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1 -*- outline -*-
2
3 This file attempts to describe the rules to use when hacking Bison.
4 Don't put this file into the distribution.
5
6 Everything related to the development of Bison is on Savannah:
7
8 http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/bison/
9
10
11 * Administrivia
12
13 ** If you incorporate a change from somebody on the net:
14 First, if it is a large change, you must make sure they have signed
15 the appropriate paperwork. Second, be sure to add their name and
16 email address to THANKS.
17
18 ** If a change fixes a test, mention the test in the commit message.
19
20 ** Bug reports
21 If somebody reports a new bug, mention his name in the commit message
22 and in the test case you write. Put him into THANKS.
23
24 The correct response to most actual bugs is to write a new test case
25 which demonstrates the bug. Then fix the bug, re-run the test suite,
26 and check everything in.
27
28
29 * Hacking
30
31 ** Visible changes
32 Which include serious bug fixes, must be mentioned in NEWS.
33
34 ** Translations
35 Only user visible strings are to be translated: error messages, bits
36 of the .output file etc. This excludes impossible error messages
37 (comparable to assert/abort), and all the --trace output which is
38 meant for the maintainers only.
39
40
41 * Working from the repository
42
43 These notes intend to help people working on the checked-out sources.
44 These requirements do not apply when building from a distribution tarball.
45
46 ** Requirements
47
48 We've opted to keep only the highest-level sources in the repository.
49 This eases our maintenance burden, (fewer merges etc.), but imposes more
50 requirements on anyone wishing to build from the just-checked-out sources.
51 For example, you have to use the latest stable versions of the maintainer
52 tools we depend upon, including:
53
54 - Automake <http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/>
55 - Autoconf <http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/>
56 - Flex <http://www.gnu.org/software/flex/>
57 - Gettext <http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/>
58 - Gzip <http://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/>
59 - Perl <http://www.cpan.org/>
60 - Rsync <http://samba.anu.edu.au/rsync/>
61 - Tar <http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/>
62
63 Valgrind <http://valgrind.org/> is also highly recommended, if
64 Valgrind supports your architecture.
65
66 Bison is written using Bison grammars, so there are bootstrapping
67 issues. The bootstrap script attempts to discover when the C code
68 generated from the grammars is out of date, and to bootstrap with an
69 out-of-date version of the C code, but the process is not foolproof.
70 Also, you may run into similar problems yourself if you modify Bison.
71
72 Only building the initial full source tree will be a bit painful.
73 Later, after synchronizing from the repository a plain `make' should
74 be sufficient.
75
76 ** First checkout
77
78 Obviously, if you are reading these notes, you did manage to check out
79 this package from the repository. For the record, you will find all the
80 relevant information on:
81
82 http://savannah.gnu.org/git/?group=bison
83
84 Bison uses Git submodules: subscriptions to other Git repositories.
85 In particular it uses gnulib, the GNU portability library. To ask Git
86 to perform the first checkout of the submodules, run
87
88 $ git submodule update --init
89
90 Git submodule support is weak before versions 1.6 and later, you
91 should probably upgrade Git if your version is older.
92
93 The next step is to get other files needed to build, which are
94 extracted from other source packages:
95
96 $ ./bootstrap
97
98 And there you are! Just
99
100 $ ./configure
101 $ make
102 $ make check
103
104 At this point, there should be no difference between your local copy,
105 and the master copy:
106
107 $ git diff
108
109 should output no difference.
110
111 Enjoy!
112
113 ** Updating
114
115 The use of submodules make things somewhat different because git does
116 not support recursive operations: submodules must be taken care of
117 explicitly by the user.
118
119 *** Updating Bison
120
121 If you pull a newer version of a branch, say via `git pull', you might
122 import requests for updated submodules. A simple `git diff' will
123 reveal if the current version of the submodule (i.e., the actual
124 contents of the gnulib directory) and the current request from the
125 subscriber (i.e., the reference of the version of gnulib that the
126 Bison reporitory requests) differ. To upgrade the submodules (i.e.,
127 to check out the version that is actually requested by the subscriber,
128 run `git submodule update'.
129
130 $ git pull
131 $ git submodule update
132
133 *** Updating a submodule
134 To update a submodule, say gnulib, do as follows:
135
136 Get the most recent version of the master branch from git.
137
138 $ cd gnulib
139 $ git fetch
140 $ git checkout -b master --track origin/master
141
142 Make sure Bison can live with that version of gnulib.
143
144 $ cd ..
145 $ ./bootstrap
146 $ make distcheck
147
148 Register your changes.
149
150 $ git checkin ...
151
152 For a suggestion of what gnulib commit might be stable enough for a
153 formal release, see the ChangeLog in the latest gnulib snapshot at:
154
155 http://erislabs.net/ianb/projects/gnulib/
156
157 The autoconf files we use are currently:
158
159 m4/m4.m4
160 lib/m4sugar/m4sugar.m4
161 lib/m4sugar/foreach.m4
162
163 These files don't change very often in Autoconf, so it should be
164 relatively straight-forward to examine the differences in order to
165 decide whether to update.
166
167 * Test suite
168
169 ** make check
170 Use liberally.
171
172 ** Release checks
173 Try to run the test suite with more severe conditions before a
174 release:
175
176 - Configure the package with --enable-gcc-warnings, so that one checks
177 that 1. Bison compiles cleanly, 2. the parsers it produces compile
178 cleanly too.
179
180 - Build with -DGNULIB_POSIXCHECK. It suggests gnulib modules that can
181 fix portability issues.
182
183 - Check with `make syntax-check' if there are issues diagnosed by
184 gnulib.
185
186 - run `make maintainer-check' which:
187 - runs `valgrind -q bison' to run Bison under Valgrind.
188 - runs the parsers under Valgrind.
189 - runs the test suite with G++ as C compiler...
190
191 - run `make maintainer-push-check', which runs `make maintainer-check'
192 while activating the push implementation and its pull interface wrappers
193 in many test cases that were originally written to exercise only the
194 pull implementation. This makes certain the push implementation can
195 perform every task the pull implementation can.
196
197 - run `make maintainer-xml-check', which runs `make maintainer-check'
198 while checking Bison's XML automaton report for every working grammar
199 passed to Bison in the test suite. The check just diffs the output of
200 Bison's included XSLT style sheets with the output of --report=all and
201 --graph.
202
203 - running `make maintainer-release-check' takes care of running
204 maintainer-check, maintainer-push-check and maintainer-xml-check.
205
206 - Change tests/atlocal/CFLAGS to add your preferred options. For
207 instance, `-traditional' to check that the parsers are K&R. Note
208 that it does not make sense for glr.c, which should be ANSI,
209 but currently is actually GNU C, nor for lalr1.cc.
210
211
212 * Release Procedure
213
214 ** Update the submodules. See above.
215
216 ** Update maintainer tools, such as Autoconf. See above.
217
218 ** Try to get the *.pot files to the Translation Project at least one
219 week before a stable release, to give them time to translate them.
220 Before generating the *.pot files, make sure that po/POTFILES.in and
221 runtime-po/POTFILES.in list all files with translatable strings.
222 This helps: grep -l '\<_(' *
223
224 ** Tests
225 See above.
226
227 ** Update the foreign files
228 Running `./bootstrap' in the top level should update them all for you.
229 This covers PO files too. Sometimes a PO file contains problems that
230 causes it to be rejected by recent Gettext releases; please report
231 these to the Translation Project.
232
233 ** Update README
234 Make sure the information in README is current. Most notably, make sure
235 it recommends a version of GNU M4 that is compatible with the latest
236 Bison sources.
237
238 ** Check copyright years.
239 We update years in copyright statements throughout Bison once at the
240 start of every year by running `make update-copyright'. However, before
241 a release, it's good to verify that it's actually been run. Besides the
242 copyright statement for each Bison file, check the copyright statements
243 that the skeletons insert into generated parsers, and check all
244 occurrences of PACKAGE_COPYRIGHT_YEAR in configure.ac.
245
246 ** Update NEWS
247 The version number, *and* the date of the release (including for
248 betas).
249
250 ** Mention the release name in a commit message
251 Should have an entry similar to `Version 2.3b.'.
252
253 ** Tag the release
254 Before Bison will build with the right version number, you must tag
255 the release in git. Do this after all other changes. The command is
256 similar to:
257
258 git tag -a v2.3b
259
260 The commit message can be simply:
261
262 Bison 2.3b
263
264 ** Push
265 Once `make distcheck' passes, push your changes and the tag.
266 `git push' without arguments will not push the tag.
267
268 ** make alpha
269 FIXME: `make alpha' is not maintained and is broken. These
270 instructions need to be replaced or removed.
271
272 Running `make alpha' is absolutely perfect for beta releases: it makes
273 the tarballs, the xdeltas, and prepares (in /tmp/) a proto
274 announcement. It is so neat, that that's what I use anyway for
275 genuine releases, but adjusting things by hand (e.g., the urls in the
276 announcement file, the ChangeLog which is not needed etc.).
277
278 If it fails, you're on your own...
279
280 It requires GNU Make.
281
282 ** Upload
283 The generic GNU upload procedure is at:
284
285 http://www.gnu.org/prep/maintain/maintain.html#Automated-FTP-Uploads
286
287 Follow the instructions there to register your information so you're permitted
288 to upload. Make sure your public key has been uploaded at least to
289 keys.gnupg.net. You can upload it with:
290
291 gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --send-keys F125BDF3
292
293 where F125BDF3 should be replaced with your key ID.
294
295 Here's a brief reminder of how to roll the tarballs and upload them:
296
297 *** make distcheck
298 *** gpg -b bison-2.3b.tar.gz
299 *** In a file named `bison-2.3b.tar.gz.directive', type:
300
301 version: 1.1
302 directory: bison
303 filename: bison-2.3b.tar.gz
304
305 *** gpg --clearsign bison-2.3b.tar.gz.directive
306 *** ftp ftp-upload.gnu.org # Log in as anonymous.
307 *** cd /incoming/alpha # cd /incoming/ftp for full release.
308 *** put bison-2.3b.tar.gz # This can take a while.
309 *** put bison-2.3b.tar.gz.sig
310 *** put bison-2.3b.tar.gz.directive.asc
311 *** Repeat all these steps for bison-2.3b.tar.xz.
312
313 ** Update Bison manual on www.gnu.org.
314
315 *** You need a non-anonymous checkout of the web pages directory.
316
317 $ cvs -d YOUR_USERID@cvs.savannah.gnu.org:/web/bison checkout bison
318
319 *** Get familiar with the instructions for web page maintainers.
320 http://www.gnu.org/server/standards/readme_index.html
321 http://www.gnu.org/server/standards/README.software.html
322 especially the note about symlinks.
323
324 *** Build the web pages.
325 Assuming BISON_CHECKOUT refers to a checkout of the Bison dir, and
326 BISON_WWW_CHECKOUT refers to the web directory created above, do:
327
328 $ cd $BISON_CHECKOUT/doc
329 $ make stamp-vti
330 $ ../build-aux/gendocs.sh -o "$BISON_WWW_CHECKOUT/manual" \
331 bison "Bison - GNU parser generator"
332 $ cd $BISON_WWW_CHECKOUT
333
334 Verify that the result looks sane.
335
336 *** Commit the modified and the new files.
337
338 *** Remove old files.
339 Find the files which have not been overwritten (because they belonged to
340 sections that have been removed or renamed):
341
342 $ cd manual/html_node
343 $ ls -lt
344
345 Remove these files and commit their removal to CVS. For each of these
346 files, add a line to the file .symlinks. This will ensure that
347 hyperlinks to the removed files will redirect to the entire manual; this
348 is better than a 404 error.
349
350 There is a problem with 'index.html' being written twice (once for POSIX
351 function 'index', once for the table of contents); you can ignore this
352 issue.
353
354 ** Announce
355 To generate a template announcement file:
356
357 make RELEASE_TYPE=alpha gpg_key_ID=F125BDF3 announcement
358
359 where alpha can be replaced by beta or stable and F125BDF3 should be
360 replaced with your key ID.
361
362 Complete/fix the announcement file. The generated list of recipients
363 (info-gnu@gnu.org, bug-bison@gnu.org, help-bison@gnu.org,
364 bison-patches@gnu.org, and coordinator@translationproject.org) is
365 appropriate for a stable release or a ``serious beta''. For any other
366 release, drop at least info-gnu@gnu.org. For an example of how to fill
367 out the rest of the template, search the mailing list archives for the
368 most recent release announcement.
369
370 For a stable release, send the same announcement on the comp.compilers
371 newsgroup by sending email to compilers@iecc.com. Do not make any Cc as
372 the moderator will throw away anything cross-posted or Cc'ed. It really
373 needs to be a separate message.
374
375 ** Bump the version number
376 In configure.ac. Run `make'. So that developers don't accidentally add new
377 items to the old NEWS entry, create a new empty NEWS entry something like:
378
379 Changes in version ?.? (????-??-??):
380
381 Push these changes.
382
383
384 -----
385
386 Copyright (C) 2002-2005, 2007-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
387
388 This file is part of GNU Bison.
389
390 This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
391 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
392 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
393 (at your option) any later version.
394
395 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
396 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
397 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
398 GNU General Public License for more details.
399
400 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
401 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.