2012-07-23 19:33:53 +02:00
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@title Writing Reviewable Code
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@group flavortext
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Project recommendations on how to structure changes.
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This document is purely advisory. Phabricator works with a variety of revision
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control strategies, and diverging from the recommendations in this document
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will not impact your ability to use it for code review and source management.
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= Overview =
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This document describes a strategy for structuring changes used successfully at
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Facebook and in Phabricator. In essence:
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- Each commit should be as small as possible, but no smaller.
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- The smallest a commit can be is a single cohesive idea: don't make commits
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so small that they are meaningless on their own.
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- There should be a one-to-one mapping between ideas and commits:
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each commit should build one idea, and each idea should be implemented by
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one commit.
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- Turn large commits into small commits by dividing large problems into
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smaller problems and solving the small problems one at a time.
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- Write sensible commit messages.
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= Many Small Commits =
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Small, simple commits are generally better than large, complex commits. They are
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easier to understand, easier to test, and easier to review. The complexity of
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understanding, testing and reviewing a change often increases faster than its
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size: ten 200-line changes each doing one thing are often far easier to
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understand than one 2,000 line change doing ten things. Splitting a change which
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does many things into smaller changes which each do only one thing can decrease
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the total complexity associated with accomplishing the same goal.
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Each commit should do one thing. Generally, this means that you should separate
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distinct changes into different commits when developing. For example, if you're
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developing a feature and run into a preexisting bug, stash or checkpoint your
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change, check out a clean HEAD/tip, fix the bug in one change, and then
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merge/rebase your new feature on top of your bugfix so that you have two
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changes, each with one idea ("add feature x", "fix a bug in y"), not one change
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with two ideas ("add feature x and fix a bug in y").
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(In Git, you can do this easily with local feature branches and commands like
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`git rebase`, `git rebase -i`, and `git stash`, or with merges. In Mercurial,
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you can use bookmarks or the queues extension. In SVN, there are few builtin
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tools, but you can use multiple working copies or treat Differential like a
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stash you access with `arc patch`.)
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Even changes like fixing style problems should ideally be separated: they're
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accomplishing a different goal. And it is far easier to review one 300-line
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change which "converts tabs to spaces" plus one 30-line change which "implements
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feature z" than one 330-line change which "implements feature z and also
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converts a bunch of tabs to spaces".
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Similarly, break related but complex changes into smaller, simpler components.
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Here's a ridiculous analogy: if you're adding a new house, don't make one
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5,000-line change which adds the whole house in one fell sweep. Split it apart
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into smaller steps which are each easy to understand: start with the foundation,
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then build the frame, etc. If you decided to dig the foundation with a shovel or
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build the frame out of cardboard, it's both easier to miss and harder to correct
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if the decisions are buried in 5,000 lines of interior design and landscaping.
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Do it one piece at a time, providing enough context that the larger problem
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can be understood but accomplishing no more with each step than you need to in
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order for it to stand on its own.
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The minimum size of a change should be a complete implementation of the simplest
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subproblem which works on its own and expresses an entire idea, not just part
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of an idea. You could mechanically split a 1,000-line change into ten 100-line
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changes by choosing lines at random, but none of the individual changes would
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make any sense and you would increase the collective complexity. The real goal
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is for each change to have minimal complexity, line size is just a proxy that is
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often well-correlated with complexity.
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We generally follow these practices in Phabricator. The median change size for
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Phabricator is 35 lines.
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2012-08-16 22:23:05 +02:00
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See @{article:Differential User Guide: Large Changes} for information about
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reviewing big checkins.
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2012-07-23 19:33:53 +02:00
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= Write Sensible Commit Messages =
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2012-07-23 22:12:17 +02:00
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There are lots of resources for this on the internet. All of them say pretty much
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2012-07-23 19:33:53 +02:00
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the same thing; this one does too.
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The single most important thing is: **commit messages should explain //why// you
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are making the change**.
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Differential attempts to encourage the construction of sensible commit messages,
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but can only enforce structure, not content. Structurally, commit messages
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should probably:
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- Have a title, briefly describing the change in one line.
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- Have a summary, describing the change in more detail.
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- Maybe have some other fields.
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The content is far more important than the structure. In particular, the summary
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should explain //why// you're making the change and //why// you're choosing the
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implementation you're choosing. The //what// of the change is generally
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well-explained by the change itself. For example, this is obviously an awful
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commit message:
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COUNTEREXAMPLE
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fix a bug
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But this one is almost as bad:
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COUNTEREXAMPLE
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Allow dots in usernames
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Change the regexps so usernames can have dots in them.
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This is better than nothing but just summarizes information which can be
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inferred from the text of the diff. Instead, you should provide context and
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explain why you're making the change you're making, and why it's the right one:
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lang=txt
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Allow dots in usernames to support Google and LDAP auth
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To prevent nonsense, usernames are currently restricted to A-Z0-9. Now that
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we have Google and LDAP auth, a couple of installs want to allow "." too
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since they have schemes like "abraham.lincoln@mycompany.com" (see Tnnn). There
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are no technical reasons not to do this, so I opened up the regexps a bit.
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We could mostly open this up more but I figured I'd wait until someone asks
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before allowing "ke$ha", etc., because I personally find such names
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distasteful and offensive.
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This information can not be extracted from the change itself, and is much more
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useful for the reviewer and for anyone trying to understand the change after the
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fact.
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An easy way to explain //why// is to reference other objects
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(bugs/issues/revisions) which motivate the change.
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Differential also includes a "Test Plan" field which is required by default.
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There is a detailed description of this field in @{article:Differential User
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Guide: Test Plans}. You can make it optional or disable it in the configuration,
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but consider adopting it. Having this information can be particularly helpful
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for reviewers.
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Some things that people sometimes feel strongly about but which are probably not
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really all that important in commit messages include:
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- If/where text is wrapped.
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- Maximum length of the title.
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- Whether there should be a period or not in the title.
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- Use of voice/tense, e.g. "fix"/"add" vs "fixes"/"adds".
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- Other sorts of pedantry not related to getting the context and
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reasons //why// a change is happening into the commit message.
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- Although maybe the spelling and grammar shouldn't be egregiously bad?
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Phabricator does not have guidelines for this stuff. You can obviously set
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guidelines at your organization if you prefer, but getting the //why// into the
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message is the most important part.
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= Next Steps =
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Continue by:
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- reading recommendations on structuring revision control with
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@{article:Recommendations on Revision Control}; or
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- reading recommendations on structuring branches with
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@{article:Recommendations on Branching}.
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