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288 lines
11 KiB
288 lines
11 KiB
Contact
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=======
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The project homepage is at https://sourceware.org/libabigail
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The current libabigail source code can be checked out with:
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git clone git://sourceware.org/git/libabigail
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The mailing list to send messages and patches to is
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libabigail@sourceware.org.
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The archives of that list are available at http://sourceware.org/ml/libabigail.
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File bugs
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=========
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Bugs are to be filled in bugzilla at
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https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/enter_bug.cgi?product=libabigail
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Writing and sending patches
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============================
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Please supply patches using git format-patch and git send-email. If
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you don't know how to use git, send-email, fine. Just use your
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favorite email client, attach the patch to a nice message, and send us
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the message.
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Patches have to be sent by email to libabigail@sourceware.org.
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Please read the file COMMIT-LOG-GUIDELINES in the source tree to learn
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about how to write the commit log accompanying the patch.
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If you are adding a new public header file to the project, or if you
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are defining a new entry point to the API of libabigail, please take
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some time to read the file VISIBILITY about how you need to handle the
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visibility of symbols that are part of the API and ABI of libabigail.
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Make sure you sign your patch. To learn about signing, please read
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the "Sign your work" chapter below.
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One important thing to do before sending your patch is to launch the
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regression tests.
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Regression tests
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================
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Regression tests are under the directory 'tests'. They are usually
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written in C++ and are especially designed to be easy to debug. The
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idea is that if the test fails, the programmer should just have to
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launch them under GDB and debug them right away. No-bullshit style.
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Regression tests are launched by doing:
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make check
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If you have N processor cores on your machine, you can launch the
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tests in parallel to make whole thing go faster by doing:
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make -jN -lN check
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If you want to test the fabrication of the distribution tarball (this
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is important, because that is how we do to actually release the
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tarball of the project that you can download from the internet) then
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you can do:
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make distcheck
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This actually builds the tarball, then untars it, configure/compile
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the untarred source code and launches the regression checks from
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there.
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You can also launch this in parallel by doing:
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make -jN -lN distcheck
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with N being the number of processor core you have on your system.
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Please make sure you always launch "make distcheck" before sending a
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patch, so that you are sure that we can always build a tarball after
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your patch is applied to the source tree.
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A variant of distcheck is "make distcheck-fast". It's like "make
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distcheck" but it's faster. You can just use that one.
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A complementary regression checking target is "check-self-compare".
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You invoke it by doing "make check-self-compare". That target
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analyzes the ABI of the libabigail.so shared object, serializes it
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into the ABIXML format and then compares the ABI internal
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representation gathered from the libabigail.so binary against the one
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gathered from the ABIXML format. The two should be equal if
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everything goes right. This is an important regression test. The
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problem is that it can takes twice as much time as make distcheck. So
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we've put it into its own separate target.
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So, to be complete the regression checking command to run against your
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patch should be: "make check-self-compare distcheck -j16", if you have
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a machine with a 16 threads processors, for instance.
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Coding language and style
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==========================
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The coding style is self evident when reading the source code. So
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please, stick to and mimic what is already in there for the sake of
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consistency at very least. Just for history, it's derived from the
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style of the C++ standard library from the GNU project.
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As of libabigail 2.0, the language we use is C++ 11. The level
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supported is the one supported by the GCC 4.8.x series of compilers.
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This should be old and well tested enough to be supported by your
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current favorite compiler.
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Initially, the code base of the project was written in C++03, with the
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TR1 extensions. That heritage is well visible in the code base as it
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is today.
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Please do not rush and send gazillions of patches that just re-write
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tons of code into your favorite C++ 11 flavour du jour. We will
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likely reject those patches. We want to keep the history of the code
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base in such a way that tools like "git blame <sourcefile> are still
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useful.
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So we'll accept patches changing parts of the code base to more recent
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C++ 11 constructs only if you happen to add functionality or fix
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things in that area. If it makes "cultural common" sense to adopt
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those constructs. What I mean by "cultural" is that must make sense
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in relative to the culture of the project. And yes, that is
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subjective. Sorry.
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As a generic rule, we tend to favor the lowest possible level of
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abstraction that makes sense without requiring future maintainers of
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the project to have a PhD in design patterns. We are not impressed by
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design patterns. We use them where they make clear sense, but we
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don't idolize them. Put it another way, we will always favor the one
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who *READS* and debug the code over the one who writes it. To put
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things in a hypothetical perspective, we'll rather accept a repetitive
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code that stays simple to read and debug over a highly abstract one
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using meta programming to save a few lines of repetitive code located
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in a very small number of places.
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Really, in this project, we care about low level binary analysis
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stuff. Issues in that area can be hard to reproduce and quite
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challenging to debug. So having tons of abstraction layers in the
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code base have proven to be a maintenance burden over the years, from
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our experience in working on similar projects. So please help us
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avoid those mistakes that we make just for the pleasure of writing
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what can look as "pleasant code" at a first naive sight.
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That being said, we also love cleanly designed APIs that are fairly
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re-usable and well documented. And we also praise abstraction and
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modularisation that we recognize as being the most basic tools of any
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engineer. So we like to think about ourselves as well rounded people
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who care about maintaining things for a long time to come :-)
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Launching regression tests in Valgrind
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--------------------------------------
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To detect memory management errors, the tests of the regression test
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suite can be run using Valgrind tools, essentially memcheck and
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helgrind.
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To do so, please do:
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make check-valgrind
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This runs the tests under the control of Valgrind memcheck and
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helgrind tools.
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But then, if you want Valgrind to check the libabigail command line
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tools that are *forked* by some of the tests then type:
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make check-valgrind-recursive
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This one takes a long time. On my system for instance, it takes an
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hour. But then it checks *everything*. If you don't have that time,
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then "make check-valgrind" is enough, as the regression tests that use
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the libabigail *library* directly (as opposed to forking libabigail
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command line tools) will be verified.
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How tests are organized
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-----------------------
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There are two kinds of regression tests. Those that use the
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libabigail *library* directly, and those that spawn one of the
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libabigail command line tools.
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Generally, both are usually made of a loop that churns through a set of input
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binaries to compare. Once the comparison is done, the resulting
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report is compared against a reference report that is provided.
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Test executable have names that starts with 'runtest*'. For instance,
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under <build-directory>/tests/ you can find tests named
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runtestdiffdwarf, runtestabidiff, etc...
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If a test executable is named
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<build-directory>/tests/runtestdiffdwarf, then its source code is
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tests/test-diff-dwarf.cc. Similarly, the source code of the test
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<build-directory>/tests/runtestabidiff is tests/test-abidiff.cc.
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The data provided for each test (for instance the input binaries to
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compare and the reference report that should result from the
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comparison) is to be found under tests/data. So data for the test
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runtestdiffdwarf is to be found under tests/data/test-diff-dwarf.
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Data for the test runtestabidiff is to be found under
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tests/data/test-abidiff.cc.
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So adding your own tests usually just amounts to adding the input
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right input into the right sub-directory of tests/data/. To do so,
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look at several tests/test-*.cc to see which one you'd like to add
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some input binaries to be compared in.
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Then once you know which tests/test-*.cc you'd like to extend, and if
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you added your input binaries and reference reports (maybe other
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things too) to the right sub-director of tests/data/, you just need to
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extend the array of input binaries/reference reports that the test
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walks to perform the comparisons. It's generally a global variable
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before the main() function of the test. In test-diff-dwarf.cc, for
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instance, the variable name is "in_out_specs". You just have to add a
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new entry to that array; that new entry contains the paths to your new
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input binaries and reference reports. Just read the code in there and
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use your brains. It should be straight forward.
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Ah, also, if you added new files for the tests, then the build system
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needs to be told that those files have to be added to the distribution
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tarball when we do "make dist" (or make distcheck). To do so, please
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make sure to add your new test input files to the
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tests/data/Makefile.am file, in the EXTRA_DIST variable. Look at how
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things are organized in that file, and please do things similarly.
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Sign your work
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==============
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To facilitate tracking of who did what, we've adopted a "sign-off"
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procedure for patches based on the procedure used by the Linux kernel
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project.
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The sign-off is a simple line at the end of the explanation for the
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patch, which certifies that you wrote it or otherwise have the right
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to pass it on as a patch under an appropriate license. The rules are
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pretty simple: if you can certify the below:
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Developer's Certificate of Origin
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By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:
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(a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me,
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and I have the right to submit the contribution under the
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license indicated in, or otherwise designated as being
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applicable to, the file.
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(b) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other
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person who certified (a), and I have not modified it.
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(c) I understand and agree that the project and the
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contribution are public and that a record of the
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contribution (including all personal information I submit
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with it, including my sign-off) is maintained indefinitely
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and may be redistributed.
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then you just add a line saying
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Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org>
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using your real name (sorry, no pseudonyms or anonymous contributions.)
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git commit --signoff will add such a Signed-off-by line at the end of
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the commit log message for you.
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Modifying the website
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=====================
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The source code of the website of libabigail is stored in CVS (sigh,
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yeah, that is so old school). You can check out that web source code
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by doing:
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CVS_RSH=ssh cvs -z9 -d :ext:user@sourceware.org:/cvs/libabigail/ co htdocs
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where 'user' is your username on the sourceware system.
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Alternatively, you can check out the the web source code anonymously,
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if you don't have any user account on the sourceware system by doing:
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export CVSROOT=:pserver:anoncvs@cygwin.com:/cvs/libabigail
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cvs login
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(the CVS anonymous password to use is "anoncvs")
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cvs checkout htdocs
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Happy Hacking!
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