Contributor License Agreement

In order to contribute to Gerrit a Contributor License Agreement must be completed before contributions are accepted.

Contribution Processes

The Gerrit project offers two contribution processes:

The lightweight contribution process has little overhead and is best suited for small contributions (documentation updates, bug fixes, small features). Contributions are pushed as changes and maintainers review them adhoc.

For large/complex features, it is required to follow the design-driven contribution process and specify the feature in a design doc before starting with the implementation.

If contributors choose the lightweight contribution process and during the review it turns out that the feature is too large or complex, maintainers can require to follow the design-driven contribution process instead.

If you are in doubt which process is right for you, consult the repo-discuss mailing list.

These contribution processes apply to everyone who contributes code to the Gerrit project, including maintainers. When reading this document, keep in mind that maintainers are also contributors when they contribute code.

If a new feature is large or complex, it is often difficult to find a maintainer who can take the time that is needed for a thorough review, and who can help with getting the changes submitted. To avoid that this results in unpredictable long waiting times during code review, contributors can ask for mentor support. A mentor helps with timely code reviews and technical guidance. Doing the implementation is still the responsibility of the contributor.

Quick Comparison

Lightweight Contribution Process Design-Driven Contribution Process

Overhead

low (write good commit message, address review comments)

high (write design doc and get it approved)

Technical Guidance

by reviewer

during the design review and by reviewer/mentor

Review

adhoc (when reviewer is available)

by a dedicated mentor (if a mentor was assigned)

Caveats

features may get vetoed after the implementation was already done, maintainers may make the design-driven contribution process required if a change gets too complex/large

design doc must stay open for a minimum of 10 calendar days, a mentor may not be available immediately

Applicable to

documentation updates, bug fixes, small features

large/complex features

Lightweight Contribution Process

The lightweight contribution process has little overhead and is best suited for small contributions (documentation updates, bug fixes, small features). For large/complex features the design-driven contribution process is required.

As Gerrit is a code review tool, naturally contributions will be reviewed before they will get submitted to the code base. To start your contribution, please make a git commit and upload it for review to the gerrit-review.googlesource.com Gerrit server. To help speed up the review of your change, review these guidelines before submitting your change. You can view the pending Gerrit contributions and their statuses here.

Depending on the size of that list it might take a while for your change to get reviewed. Naturally there are fewer maintainers, that can approve changes, than contributors; so anything that you can do to ensure that your contribution will undergo fewer revisions will speed up the contribution process. This includes helping out reviewing other people’s changes to relieve the load from the maintainers. Even if you are not familiar with Gerrit’s internals, it would be of great help if you can download, try out, and comment on new features. If it works as advertised, say so, and if you have the privileges to do so, go ahead and give it a +1 Verified. If you would find the feature useful, say so and give it a +1 Code Review.

And finally, the quicker you respond to the comments of your reviewers, the quicker your change might get merged! Try to reply to every comment after submitting your new patch, particularly if you decided against making the suggested change. Reviewers don’t want to seem like nags and pester you if you haven’t replied or made a fix, so it helps them know if you missed it or decided against it.

Design-driven Contribution Process

The design-driven contribution process applies to large/complex features.

For large/complex features it is important to:

  • agree on the functionality and scope before spending too much time on the implementation

  • ensure that they are in line with Gerrit’s project scope and vision

  • ensure that they are well aligned with other features

  • think about possibilities how the feature could be evolved over time

This is why for large/complex features it is required to describe the feature in a design doc and get it approved by the steering committee, before starting the implementation.

The design-driven contribution process has the following steps:

  • A contributor proposes a new feature by uploading a change with a design doc.

  • The design doc is reviewed by interested parties from the community. The design review is public and everyone can comment and raise concerns.

  • Design docs should stay open for a minimum of 10 calendar days so that everyone has a fair chance to join the review.

  • Within 14 calendar days the contributor should hear back from the steering committee whether the proposed feature is in scope of the project and if it can be accepted.

  • To be submitted, the design doc needs to be approved by the steering committee.

  • After the design was approved, the implementation is done by pushing changes for review, see lightweight contribution process. Changes that are associated with a design should all share a common hashtag. The contributor is the main driver of the implementation and responsible that it is done. Others from the Gerrit community are usually much welcome to help with the implementation.

In order to be accepted/submitted, it is not necessary that the design doc fully specifies all the details, but the idea of the feature and how it fits into Gerrit should be sufficiently clear (judged by the steering committee). Contributors are expected to keep the design doc updated and fill in gaps while they go forward with the implementation. We expect that implementing the feature and updating the design doc will be an iterative process.

While the design doc is still in review, contributors may already start with the implementation (e.g. do some prototyping to demonstrate parts of the proposed design), but those changes should not be submitted while the design wasn’t approved yet.

By approving a design, the steering committee commits to:

  • Accepting the feature when it is implemented.

  • Supporting the feature by assigning a mentor (if requested, see mentorship).

If the implementation of a feature gets stuck and it’s unclear whether the feature gets fully done, it should be discussed with the steering committee how to proceed. If the contributor cannot commit to finish the implementation and no other contributor can take over, changes that have already been submitted for the feature might get reverted so that there is no unused or half-finished code in the code base.

For contributors, the design-driven contribution process has the following advantages:

  • By writing a design doc, the feature gets more attention. During the design review, feedback from various sides can be collected, which likely leads to improvements of the feature.

  • Once a design was approved by the steering committee, the contributor can be almost certain that the feature will be accepted. Hence, there is only a low risk to invest into implementing a feature and see it being rejected later during the code review, as it can happen with the lightweight contribution process.

  • The contributor can get a dedicated mentor assigned who provides timely reviews and serves as a contact person for technical questions and discussing details of the design.

Mentorship

For features for which a design has been approved (see design-driven contribution process), contributors can gain the support of a mentor if they are committed to implement the feature.

A mentor helps with:

  • doing timely reviews

  • providing technical guidance during code reviews

  • discussing details of the design

  • ensuring that the quality standards are met (well documented, sufficient test coverage, backwards compatible etc.)

A feature can have more than one mentor. To be able to deliver the promised support, at least one of the mentors must be a maintainer.

Mentors are assigned by the steering committee. To gain a mentor, ask for a mentor in the Implementation Plan section of the design doc or ask the steering committee after the design has been approved.

Mentors may not be available immediately. In this case, the steering committee should include the approved feature into the roadmap or prioritize it in the backlog. This way, it is transparent for the contributor when they can expect to be able to work on the feature with mentor support.

Once the implementation phase starts, the contributor is expected to do the implementation in a timely manner.

For every mentorship, the end must be clearly defined. The design doc must specify:

  • a maximum time frame for the mentorship, after which the mentorship automatically ends, even if the feature is not done yet

  • done criteria that define when the feature is done and the mentorship ends

If a feature is not finished in time, it should be discussed with the steering committee how to proceed. If the contributor cannot commit to finish the implementation in time and no other contributor can take over, changes that have already been submitted for the feature might get reverted so that there is no unused or half-finished code in the code base.