the next step. Otherwise, revise the topic and push it back to Gerrit for another review.
Checkout the topic if it is not your current branch: | |
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To revise the most recent commit on the topic edit files and add changes normally and then amend the commit: | |
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To revise commits further back on the topic, say the | |
(Substitute the correct number of commits back, as low as Follow Git's interactive instructions.
Preserve the |
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Return to the previous step to share the revised topic. |
Test a Topic
When a patch is submitted, it is tested across the three major platforms before being merged and tested on many platforms and configurations on the nightly dashboard.
If tests fail on a submitted topic, see the previous step on how to submit a revised version. After a topic is merged, please check the next day's nightly dashboard to ensure there are not any regressions. If there are any new warnings or errors, submit a follow-up patch as soon as possible.
When a patch is submitted, MacOSX-Clang, Windows-MSVC, and Linux-GCC builds will start. Once they have finished, the build robots will make a comment on the patch with a link to their results visualized in CDash and mark the patch set as Verified +1 or Not Verified -1. The results are submitted by the Kitware Build Robot Gerrit user.
Builds can be spawned by adding the following comments to a patch set in Gerrit.
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MacOSX, Linux, Windows |
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MacOSX |
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Linux |
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Windows |
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Python Wrapping (Linux, MacOSX, Windows) |
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C++11 (Linux, MacOSX, Windows) |
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C++14 (Linux, MacOSX, Windows) |
Merge a Topic
Only authorized developers with Git push access to itk.org
may perform this step.
After a feature topic has been reviewed and approved in Gerrit, merge it into the upstream repository.
Checkout the topic if it is not your current branch: | |
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Merge the topic, which is originally forked off the master branch, to master branch: | |
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For bug fixes that are ready to be included in the next patch release, please email the release manager, Matt McCormick, for assistance.
Here are the recommended steps to merge a topic to both release and master branches, assuming the topic branch is forked off the release branch:
$ git checkout release
$ git merge --no-ff my-topic
$ git push origin release
and do:
$ git checkout master
$ git merge --no-ff release
$ git push origin master
to merge the release branch back to master.
Delete a Topic
After a topic has been merged upstream, delete your local branch for the topic.
Checkout and update the master branch: | |
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Delete the local topic branch: | |
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The |