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SubmittingRFCs
In the Open MPI project, we track three main things:
NOTE: AS OF SEPTEMBER 2016, THIS PAGE IS A BIT STALE; WE NO LONGER HAVE AN ompi-release
REPO. THIS PAGE NEEDS TO BE UPDATED.
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Bugs and enhancement requests: These tracked in the Github Issues tracker in the
ompi
repository. -
Requests to get code into the release branches: These are tracked in the Pull Requests in the
ompi-release
repository. -
RFCs (i.e., "hey, I've got an idea -- what do people think about this?"): These are typically tracked in the Pull Requests in the
ompi
repository.
You must have a Github account to submit bugs or pull requests.
A "Request for Comment" is typically sent to the Open MPI developer community when one developer has an idea for which they would like some feedback. This is typically done for large new features, or features that change core functionality.
Github provides a nice code review functionality for exactly this purpose: Pull Requests (we also use Github Pull Requests to get code to Open MPI release branches).
In this case, the developer will file a Pull Requests to the master
branch on the ompi
repo (as opposed to a release branch in the ompi-release
repo).
In addition to filing a Pull Request, the developer still needs to send something to the open-mpi development list.
As such, the process for an RFC is quite similar to that of a Pull Request to a release branch:
- Developer sends RFC to the mailing list.
- Developer creates a topic branch off their
master
branch in their localompi
clone. - Developer writes/commits code in this topic branch.
- Developer pushes their topic branch to their personal Github repo (NOT the main
ompi
repo!). - Developer files a Pull Request to bring the code to the relevant branch in the
ompi
repo.
Once the Pull Request is filed, there can be discussion on the PR, and the developer may revise their patch (or series of patches) on the topic branch, and re-push to their personal Github repo to allow others to see the changes. If the community agrees, the PR can be merged into master
on the main ompi
repo, and then closed. The topic branch at Github and in the developer's local repo can be deleted.
This wiki page shows an example filing of a Pull Request to the ompi-release
repo. Filing an RFC Pull Request is the same concept, but a bit simpler.