=head1 Developing Qpsmtpd =head2 Mailing List All qpsmtpd development happens on the qpsmtpd mailing list. Subscribe by sending mail to qpsmtpd-subscribe@perl.org =head2 Git We use git for version control. Ask owns the master repository at git://github.com/abh/qpsmtpd.git We suggest using github to host your repository -- it makes your changes easily accessible for pulling into the master. After you create a github account, go to http://github.com/abh/qpsmtpd/tree/master and click on the "fork" button to get your own repository. =head3 Making a working Copy git clone git@github.com:username/qpsmtpd.git qpsmtpd will check out your copy into a directory called qpsmtpd =head3 Making a branch for your change As a general rule, you'll be better off if you do your changes on a branch - preferably a branch per unrelated change. You can use the C command to see which branch you are on. The easiest way to make a new branch is git checkout -b topic/my-great-change This will create a new branch with the name "topic/my-great-change" (and your current commit as the starting point). =head3 Committing a change Edit the appropriate files, and be sure to run the test suite. emacs lib/Qpsmtpd.pm # for example perl Makefile.PL make test When you're ready to check it in... git add lib/Qpsmtpd.pm # to let git know you changed the file git add --patch plugin/tls # interactive choose which changes to add git diff --cached # review changes added git commit git log -p # review your commit a last time git push origin # to send to github =head3 Submit patches by mail The best way to submit patches to the project is to send them to the mailing list for review. Use the C command to generate patches ready to be mailed. For example: git format-patch HEAD~3 will put each of the last three changes in files ready to be mailed with the C tool (it might be a good idea to send them to yourself first as a test). Sending patches to the mailing list is the most effective way to submit changes, although it helps if you at the same time also commit them to a git repository (for example on github). =head3 Merging changes back in from the master repository Tell git about the master repository. We're going to call it 'abh' for now, but you could call it anything you want. You only have to do this once. git remote add abh git://github.com/abh/qpsmtpd.git Pull in data from all remote branches git remote update Forward-port local commits to the updated upstream head git rebase abh/master If you have a change that conflicts with an upstream change (git will let you know) you have two options. Manually fix the conflict and then do git add some/file git commit Or if the conflicting upstream commit did the same logical change then you might want to just skip the local change: git rebase --skip Be sure to decide whether you're going to skip before you merge, or you might get yourself into an odd situation. Conflicts happen because upstream committers may make minor tweaks to your change before applying it. =head3 Throwing away changes If you get your working copy into a state you don't like, you can always revert to the last commit: git reset --hard HEAD Or throw away your most recent commit: git reset --hard HEAD^ If you make a mistake with this, git is pretty good about keeping your commits around even as you merge, rebase and reset away. This log of your git changes is called with "git reflog". =head3 Applying other peoples changes If you get a change in an email with the patch, one easy way to apply other peoples changes is to use C. That will go ahead and commit the change. To modify it, you can use C. If the changes are in a repository, you can add that repository with "git remote add" and then either merge them in with "git merge" or pick just the relevant commits with "git cherry-pick".