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249 lines
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=====================================
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LLVM Code-Review Policy and Practices
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=====================================
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LLVM's code-review policy and practices help maintain high code quality across
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the project. Specifically, our code review process aims to:
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* Improve readability and maintainability.
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* Improve robustness and prevent the introduction of defects.
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* Best leverage the experience of other contributors for each proposed change.
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* Help grow and develop new contributors, through mentorship by community leaders.
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It is important for all contributors to understand our code-review
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practices and participate in the code-review process.
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General Policies
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================
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What Code Should Be Reviewed?
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-----------------------------
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All developers are required to have significant changes reviewed before they
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are committed to the repository.
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Must Code Be Reviewed Prior to Being Committed?
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-----------------------------------------------
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Code can be reviewed either before it is committed or after. We expect
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significant patches to be reviewed before being committed. Smaller patches
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(or patches where the developer owns the component) that meet
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likely-community-consensus requirements (as apply to all patch approvals) can
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be committed prior to an explicit review. In situations where there is any
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uncertainty, a patch should be reviewed prior to being committed.
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Please note that the developer responsible for a patch is also
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responsible for making all necessary review-related changes, including
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those requested during any post-commit review.
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Can Code Be Reviewed After It Is Committed?
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-------------------------------------------
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Post-commit review is encouraged, and can be accomplished using any of the
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tools detailed below. There is a strong expectation that authors respond
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promptly to post-commit feedback and address it. Failure to do so is cause for
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the patch to be reverted.
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If a community member expresses a concern about a recent commit, and this
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concern would have been significant enough to warrant a conversation during
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pre-commit review (including around the need for more design discussions),
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they may ask for a revert to the original author who is responsible to revert
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the patch promptly. Developers often disagree, and erring on the side of the
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developer asking for more review prevents any lingering disagreement over
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code in the tree. This does not indicate any fault from the patch author,
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this is inherent to our post-commit review practices.
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Reverting a patch ensures that design discussions can happen without blocking
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other development; it's entirely possible the patch will end up being reapplied
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essentially as-is once concerns have been resolved.
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Before being recommitted, the patch generally should undergo further review.
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The community member who identified the problem is expected to engage
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actively in the review. In cases where the problem is identified by a buildbot,
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a community member with access to hardware similar to that on the buildbot is
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expected to engage in the review.
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Please note: The bar for post-commit feedback is not higher than for pre-commit
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feedback. Don't delay unnecessarily in providing feedback. However, if you see
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something after code has been committed about which you would have commented
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pre-commit (had you noticed it earlier), please feel free to provide that
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feedback at any time.
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That having been said, if a substantial period of time has passed since the
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original change was committed, it may be better to create a new patch to
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address the issues than comment on the original commit. The original patch
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author, for example, might no longer be an active contributor to the project.
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What Tools Are Used for Code Review?
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------------------------------------
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Code reviews are conducted, in order of preference, on our web-based
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code-review tool (see :doc:`Phabricator`), by email on the relevant project's
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commit mailing list, on the project's development list, or on the bug tracker.
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When Is an RFC Required?
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------------------------
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Some changes are too significant for just a code review. Changes that should
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change the LLVM Language Reference (e.g., adding new target-independent
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intrinsics), adding language extensions in Clang, and so on, require an RFC
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(Request for Comment) email on the project's ``*-dev`` mailing list first. For
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changes that promise significant impact on users and/or downstream code bases,
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reviewers can request an RFC achieving consensus before proceeding with code
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review. That having been said, posting initial patches can help with
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discussions on an RFC.
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Code-Review Workflow
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====================
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Code review can be an iterative process, which continues until the patch is
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ready to be committed. Specifically, once a patch is sent out for review, it
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needs an explicit approval before it is committed. Do not assume silent
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approval, or solicit objections to a patch with a deadline.
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Acknowledge All Reviewer Feedback
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---------------------------------
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All comments by reviewers should be acknowledged by the patch author. It is
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generally expected that suggested changes will be incorporated into a future
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revision of the patch unless the author and/or other reviewers can articulate a
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good reason to do otherwise (and then the reviewers must agree). If a new patch
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does not address all outstanding feedback, the author should explicitly state
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that when providing the updated patch. When using the web-based code-review
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tool, such notes can be provided in the "Diff" description (which is different
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from the description of the "Differential Revision" as a whole used for the
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commit message).
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If you suggest changes in a code review, but don't wish the suggestion to be
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interpreted this strongly, please state so explicitly.
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Aim to Make Efficient Use of Everyone's Time
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--------------------------------------------
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Aim to limit the number of iterations in the review process. For example, when
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suggesting a change, if you want the author to make a similar set of changes at
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other places in the code, please explain the requested set of changes so that
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the author can make all of the changes at once. If a patch will require
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multiple steps prior to approval (e.g., splitting, refactoring, posting data
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from specific performance tests), please explain as many of these up front as
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possible. This allows the patch author and reviewers to make the most efficient
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use of their time.
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LGTM - How a Patch Is Accepted
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------------------------------
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A patch is approved to be committed when a reviewer accepts it, and this is
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almost always associated with a message containing the text "LGTM" (which
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stands for Looks Good To Me). Only approval from a single reviewer is required.
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When providing an unqualified LGTM (approval to commit), it is the
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responsibility of the reviewer to have reviewed all of the discussion and
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feedback from all reviewers ensuring that all feedback has been addressed and
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that all other reviewers will almost surely be satisfied with the patch being
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approved. If unsure, the reviewer should provide a qualified approval, (e.g.,
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"LGTM, but please wait for @someone, @someone_else"). You may also do this if
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you are fairly certain that a particular community member will wish to review,
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even if that person hasn't done so yet.
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Note that, if a reviewer has requested a particular community member to review,
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and after a week that community member has yet to respond, feel free to ping
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the patch (which literally means submitting a comment on the patch with the
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word, "Ping."), or alternatively, ask the original reviewer for further
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suggestions.
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If it is likely that others will want to review a recently-posted patch,
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especially if there might be objections, but no one else has done so yet, it is
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also polite to provide a qualified approval (e.g., "LGTM, but please wait for a
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couple of days in case others wish to review"). If approval is received very
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quickly, a patch author may also elect to wait before committing (and this is
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certainly considered polite for non-trivial patches). Especially given the
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global nature of our community, this waiting time should be at least 24 hours.
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Please also be mindful of weekends and major holidays.
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Our goal is to ensure community consensus around design decisions and
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significant implementation choices, and one responsibility of a reviewer, when
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providing an overall approval for a patch, is to be reasonably sure that such
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consensus exists. If you're not familiar enough with the community to know,
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then you shouldn't be providing final approval to commit. A reviewer providing
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final approval should have commit access to the LLVM project.
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Every patch should be reviewed by at least one technical expert in the areas of
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the project affected by the change.
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Splitting Requests and Conditional Acceptance
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---------------------------------------------
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Reviewers may request certain aspects of a patch to be broken out into separate
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patches for independent review. Reviewers may also accept a patch
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conditioned on the author providing a follow-up patch addressing some
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particular issue or concern (although no committed patch should leave the
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project in a broken state). Moreover, reviewers can accept a patch conditioned on
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the author applying some set of minor updates prior to committing, and when
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applicable, it is polite for reviewers to do so.
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Don't Unintentionally Block a Review
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------------------------------------
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If you review a patch, but don't intend for the review process to block on your
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approval, please state that explicitly. Out of courtesy, we generally wait on
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committing a patch until all reviewers are satisfied, and if you don't intend
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to look at the patch again in a timely fashion, please communicate that fact in
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the review.
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Who Can/Should Review Code?
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===========================
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Non-Experts Should Review Code
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------------------------------
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You do not need to be an expert in some area of the code base to review patches;
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it's fine to ask questions about what some piece of code is doing. If it's not
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clear to you what is going on, you're unlikely to be the only one. Please
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remember that it is not in the long-term best interest of the community to have
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components that are only understood well by a small number of people. Extra
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comments and/or test cases can often help (and asking for comments in the test
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cases is fine as well).
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Moreover, authors are encouraged to interpret questions as a reason to reexamine
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the readability of the code in question. Structural changes, or further
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comments, may be appropriate.
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If you're new to the LLVM community, you might also find this presentation helpful:
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.. _How to Contribute to LLVM, A 2019 LLVM Developers' Meeting Presentation: https://youtu.be/C5Y977rLqpw
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A good way for new contributors to increase their knowledge of the code base is
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to review code. It is perfectly acceptable to review code and explicitly
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defer to others for approval decisions.
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Experts Should Review Code
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--------------------------
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If you are an expert in an area of the compiler affected by a proposed patch,
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then you are highly encouraged to review the code. If you are a relevant code
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owner, and no other experts are reviewing a patch, you must either help arrange
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for an expert to review the patch or review it yourself.
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Code Reviews, Speed, and Reciprocity
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------------------------------------
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Sometimes code reviews will take longer than you might hope, especially for
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larger features. Common ways to speed up review times for your patches are:
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* Review other people's patches. If you help out, everybody will be more
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willing to do the same for you; goodwill is our currency.
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* Ping the patch. If it is urgent, provide reasons why it is important to you to
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get this patch landed and ping it every couple of days. If it is
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not urgent, the common courtesy ping rate is one week. Remember that you're
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asking for valuable time from other professional developers.
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* Ask for help on IRC. Developers on IRC will be able to either help you
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directly, or tell you who might be a good reviewer.
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* Split your patch into multiple smaller patches that build on each other. The
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smaller your patch is, the higher the probability that somebody will take a quick
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look at it. When doing this, it is helpful to add "[N/M]" (for 1 <= N <= M) to
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the title of each patch in the series, so it is clear that there is an order
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and what that order is.
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Developers should participate in code reviews as both reviewers and
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authors. If someone is kind enough to review your code, you should return the
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favor for someone else. Note that anyone is welcome to review and give feedback
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on a patch, but approval of patches should be consistent with the policy above.
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