Git¶
This document explains some conventions and specificities in the way we manage the Rsyslog code with Git.
Pull Requests¶
Whenever a pull request is merged, all the information contained in the pull request (including comments) is saved in the repository.
You can easily spot pull request merges as the commit message always follows this pattern:
merged branch USER_NAME/BRANCH_NAME (PR #1111)
The PR reference allows you to have a look at the original pull request on GitHub: https://github.com/rsyslog/rsyslog/pull/1111. But all the information you can get on GitHub is also available from the repository itself.
The merge commit message contains the original message from the author of the changes. Often, this can help understand what the changes were about and the reasoning behind the changes.
Moreover, the full discussion that might have occurred back then is also
stored as a Git note. To get access to these notes, add this line to
your .git/config
file:
fetch = +refs/notes/*:refs/notes/*
After a fetch, getting the GitHub discussion for a commit is then a matter of
adding --show-notes=github-comments
to the git show
command:
$ git show HEAD --show-notes=github-comments
See also
Help with configuring/using Rsyslog
:
- Mailing list - best route for general questions
- GitHub: rsyslog source project - detailed questions, reporting issues
that are believed to be bugs with
Rsyslog
- Stack Exchange (View, Ask) - experimental support from rsyslog community
See also
Contributing to Rsyslog
:
- Source project: rsyslog project README.
- Documentation: rsyslog-doc project README