Submitting a Patch¶
QEMU welcomes contributions of code (either fixing bugs or adding new functionality). However, we get a lot of patches, and so we have some guidelines about submitting patches. If you follow these, you’ll help make our task of code review easier and your patch is likely to be committed faster.
This page seems very long, so if you are only trying to post a quick one-shot fix, the bare minimum we ask is that:
- You must provide a Signed-off-by: line (this is a hard
requirement because it’s how you say “I’m legally okay to contribute
this and happy for it to go into QEMU”, modeled after the Linux kernel
policy.)
git commit -s
orgit format-patch -s
will add one. - All contributions to QEMU must be sent as patches to the
qemu-devel mailing list. Patch contributions
should not be posted on the bug tracker, posted on forums, or
externally hosted and linked to. (We have other mailing lists too,
but all patches must go to qemu-devel, possibly with a Cc: to another
list.)
git send-email
(step-by-step setup guide and hints and tips) works best for delivering the patch without mangling it, but attachments can be used as a last resort on a first-time submission. - You must read replies to your message, and be willing to act on them. Note, however, that maintainers are often willing to manually fix up first-time contributions, since there is a learning curve involved in making an ideal patch submission.
You do not have to subscribe to post (list policy is to reply-to-all to preserve CCs and keep non-subscribers in the loop on the threads they start), although you may find it easier as a subscriber to pick up good ideas from other posts. If you do subscribe, be prepared for a high volume of email, often over one thousand messages in a week. The list is moderated; first-time posts from an email address (whether or not you subscribed) may be subject to some delay while waiting for a moderator to whitelist your address.
The larger your contribution is, or if you plan on becoming a long-term contributor, then the more important the rest of this page becomes. Reading the table of contents below should already give you an idea of the basic requirements. Use the table of contents as a reference, and read the parts that you have doubts about.
Table of Contents
- Submitting a Patch
- Writing your Patches
- Submitting your Patches
- If you cannot send patch emails
- CC the relevant maintainer
- Do not send as an attachment
- Use
git format-patch
- Avoid posting large binary blob
- Patch emails must include a
Signed-off-by:
line - Include a meaningful cover letter
- Use the RFC tag if needed
- Consider whether your patch is applicable for stable
- Participating in Code Review
- Tips and Tricks
Writing your Patches¶
Use the QEMU coding style¶
You can run run scripts/checkpatch.pl <patchfile> before submitting to
check that you are in compliance with our coding standards. Be aware
that checkpatch.pl
is not infallible, though, especially where C
preprocessor macros are involved; use some common sense too. See also:
Base patches against current git master¶
There’s no point submitting a patch which is based on a released version of QEMU because development will have moved on from then and it probably won’t even apply to master. We only apply selected bugfixes to release branches and then only as backports once the code has gone into master.
It is also okay to base patches on top of other on-going work that is
not yet part of the git master branch. To aid continuous integration
tools, such as patchew, you should add a
tag
line Based-on: $MESSAGE_ID
to your cover letter to make the series
dependency obvious.
Split up long patches¶
Split up longer patches into a patch series of logical code changes. Each change should compile and execute successfully. For instance, don’t add a file to the makefile in patch one and then add the file itself in patch two. (This rule is here so that people can later use tools like git bisect without hitting points in the commit history where QEMU doesn’t work for reasons unrelated to the bug they’re chasing.) Put documentation first, not last, so that someone reading the series can do a clean-room evaluation of the documentation, then validate that the code matched the documentation. A commit message that mentions “Also, …” is often a good candidate for splitting into multiple patches. For more thoughts on properly splitting patches and writing good commit messages, see this advice from OpenStack.
Make code motion patches easy to review¶
If a series requires large blocks of code motion, there are tricks for
making the refactoring easier to review. Split up the series so that
semantic changes (or even function renames) are done in a separate patch
from the raw code motion. Use a one-time setup of git config
diff.renames true;
git config diff.algorithm patience
(refer to
git-config). The ‘diff.renames’
property ensures file rename patches will be given in a more compact
representation that focuses only on the differences across the file
rename, instead of showing the entire old file as a deletion and the new
file as an insertion. Meanwhile, the ‘diff.algorithm’ property ensures
that extracting a non-contiguous subset of one file into a new file, but
where all extracted parts occur in the same order both before and after
the patch, will reduce churn in trying to treat unrelated }
lines in
the original file as separating hunks of changes.
Ideally, a code motion patch can be reviewed by doing:
git format-patch --stdout -1 > patch;
diff -u <(sed -n 's/^-//p' patch) <(sed -n 's/^\+//p' patch)
to focus on the few changes that weren’t wholesale code motion.
Don’t include irrelevant changes¶
In particular, don’t include formatting, coding style or whitespace changes to bits of code that would otherwise not be touched by the patch. (It’s OK to fix coding style issues in the immediate area (few lines) of the lines you’re changing.) If you think a section of code really does need a reindent or other large-scale style fix, submit this as a separate patch which makes no semantic changes; don’t put it in the same patch as your bug fix.
For smaller patches in less frequently changed areas of QEMU, consider using the Trivial Patches process.
Write a meaningful commit message¶
Commit messages should be meaningful and should stand on their own as a historical record of why the changes you applied were necessary or useful.
QEMU follows the usual standard for git commit messages: the first line
(which becomes the email subject line) is “subsystem: single line
summary of change”. Whether the “single line summary of change” starts
with a capital is a matter of taste, but we prefer that the summary does
not end in a dot. Look at git shortlog -30
for an idea of sample
subject lines. Then there is a blank line and a more detailed
description of the patch, another blank and your Signed-off-by: line.
Please do not use lines that are longer than 76 characters in your
commit message (so that the text still shows up nicely with “git show”
in a 80-columns terminal window).
The body of the commit message is a good place to document why your
change is important. Don’t include comments like “This is a suggestion
for fixing this bug” (they can go below the ---
line in the email so
they don’t go into the final commit message). Make sure the body of the
commit message can be read in isolation even if the reader’s mailer
displays the subject line some distance apart (that is, a body that
starts with “… so that” as a continuation of the subject line is
harder to follow).
If your patch fixes a commit that is already in the repository, please add an additional line with “Fixes: <at-least-12-digits-of-SHA-commit-id> (“Fixed commit subject”)” below the patch description / before your “Signed-off-by:” line in the commit message.
If your patch fixes a bug in the gitlab bug tracker, please add a line with “Resolves: <URL-of-the-bug>” to the commit message, too. Gitlab can close bugs automatically once commits with the “Resolved:” keyword get merged into the master branch of the project. And if your patch addresses a bug in another public bug tracker, you can also use a line with “Buglink: <URL-of-the-bug>” for reference here, too.
Example:
Fixes: 14055ce53c2d ("s390x/tcg: avoid overflows in time2tod/tod2time")
Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/42
Buglink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1804323``
Some other tags that are used in commit messages include “Message-Id:”
“Tested-by:”, “Acked-by:”, “Reported-by:”, “Suggested-by:”. See git
log
for these keywords for example usage.
Test your patches¶
Although QEMU has continuous integration services that attempt to test patches submitted to the list, it still saves everyone time if you have already tested that your patch compiles and works. Because QEMU is such a large project, it’s okay to use configure arguments to limit what is built for faster turnaround during your development time; but it is still wise to also check that your patches work with a full build before submitting a series, especially if your changes might have an unintended effect on other areas of the code you don’t normally experiment with. See Testing for more details on what tests are available. Also, it is a wise idea to include a testsuite addition as part of your patches - either to ensure that future changes won’t regress your new feature, or to add a test which exposes the bug that the rest of your series fixes. Keeping separate commits for the test and the fix allows reviewers to rebase the test to occur first to prove it catches the problem, then again to place it last in the series so that bisection doesn’t land on a known-broken state.
Submitting your Patches¶
If you cannot send patch emails¶
In rare cases it may not be possible to send properly formatted patch emails. You can use sourcehut to send your patches to the QEMU mailing list by following these steps:
- Register or sign in to your account
- Add your SSH public key in meta | keys.
- Publish your git branch using git push git@git.sr.ht:~USERNAME/qemu HEAD
- Send your patches to the QEMU mailing list using the web-based
git-send-email
UI at https://git.sr.ht/~USERNAME/qemu/send-email
This video
shows the web-based git-send-email
workflow. Documentation is
available here.
CC the relevant maintainer¶
Send patches both to the mailing list and CC the maintainer(s) of the files you are modifying. look in the MAINTAINERS file to find out who that is. Also try using scripts/get_maintainer.pl from the repository for learning the most common committers for the files you touched.
Example:
~/src/qemu/scripts/get_maintainer.pl -f hw/ide/core.c
In fact, you can automate this, via a one-time setup of git config
sendemail.cccmd 'scripts/get_maintainer.pl --nogit-fallback'
(Refer to
git-config.)
Do not send as an attachment¶
Send patches inline so they are easy to reply to with review comments. Do not put patches in attachments.
Use git format-patch
¶
Use the right diff format.
git format-patch will
produce patch emails in the right format (check the documentation to
find out how to drive it). You can then edit the cover letter before
using git send-email
to mail the files to the mailing list. (We
recommend git send-email
because mail clients often mangle patches by wrapping long lines or
messing up whitespace. Some distributions do not include send-email in a
default install of git; you may need to download additional packages,
such as ‘git-email’ on Fedora-based systems.) Patch series need a cover
letter, with shallow threading (all patches in the series are
in-reply-to the cover letter, but not to each other); single unrelated
patches do not need a cover letter (but if you do send a cover letter,
use --numbered
so the cover and the patch have distinct subject lines).
Patches are easier to find if they start a new top-level thread, rather
than being buried in-reply-to another existing thread.
Avoid posting large binary blob¶
If you added binaries to the repository, consider producing the patch
emails using git format-patch --no-binary
and include a link to a
git repository to fetch the original commit.
Patch emails must include a Signed-off-by:
line¶
For more information see SubmittingPatches 1.12. This is vital or we will not be able to apply your patch! Please use your real name to sign a patch (not an alias or acronym).
If you wrote the patch, make sure your “From:” and “Signed-off-by:” lines use the same spelling. It’s okay if you subscribe or contribute to the list via more than one address, but using multiple addresses in one commit just confuses things. If someone else wrote the patch, git will include a “From:” line in the body of the email (different from your envelope From:) that will give credit to the correct author; but again, that author’s Signed-off-by: line is mandatory, with the same spelling.
Include a meaningful cover letter¶
This is a requirement for any series with multiple patches (as it aids
continuous integration), but optional for an isolated patch. The cover
letter explains the overall goal of such a series, and also provides a
convenient 0/N email for others to reply to the series as a whole. A
one-time setup of git config format.coverletter auto
(refer to
git-config) will generate the
cover letter as needed.
When reviewers don’t know your goal at the start of their review, they may object to early changes that don’t make sense until the end of the series, because they do not have enough context yet at that point of their review. A series where the goal is unclear also risks a higher number of review-fix cycles because the reviewers haven’t bought into the idea yet. If the cover letter can explain these points to the reviewer, the process will be smoother patches will get merged faster. Make sure your cover letter includes a diffstat of changes made over the entire series; potential reviewers know what files they are interested in, and they need an easy way determine if your series touches them.
Use the RFC tag if needed¶
For example, “[PATCH RFC v2]”. git format-patch --subject-prefix=RFC
can help.
“RFC” means “Request For Comments” and is a statement that you don’t intend for your patchset to be applied to master, but would like some review on it anyway. Reasons for doing this include:
- the patch depends on some pending kernel changes which haven’t yet been accepted, so the QEMU patch series is blocked until that dependency has been dealt with, but is worth reviewing anyway
- the patch set is not finished yet (perhaps it doesn’t cover all use cases or work with all targets) but you want early review of a major API change or design structure before continuing
In general, since it’s asking other people to do review work on a patchset that the submitter themselves is saying shouldn’t be applied, it’s best to:
- use it sparingly
- in the cover letter, be clear about why a patch is an RFC, what areas of the patchset you’re looking for review on, and why reviewers should care
Consider whether your patch is applicable for stable¶
If your patch fixes a severe issue or a regression, it may be applicable
for stable. In that case, consider adding Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org
to your patch to notify the stable maintainers.
For more details on how QEMU’s stable process works, refer to the QEMU and the stable process page.
Participating in Code Review¶
All patches submitted to the QEMU project go through a code review process before they are accepted. Some areas of code that are well maintained may review patches quickly, lesser-loved areas of code may have a longer delay.
Stay around to fix problems raised in code review¶
Not many patches get into QEMU straight away – it is quite common that developers will identify bugs, or suggest a cleaner approach, or even just point out code style issues or commit message typos. You’ll need to respond to these, and then send a second version of your patches with the issues fixed. This takes a little time and effort on your part, but if you don’t do it then your changes will never get into QEMU. It’s also just polite – it is quite disheartening for a developer to spend time reviewing your code and suggesting improvements, only to find that you’re not going to do anything further and it was all wasted effort.
When replying to comments on your patches reply to all and not just the sender – keeping discussion on the mailing list means everybody can follow it.
Pay attention to review comments¶
Someone took their time to review your work, and it pays to respect that effort; repeatedly submitting a series without addressing all comments from the previous round tends to alienate reviewers and stall your patch. Reviewers aren’t always perfect, so it is okay if you want to argue that your code was correct in the first place instead of blindly doing everything the reviewer asked. On the other hand, if someone pointed out a potential issue during review, then even if your code turns out to be correct, it’s probably a sign that you should improve your commit message and/or comments in the code explaining why the code is correct.
If you fix issues that are raised during review resend the entire patch series not just the one patch that was changed. This allows maintainers to easily apply the fixed series without having to manually identify which patches are relevant. Send the new version as a complete fresh email or series of emails – don’t try to make it a followup to version 1. (This helps automatic patch email handling tools distinguish between v1 and v2 emails.)
When resending patches add a version tag¶
All patches beyond the first version should include a version tag – for
example, “[PATCH v2]”. This means people can easily identify whether
they’re looking at the most recent version. (The first version of a
patch need not say “v1”, just [PATCH] is sufficient.) For patch series,
the version applies to the whole series – even if you only change one
patch, you resend the entire series and mark it as “v2”. Don’t try to
track versions of different patches in the series separately. git
format-patch and git
send-email both understand
the -v2
option to make this easier. Send each new revision as a new
top-level thread, rather than burying it in-reply-to an earlier
revision, as many reviewers are not looking inside deep threads for new
patches.
Include version history in patchset revisions¶
For later versions of patches, include a summary of changes from
previous versions, but not in the commit message itself. In an email
formatted as a git patch, the commit message is the part above the ---
line, and this will go into the git changelog when the patch is
committed. This part should be a self-contained description of what this
version of the patch does, written to make sense to anybody who comes
back to look at this commit in git in six months’ time. The part below
the ---
line and above the patch proper (git format-patch puts the
diffstat here) is a good place to put remarks for people reading the
patch email, and this is where the “changes since previous version”
summary belongs. The git-publish script can help with
tracking a good summary across versions. Also, the git-backport-diff script can help focus
reviewers on what changed between revisions.
Tips and Tricks¶
Proper use of Reviewed-by: tags can aid review¶
When reviewing a large series, a reviewer can reply to some of the patches with a Reviewed-by tag, stating that they are happy with that patch in isolation (sometimes conditional on minor cleanup, like fixing whitespace, that doesn’t affect code content). You should then update those commit messages by hand to include the Reviewed-by tag, so that in the next revision, reviewers can spot which patches were already clean from the previous round. Conversely, if you significantly modify a patch that was previously reviewed, remove the reviewed-by tag out of the commit message, as well as listing the changes from the previous version, to make it easier to focus a reviewer’s attention to your changes.
If your patch seems to have been ignored¶
If your patchset has received no replies you should “ping” it after a week or two, by sending an email as a reply-to-all to the patch mail, including the word “ping” and ideally also a link to the page for the patch on patchew or lore.kernel.org. It’s worth double-checking for reasons why your patch might have been ignored (forgot to CC the maintainer? annoyed people by failing to respond to review comments on an earlier version?), but often for less-maintained areas of QEMU patches do just slip through the cracks. If your ping is also ignored, ping again after another week or so. As the submitter, you are the person with the most motivation to get your patch applied, so you have to be persistent.
Is my patch in?¶
QEMU has some Continuous Integration machines that try to catch patch submission problems as soon as possible. patchew includes a web interface for tracking the status of various threads that have been posted to the list, and may send you an automated mail if it detected a problem with your patch.
Once your patch has had enough review on list, the maintainer for that area of code will send notification to the list that they are including your patch in a particular staging branch. Periodically, the maintainer then takes care of Submitting a Pull Request for aggregating topic branches into mainline QEMU. Generally, you do not need to send a pull request unless you have contributed enough patches to become a maintainer over a particular section of code. Maintainers may further modify your commit, by resolving simple merge conflicts or fixing minor typos pointed out during review, but will always add a Signed-off-by line in addition to yours, indicating that it went through their tree. Occasionally, the maintainer’s pull request may hit more difficult merge conflicts, where you may be requested to help rebase and resolve the problems. It may take a couple of weeks between when your patch first had a positive review to when it finally lands in qemu.git; release cycle freezes may extend that time even longer.
Return the favor¶
Peer review only works if everyone chips in a bit of review time. If everyone submitted more patches than they reviewed, we would have a patch backlog. A good goal is to try to review at least as many patches from others as what you submit. Don’t worry if you don’t know the code base as well as a maintainer; it’s perfectly fine to admit when your review is weak because you are unfamiliar with the code.