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authorManish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com>2020-10-20 20:19:35 +0000
committerTrustedFirmware Code Review <review@review.trustedfirmware.org>2020-10-20 20:19:35 +0000
commitbd260fcbfea1be22599687174270bad96fafb22e (patch)
treeea1998ca6191c8aa535815f23100315b112fc42b
parent32269499cc5f66564a2ea420a33e369373c2de0c (diff)
parent1f19411a14cbe5693ff3df203964481e6ee57a83 (diff)
downloadtrusted-firmware-a-bd260fcbfea1be22599687174270bad96fafb22e.tar.gz
Merge "docs: code review guidelines" into integration
-rw-r--r--docs/process/code-review-guidelines.rst216
-rw-r--r--docs/process/coding-style.rst2
-rw-r--r--docs/process/contributing.rst2
-rw-r--r--docs/process/index.rst1
4 files changed, 221 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/process/code-review-guidelines.rst b/docs/process/code-review-guidelines.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..67a211f753
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+++ b/docs/process/code-review-guidelines.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,216 @@
+Code Review Guidelines
+======================
+
+This document provides TF-A specific details about the project's code review
+process. It should be read in conjunction with the `Project Maintenance
+Process`_, which it supplements.
+
+
+Why do we do code reviews?
+--------------------------
+
+The main goal of code reviews is to improve the code quality. By reviewing each
+other's code, we can help catch issues that were missed by the author
+before they are integrated in the source tree. Different people bring different
+perspectives, depending on their past work, experiences and their current use
+cases of TF-A in their products.
+
+Code reviews also play a key role in sharing knowledge within the
+community. People with more expertise in one area of the code base can
+help those that are less familiar with it.
+
+Code reviews are meant to benefit everyone through team work. It is not about
+unfairly criticizing or belittling the work of any contributor.
+
+
+Good practices
+--------------
+
+To ensure the code review gives the greatest possible benefit, participants in
+the project should:
+
+- Be considerate of other people and their needs. Participants may be working
+ to different timescales, and have different priorities. Keep this in
+ mind - be gracious while waiting for action from others, and timely in your
+ actions when others are waiting for you.
+
+- Review other people's patches where possible. The more active reviewers there
+ are, the more quickly new patches can be reviewed and merged. Contributing to
+ code review helps everyone in the long run, as it creates a culture of
+ participation which serves everyone's interests.
+
+
+Guidelines for patch contributors
+---------------------------------
+
+In addition to the rules outlined in the :ref:`Contributor's Guide`, as a patch
+contributor you are expected to:
+
+- Answer all comments from people who took the time to review your
+ patches.
+
+- Be patient and resilient. It is quite common for patches to go through
+ several rounds of reviews and rework before they get approved, especially
+ for larger features.
+
+ In the event that a code review takes longer than you would hope for, you
+ may try the following actions to speed it up:
+
+ - Ping the reviewers on Gerrit or on the mailing list. If it is urgent,
+ explain why. Please remain courteous and do not abuse this.
+
+ - If one code owner has become unresponsive, ask the other code owners for
+ help progressing the patch.
+
+ - If there is only one code owner and they have become unresponsive, ask one
+ of the project maintainers for help.
+
+- Do the right thing for the project, not the fastest thing to get code merged.
+
+ For example, if some existing piece of code - say a driver - does not quite
+ meet your exact needs, go the extra mile and extend the code with the missing
+ functionality you require - as opposed to copying the code into some other
+ directory to have the freedom to change it in any way. This way, your changes
+ benefit everyone and will be maintained over time.
+
+
+Guidelines for all reviewers
+----------------------------
+
+There are no good or bad review comments. If you have any doubt about a patch or
+need some clarifications, it's better to ask rather than letting a potential
+issue slip. Examples of review comments could be:
+
+- Questions ("Why do you need to do this?", "What if X happens?")
+- Bugs ("I think you need a logical \|\| rather than a bitwise \|.")
+- Design issues ("This won't scale well when we introduce feature X.")
+- Improvements ("Would it be better if we did Y instead?")
+
+
+Guidelines for code owners
+--------------------------
+
+Code owners are listed on the :ref:`Project Maintenance<code owners>` page,
+along with the module(s) they look after.
+
+When reviewing a patch, code owners are expected to check the following:
+
+- The patch looks good from a technical point of view. For example:
+
+ - The structure of the code is clear.
+
+ - It complies with the relevant standards or technical documentation (where
+ applicable).
+
+ - It leverages existing interfaces rather than introducing new ones
+ unnecessarily.
+
+ - It fits well in the design of the module.
+
+ - It adheres to the security model of the project. In particular, it does not
+ increase the attack surface (e.g. new SMCs) without justification.
+
+- The patch adheres to the TF-A :ref:`Coding Style`. The CI system should help
+ catch coding style violations.
+
+- (Only applicable to generic code) The code is MISRA-compliant (see
+ :ref:`misra-compliance`). The CI system should help catch violations.
+
+- Documentation is provided/updated (where applicable).
+
+- The patch has had an appropriate level of testing. Testing details are
+ expected to be provided by the patch author. If they are not, do not hesitate
+ to request this information.
+
+- All CI automated tests pass.
+
+If a code owner is happy with a patch, they should give their approval
+through the ``Code-Owner-Review+1`` label in Gerrit. If instead, they have
+concerns, questions, or any other type of blocking comment, they should set
+``Code-Owner-Review-1``.
+
+Code owners are expected to behave professionally and responsibly. Here are some
+guidelines for them:
+
+- Once you are engaged in a review, make sure you stay involved until the patch
+ is merged. Rejecting a patch and going away is not very helpful. You are
+ expected to monitor the patch author's answers to your review comments,
+ answer back if needed and review new revisions of their patch.
+
+- Provide constructive feedback. Just saying, "This is wrong, you should do X
+ instead." is usually not very helpful. The patch author is unlikely to
+ understand why you are requesting this change and might feel personally
+ attacked.
+
+- Be mindful when reviewing a patch. As a code owner, you are viewed as
+ the expert for the relevant module. By approving a patch, you are partially
+ responsible for its quality and the effects it has for all TF-A users. Make
+ sure you fully understand what the implications of a patch might be.
+
+
+Guidelines for maintainers
+--------------------------
+
+Maintainers are listed on the :ref:`Project Maintenance<maintainers>` page.
+
+When reviewing a patch, maintainers are expected to check the following:
+
+- The general structure of the patch looks good. This covers things like:
+
+ - Code organization.
+
+ - Files and directories, names and locations.
+
+ For example, platform code should be added under the ``plat/`` directory.
+
+ - Naming conventions.
+
+ For example, platform identifiers should be properly namespaced to avoid
+ name clashes with generic code.
+
+ - API design.
+
+- Interaction of the patch with other modules in the code base.
+
+- The patch aims at complying with any standard or technical documentation
+ that applies.
+
+- New files must have the correct license and copyright headers. See :ref:`this
+ paragraph<copyright-license-guidance>` for more information. The CI system
+ should help catch files with incorrect or no copyright/license headers.
+
+- There is no third party code or binary blobs with potential IP concerns.
+ Maintainers should look for copyright or license notices in code, and use
+ their best judgement. If they are unsure about a patch, they should ask
+ other maintainers for help.
+
+- Generally speaking, new driver code should be placed in the generic
+ layer. There are cases where a driver has to stay into the platform layer but
+ this should be the exception, rather than the rule.
+
+- Existing common drivers (in particular for Arm IPs like the GIC driver) should
+ not be copied into the platform layer to cater for platform quirks. This
+ type of code duplication hurts the maintainability of the project. The
+ duplicate driver is less likely to benefit from bug fixes and future
+ enhancements. In most cases, it is possible to rework a generic driver to
+ make it more flexible and fit slightly different use cases. That way, these
+ enhancements benefit everyone.
+
+- When a platform specific driver really is required, the burden lies with the
+ patch author to prove the need for it. A detailed justification should be
+ posted via the commit message or on the mailing list.
+
+- Before merging a patch, verify that all review comments have been addressed.
+ If this is not the case, encourage the patch author and the relevant
+ reviewers to resolve these together.
+
+If a maintainer is happy with a patch, they should give their approval
+through the ``Maintainer-Review+1`` label in Gerrit. If instead, they have
+concerns, questions, or any other type of blocking comment, they should set
+``Maintainer-Review-1``.
+
+--------------
+
+*Copyright (c) 2020, Arm Limited. All rights reserved.*
+
+.. _Project Maintenance Process: https://developer.trustedfirmware.org/w/collaboration/project-maintenance-process/
diff --git a/docs/process/coding-style.rst b/docs/process/coding-style.rst
index fd1984d303..94fd85e363 100644
--- a/docs/process/coding-style.rst
+++ b/docs/process/coding-style.rst
@@ -42,6 +42,8 @@ Both GCC and Clang compiler toolchains have support for *GNU99* mode, though
Clang does lack support for a small number of GNU extensions. These
missing extensions are rarely used, however, and should not pose a problem.
+.. _misra-compliance:
+
MISRA Compliance
----------------
diff --git a/docs/process/contributing.rst b/docs/process/contributing.rst
index 0b3b848f42..15c2b4529a 100644
--- a/docs/process/contributing.rst
+++ b/docs/process/contributing.rst
@@ -90,6 +90,8 @@ Making Changes
(and nothing else) in the last commit of the series. Otherwise, include
the documentation changes within the single commit.
+.. _copyright-license-guidance:
+
- Ensure that each changed file has the correct copyright and license
information. Files that entirely consist of contributions to this project
should have a copyright notice and BSD-3-Clause SPDX license identifier of
diff --git a/docs/process/index.rst b/docs/process/index.rst
index 1cb5354056..37324b0e9f 100644
--- a/docs/process/index.rst
+++ b/docs/process/index.rst
@@ -11,5 +11,6 @@ Processes & Policies
coding-style
coding-guidelines
contributing
+ code-review-guidelines
faq
security-hardening