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==Introduction==
==Introduction==
This page describes a recommended git workflow for use with the Mu2e Offline code in GitHub.


The Mu2e computing group manages the Mu2e organization within GitHub.  To have full access to Mu2e software,
The primary source code management system for the Mu2e Offline software is a [http://git-scm.com/ git] repository. Git is a popular open-source software version control system.
Mu2e collaborators should create a GitHub account, and request to join the Mu2e organization.
Based on the git repository's url, you can check out code, and, if you are a code developer, check in modifications. Git also has capabilities for tagging code, tracking history and supports splitting off and merging development branches, among many other features.  A general description and tips about using Git are on the [[GitIntro|git introduction page]].
 
Our main code repositories are stored on the commercial hosting site [http://github.com GitHub]. The Mu2e computing group manages the [https://www.github.com/Mu2e github Mu2e organization].  Most Mu2e repositories are public (visible to all GitHub users and the larger web), some are restricted to Mu2e organization members, per the [https://mu2e-docdb.fnal.gov/cgi-bin/sso/ShowDocument?docid=26349 Mu2e software policy].
 
==Make your Own GitHub Account and Join the Mu2e GitHub Organization==
 
Most of the repositories in the Mu2e GitHub organization are publicly readable but some are private.  To be a full participant in the Mu2e computing effort, you will need to create and GitHub account and ask that your account be invited to join the Mu2e GitHub organization.  If you don't already have one, you can create an account at [https://github.com/ github.com].  You can use whatever username you would like for your account. If you are not a FNAL employee, do not use your fnal.gov email as your primary email; if you do, messages from GitHub activity may be blocked. Once you have an account, you can request to join the Mu2e organization by sending an email to <b>mu2e-hn-helpbug@listserv.fnal.gov</b>.  In the email please tell us who you are and which Mu2e institution you are with; and tell us your github username.  <b>mu2e-hn-helpbug</b> is one of the Mu2e hypernews forums.  You must send this email from the email account that is registered in the mu2emailing listserv.
 
Once you have an account, you can configure it according to your personal preferences by selecting the 'Settings' menu under you account.  For instance, under that menu you can configure GitHub to send you email notifications when code you are currently working with changes or has change requests made against it.  You can also or provide a picture or icon for your account.  We would very much appreciate it if you add enough identifying information to your GitHub account's public page that your colleagues can figure who you are.
 
==Workflows==
 
There are two supported git workflows for use with the Mu2e Offline code in GitHub, one for regular users and one for developers.  A list of requirements follows.


<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<li>To execute this workflow make sure you have defined the mu2e environment by executing "setup mu2e" in your shell </li>
<li>To execute either of these workflows make sure you have defined the Mu2e environment by executing <code>mu2einit</code> in your shell.  This ensures that you have known version of git. </li>
<li>Make sure you have a GitHub account, and that you are added to the Mu2e GitHub organization (https://github.com/orgs/Mu2e/people)</li>
<li>To execute the developer workflow, your GitHub Id must be added to the Mu2e GitHub organization (https://github.com/orgs/Mu2e/people).  If it's not already there, please request this from the computing coordinator.</li>
<li>In order to authenticate with github, you will need to set up your ssh keys on the machine you plan to clone / push from, following the instructions [https://help.github.com/en/articles/adding-a-new-ssh-key-to-your-github-account here]</li>
<li>In order to authenticate with github, you will need to set up your ssh keys on the machine from which you plan to clone/push, following the instructions [https://help.github.com/en/articles/adding-a-new-ssh-key-to-your-github-account here].</li>
<ul>
<ul>
  <li> Password based authentication on GitHub is now deprecated and is scheduled to be disabled soon, [https://github.blog/2020-12-15-token-authentication-requirements-for-git-operations/ as described here].</li>
  <li> Password based authentication on GitHub is now deprecated and is scheduled to be disabled soon, [https://github.blog/2020-12-15-token-authentication-requirements-for-git-operations/ as described here].</li>
</ul>
</ul>
<li>Before you do any developing, create your own fork of the official Mu2e Offline repo using the GitHub web interface (instructions [https://guides.github.com/activities/forking/ here]).</li>
<li> Before you do any developing, go to your GitHub account and create your own fork of the official Mu2e Offline repo using the GitHub web interface (instructions [https://guides.github.com/activities/forking/ here]).</li>
</ol>
</ol>


The main Mu2e repository is 'Offline', which contains the algorithms, data structures, art modules and configuration used
The main Mu2e repository is 'Offline', which contains the algorithms, data structures, art modules and configuration used
in simulation production, online filtering, offline reconstruction,  and other tasks.  The main development branch within Offline
in simulation production, online filtering, offline reconstruction,  and other tasks.  The main development branch within Offline
is 'master', which should be used for all code development.  Offline also contains legacy branches associated with particular
is 'main', which should be used for all code development.  Offline also contains legacy branches associated with particular
data sets, which are maintained for a limited time after the master branch has been developed past those data, as described in the
data sets, which are maintained for a limited time after the main branch has been developed past those data, as described in the
table below.
table below.


Line 27: Line 38:
| '''support end date'''
| '''support end date'''
|-
|-
| master
| main
| development  
| development  
| end of Mu2e
| end of Mu2e
Line 34: Line 45:
| MDC2018 dataset support  
| MDC2018 dataset support  
| end of 2020
| end of 2020
|-
| Mu2eII_SM21
| Mu2eII code for Snowmass
| end of 2022
|-
|-
|}
|}
To work on a branch other than master:
 
<nowiki>> git checkout 'BRANCH' </nowiki>
Some additional smaller repositories important to Mu2e are in the Fermilab [[Redmine|redmine]] git server.
where 'BRANCH' is the name of the branch


==Authentication==
==Authentication==
We recommend that you establish authentication to GitHub using ssh keys and all GitHub examples on the Mu2e wiki assume that you have done so. The page [[Authentication#Authenticating to github]] has instructions.


==Migrating an existing redmine clone directory to GitHub==
If you are asking for readonly access to a public repository, such as Mu2e Offline and most other Mu2e repositories, you do not need to authenticate yourself to GitHub.  For getting started with Mu2e, this is all you need to know; just follow the instructions. You should also recognize two styles of clone urls:
You can repoint an existing Offline clone from redmine to GitHub as a way of making an easy transitionTo follow these instructions, you must already have a GitHub account that's registered in the [https://github.com/Mu2e Mu2e Organization].  The following assumes your redmine clone is in <nowiki>/mu2e/app/Me/MyRedmineClone/Offline</nowiki>, that your GitHub username is ''MyGitHubName'', and that you are working on a branch called ''MyDevelopmentBranch''.
https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline  
<ul>
git@github.com:Mu2e/Offline
# Login to [https://github.com GitHub]
The first style gives unauthenticated readonly access to public repositories; the second style requires that you authenticate to GitHub.
# Fork Mu2e/Offline in GitHub using the 'Fork' button on the top right of the [https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline Mu2e Offline repo page]
 
# Add GitHub as a remote to your clone
There are two important cases in which you will need to authenticate to GitHub: to write to your own GitHub fork and to read the few Mu2e repositories that have access restricted to Mu2e members.  You will never write directly to the Mu2e GitHub repositories. We recommend that you establish authentication to GitHub using ssh keys and all GitHub examples on the Mu2e wiki assume that you have done so.  You may delay this step until it is needed.  The page [[Authentication#Authenticating to github|Authenticating to GitHub]] has instructions.  Remember that
#: > cd <nowiki>/mu2e/app/Me/MyRedmineClone/Offline</nowiki>
[https://github.blog/2020-12-15-token-authentication-requirements-for-git-operations/|password based authentication to GitHub will be disabled in the near future].
#: > git remote rename origin Redmine
#: > git remote add mu2e <nowiki>https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline</nowiki>
#: > git remote add origin <nowiki>https://github.com/MyGitHubName/Offline</nowiki>
#: These commands are very fast as no data is actually transferred. You can see your remotes with:
#: > git remote -v
#: Your clone is now connected to the main Mu2e github repository and your own fork in addition to the Redmine repository. Additionally, we have changed your fork to be the default remote repository (origin)
# Push your working branch to your GitHub fork:
#: > git push -u origin MyDevelopmentBranch
After this, you can continue developing in this directory according to the general GitHub workflow described below.
</ul>


==Downloading Offline as a user and NOT a developer==
==Downloading Offline as a user and NOT a developer==
Line 65: Line 68:
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<li>clone the repo:</li>
<li>clone the repo:</li>
   git clone https://github.com/mu2e/Offline
   git clone https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline
  cd Offline
<li>Done!</li>
<li>Done!</li>
</ol>
</ol>
Line 72: Line 76:
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<li> Find their github user name</li>
<li> Find their github user name</li>
<li> Determine what the name of the branch they are working on is (Note: this can be master!)
<li> Learn the name of the branch they are working on; this may be main but it normally should not be.</li>
<li> Clone their fork:</li>
<li> Clone their fork:</li>
   git clone https://github.com/<user name>/Offline
   git clone https://github.com/<their GitHub user name>/Offline
   cd Offline
   cd Offline
   git checkout origin/<branch name>
   git checkout origin/<branch name>
Line 80: Line 84:
</ol>
</ol>


<b>Option 3</b>: You want to use pgit to avoid a long compilation time (EXPERIMENTAL)
<b>Option 3</b>: You want to checkout and build only a part of the Offline repo<br>
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
This partial checkout allows you to build only a small part of the Offline repo with this local part overriding the rest of the Offline build coming from a complete ''backing build''. This procedure is part of the [[Muse]] multi-repo build system. Please see [[Muse#mgit_partial_build|those instructions]].
<li> Create new directory to put your Offline repo in and move to that directory</li>
  mkdir Offline
  cd Offline
<li> As in Option 2, determine fork and branch name you wish to use</li>
<li> Create a partial checkout clone</li>
  pgit2 setup https://github.com/<user name (or mu2e)>/Offline <branch name>
<li> You can now use as normal:</li>
  source setup.sh
  scons -j 4
<li> You might need to source the following before 'source setup.sh':</li>
  source /cvmfs/mu2e.opensciencegrid.org/setupmu2e-art.sh
</ol>


==Developer Workflow==
==Developer Workflow==


To start, make sure you understand what a [https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Working-with-Remotes remote] is, the difference between a branch and a [https://help.github.com/en/articles/fork-a-repo fork], and what a [https://help.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/creating-a-pull-request pull request] is.
This section assumes basic familiarity with git, including:
* what is a [https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Working-with-Remotes remote]
* the difference between a branch and a [https://help.github.com/en/articles/fork-a-repo fork]
* what a [https://git-scm.com/docs/git-clone clone] is
* what a [https://help.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/creating-a-pull-request pull request] is.
* What conflict is and how to resolve conflicts; for some tips see [[#Tips_For_Resolving_Conflicts|tips for resolving conflicts]]
* The difference between the two styles of clone urls.  See the section on [[#Authentication|Authentication]] for details.
 
 
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
<li>Create our own fork of the official Mu2e Offline repo using the GitHub web interface (instructions [https://guides.github.com/activities/forking/ here]). This fork will be your personal sandbox on GitHub; you can do anything you want to it and it will have no effect on anyone else! Note that you
<li> Create your own fork of the official Mu2e Offline repo using the GitHub web interface (instructions [https://guides.github.com/activities/forking/ here]).  
only need to do this once; you can reuse this fork for all your development projects.</li>
<ul>
<li>Create a local clone of your Offline fork.  This is another step that you only need to do once and you can use this local clone for multiple development projects in you want to.  When you push code to another repository, the default will be to push to your fork own instead of the official mu2e version. </li>
<li> This fork will be your personal sandbox on GitHub; you can do anything you want to it and it will have no effect on anyone else!</li>
<li> You only need to do this once; you can reuse this fork for all your development projects.</li>
</ul>
<li> On your development machine, create a local clone of your Offline fork.  This is another step that you only need to do once and you can use this local clone for multiple development projects in you want to.  When you push code to another repository, the default will be to push to your fork; you will never push code directly to the GitHub Mu2e/Offline repository.</li>
<pre>
<pre>
setup mu2e
mu2einit
git init Offline
git clone git@github.com:<your GitHub username>/Offline
cd Offline
cd Offline
git remote add -f origin git@github.com:<your github username>/Offline
git remote add -f mu2e https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline
git remote add mu2e https://github.com/mu2e/Offline
git branch -d -r origin/master
git fetch mu2e master
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
</li>
<li> The above steps will create a git repository with the following properties:
<li> The above steps will create a local clone of your fork of the Offline repository with the following properties:
   <ul>
   <ul>
     <li> There are two remotes: your fork and mu2e/Offline</li>
     <li> There are two remotes: your fork (origin), and mu2e.</li>
     <li> All of the branches from your fork, except master, will be visible as remote branches</li>
     <li> All of the branches from your fork and from Ofline will be visible as remote branches</li>
     <li> The master branch from mu2e/Offline will be visible as a remote branch.</li>
     <li> The only local branch will be the HEAD branch (usually main) of your local fork.</li>
     <li> There will be no local branches and no checked out files; so you cannot yet build or run anything.</li>
     <li> The checked out local branch will be the HEAD of your local fork.</li>
     <li> You can inspect the status of remotes and branches using [[Git#What_Remotes_are_Available_in_my_Working_area|git remote -v]] and [[Git#What_branch_is_Tracking_What_Other_Branch.3F | git branch -avv]].
     <li> You can inspect the status of remotes and branches using [[Git#What_Remotes_are_Available_in_my_Working_area|git remote -v]] and [[Git#What_branch_is_Tracking_What_Other_Branch.3F | git branch -avv]]. </li>
</li>
    <li> <font color=red>In general the head of the main branch of your local fork will be out of date; you should never work from this branch.
          Therefore you must do the next step before you can begin development work. </font></li>
   </ul>
   </ul>
<li> When you want to start a new development project, the first step is to make a new local branch on which to do the work. If two development efforts are not intrinsically coupled to each other, each should be done on its own branch. This branch is local to your fork, so has no impact on the main Offline. The branch name is used for sharing your development work with other people while it is still in progress, and for making your pull request, but has no intrinsic meaning.</li>
Optionally, the same local repo can be setup as a partial checkout, with a small part of the repo being built locally, which can save build time.  This procedure is provided by ''mgit'', part of the Muse multi-repo build system, after understanding the concepts and procedures here, please see [[Muse#mgit_partial_build|those instructions]].  With a partial checkout, you can still commit and push normally.
  git fetch mu2e master
 
   git checkout --no-track -b <development branch name> mu2e/master
<li> Make a new local branch on which to do your development work.  
<li> After you have done the previous step, your directory will be populated with files; you can start to edit, build and run.  The two commands in the previous step ensure that your new development work starts from the up-to-date head of the master branch in the official mu2e/Offline.  Note that the master branch from your own github fork is never a part of this work; in general it will always be very out of date. This is why step 2 is a little complicated: among other things it ensures that the master branch from your fork is not visible in your clone.
<ul>
<li> Do your work and commit it locally.  This makes a local 'backup' of your work.</li>
  <li> If two or more development efforts are not intrinsically coupled, each should be done on its own branch. </li>
   git commit -m "brief comment describing the changes you are committing"
  <li> This branch is local to your clone, so has no impact on the main Offline; when you push it, it will be to your fork. Therefore it has on effect on the GitHub Mu2e version of Offline.</li>
<li> When your development is complete, or when you wish to back it up remotely, or share your work with others, push your branch back to your GitHub fork.  Note this requires you to have setup your [[Authentication#Authenticating_to_github|github authentication]].
  <li> The branch name is used for sharing your development work with other people while it is still in progress, and for making your pull request, but has no special meaning to git.  Choose a name that will be meaningful.</li>
</ul>
<pre>
   git checkout --no-track -b <development branch name> mu2e/main
</pre>
<li> Do your work and commit it.</li>
   git commit -m "brief comment describing the changes you are committing" file1 [ file2 file3 .... ]
<li> When you wish to back up your work, or share your work with others, push your branch to your GitHub fork.  If you are working on a disk that his not backed up, such as /mu2e/app, we encourage you to push frequently in order to backup your work:
</li>
</li>
<pre>
   git push -u origin <development branch name>
   git push -u origin <development branch name>
<li> In the previous step the -u option tells git that your local branch should track the branch in your fork.  If you push the branch again, the -u option is not needed but it won't hurt if it is present.  You can use [[Git#What_branch_is_Tracking_What_Other_Branch.3F | git branch -avv]] to see that your development branch is now tracking the version of itself in your github fork.
</pre>
<li> When your development is complete and tested and ready to be re-integrated with the rest of Mu2e/Offline, go to the GitHub web site and request that your branch be pulled back into Mu2e/Offline.  Your pull request will start the code review process (see [[GitHubWorkflow#Code Review|Code Review]]), which may take anywhere from a few hours to a few days. Note that GitHub will not allow merging a pull request that conflicts with other development merged since your clone.
The -u option tells git that your local branch should track the branch in your fork.  If you push the branch again, the -u option is not needed but it won't hurt if it is present.  You can use [[Git#What_branch_is_Tracking_What_Other_Branch.3F | git branch -avv]] to see that your development branch is now tracking the version of itself in your github fork and your local clone.
<li> When your development is complete and tested, go to the web site of your GitHub fork and, using the GUI, request that your branch be pulled into Mu2e/Offline.  Your pull request (PR) will start the code review process (see [[GitHubWorkflow#Code Review|Code Review]]), which may take anywhere from a few hours to a few days.
<ol style="list-style-type:lower-alpha">
<ol style="list-style-type:lower-alpha">
<li> In a web browser, open https://github.com/<your user name>/Offline</li>
<li> In a web browser, open https://github.com/<your GitHub user name>/Offline</li>
<li> push the 'new request pull' button associated with your development branch </li>
<li> Click on the icon that shows all branches</i>
<li> More info is available at [https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-pull-request-from-a-fork instructions]</li>
<li> Click on the 'New pull request' button associated with your development branch </li>
<li> There will be an informational message near the top of the page saying if your branch is "Able to merge" or if conflicts exist. 
<ul>
  <li> If conflicts exist, it is your responsibility to resolve them.  See below for some instructions for [[#Rebasing]] and [[#Tips_For_Resolving_Conflicts]]
</ul>
<li> After conflicts, if any, are resolved, fill requested information and click the "Create Pull Request" button.
<li> More info is available at [https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-pull-request-from-a-fork the GitHub instructions for Pull Requests]</li>
</ol>
</ol>
</li>
<li> After you submit your PR, GitHub will automatically start a Continuous Integration (CI), which includes: </li>
<li> If your pull request shows conflicts with Mu2e/Offline, you must reconcile those before you can request a pull.  This involves first bringing in the latest Mu2e/Offline master branch, and then merging it with your branch.  Please do NOT perform these steps if there are no conflicts, as the merging process complicates the git history.
<ol>
</li>
<li> In a scratch area it will merge your PR into main and will build your code (prof build only)
  git fetch mu2e master
  <li> It will run several standard fcl scripts; the test passes if the art executable returns a status of 0There are no checks on the output.
  git checkout <development branch name>
  <li> It will run two tests that check that the geometry description has no illegal constructions: the Geant4 surface check and the root overlap check.
  git merge mu2e/master
<li> It also run code formatting and static analysis checks; at this time these are informational only and their recommendations are not enforced.
<li> if the 'git merge master' step has unresolved conflicts, you will need to edit the code to resolve them. There is no formula for this step; you will have to look at the 2 versions of the conflicting code blocks and decide how to best merge both functionalityIf you have questions about the intent of the previously-merged conflicting code, work together with the author of those changes to figure that outYou can figure out who last changed a line in a file using the 'git blame' command.</li>
  <li> It reports how many time it sees the strings "FIXME" or "TODO" in the code in the PR.
  git blame mu2e/master <name of file that has conflicts>
</ol>
<li> Once all conflicts from the merge are resolved, commit the merge and push it back to your forkAfter this, GitHub will allow you to request a pull.</li>
The results of these tests are posted to the PR Conversation page. These tests must pass before your PR will be merged.
  git add <files that were part of resolving conflicts>  
<li> If changes are requested during the code review process, make those on the same development branch as your PR.  When the changes are complete, commit them, and push your changes back to your fork. GitHub will automatically update your PR to include your new commits. This is because the target of a PR is a branch, not the commit that happened to be at the head of the branch at the time of your initial PR</li>
  git remove <any files that need to be removed to resolve conflicts>
<pre>
  git commit -m "Resolve conflicts message" 
  git push origin <development branch name>
<li> If changes are requested during the code review process, make those on the same development branch as your pull request.  When the changes are complete, commit them, and push your changes back to your fork. GitHub will automatically add the new commits to the pull request, so the reviewers and the GitHub record will show them. </li>
   <edit code as requested by reviewer>
   <edit code as requested by reviewer>
   git commit -m "Address review comment X"   
   git commit -m "Address review comment X"  file1 [file2 file3 ...]
   git push origin <development branch name>
   git push origin <development branch name>
<li> When the code reviewers are satisfied, one of the software coordinators will merge the pull into Mu2e/Offline.
</pre>
Once your pull request is merged your changes (commits) will be part of Mu2e/Offline master, and your development branch can be deleted.  If you are uncertain if your branch has been merged or not, select the branch, and push the 'compare' button.  If this comes back stating there is 'nothing to compare to', it means all your changes were already merged.  If it shows differences, those have NOT been merged, so do NOT delete your branch. To delete your branch in GitHub, just push the trash can icon.  You can also delete the branch in your shell, as </li>
<li> When the code reviewers are satisfied, one of the software coordinators will merge the PR into Mu2e/Offline.
Once your PR is merged your changes (commits) will be part of Mu2e/Offline main, and your development branch can be deleted.  If you are uncertain if your branch has been merged or not, select the branch, and push the 'compare' button.  If this comes back stating there is 'nothing to compare to', it means all your changes were already merged.  If it shows differences, those have NOT been merged, so do NOT delete your branch. To delete your branch in GitHub, just push the trash can icon.  You can also delete the branch in your shell, as </li>
<pre>
   git branch -d <my branch name>
   git branch -d <my branch name>
   git push origin --delete <my branch name> (this deletes the branch from your github fork as well)
   git push origin --delete <my branch name> (this deletes the branch from your github fork as well)
<li> To reuse your working directory for a new development, first refresh to the current head of master, then create a new branch as described above.  Do NOT reuse branches for new development, as updating those to the head of Mu2e/Offline master will confuse the git history. </li>
</pre>
   git fetch mu2e master
<li> Every night the head of the main branch is used as input to a series of validation tests; these are similar to the CI tests discussed above; however some of the jobs run many events and the output of these jobs is compared to reference output.  On the morning following the merge of your PR, you may be asked if the nightly validation behaved as you expected.
<li> To reuse your working directory for a new development, first refresh to the current head of main, then create a new branch as described above.  Do NOT reuse branches for new development, as updating those to the head of Mu2e/Offline main will confuse the git history. </li>
<pre>
   git fetch mu2e main
   git checkout -b <new development branch name>
   git checkout -b <new development branch name>
<li> We encourage you to commit your work frequently and push to your github fork frequently; this is the best way to backup your work.  You do NOT need to wait until you are ready for a pull request to push to your fork.
</pre>
<li> We encourage you to commit your work frequently and push to your github fork frequently; this is the best way to backup your work.  You do NOT need to wait until you are ready for a PR request to push to your fork.
</ol>
</ol>


===Adapting your Existing Clones to the New Workflow===
===Tips for Good GitHub Hygiene===


Many of you have existing clones of your own github fork that were created using an older recommended github workflow.  This section discusses how to bring your clone into compliance with the new recommended workflow.  We cannot give an exact script to follow since everyone's local clone is likely to be different; so the following is general guidance:
# Prefer many PRs, each on a self contained topic, instead of a single PR that includes many topics.
 
## Of course, extensive changes are sometimes necessary and will require a single large PR.
# If you have unpushed commits on your local master, see the instructions in the hints section below.
# Within a PR, prefer many commits with a small number of related changes to few commits with many changes each.
# If you have uncommitted changes in your checked out area, commit them to a local development branch that you intend to keep.
# Do not make spurious white space changes or formatting changes; if you want to make such changes, do so in a separate PR that includes only those changes.
## If needed: git stash; create a new development branch starting from the current head; git stash pop.
# Mu2e has coding standards that exclude the use of hard tabs in most places and trailing whitespace. Your PR will be held until these errors are fixed. See [[Editors]]; you can customize your editor's configuration to do this automatically.
# If the old workflow you will have have a local branch named master and a branch named remotes/origin/master.  These come from the master branch of your github fork;  if you still have these branches, delete them.
## You cannot delete the branch that is currently checked out; therefore, to delete your local master you need first to checkout a different branch.
# You must have a branch named remotes/mu2e/master that comes from the Offline repository in the Mu2e github instance; actually the middle "mu2e" in the branch name is just an arbitrary identifier than you can choose but it would be weird to chose anything except mu2e or Mu2e.
# If you have existing development branches that started from something other than mu2e/master, just keep them and proceed as described in the recommended workflow; if you are lucky they will merge cleanly. If not, follow the merge/rebase procedure.
# Start all new development branches with:
  git fetch mu2e master
  git checkout -b <new development branch name>
 
Here are a few hints and reminders of things to watch for:
 
# Use [[Git#What_Remotes_are_Available_in_my_Working_area|git remote -v]] and [[Git#What_branch_is_Tracking_What_Other_Branch.3F | git branch -avv]] to learn what remotes you have and what branches are tracking what other branches.
# If your local master branch has commits on it that you need to keep, then start a new development branch from the head of master.  Just develop on it normally and push it to your fork when you are ready and make a pull request when you are ready for that.  If you are lucky it will merge cleanly; if not follow the merge/rebase procedure.  Once you have created the new development branch you can delete the local master branch.


==Collaborating on a feature==
==Collaborating on a feature==
Line 192: Line 199:
<li>Decide which user's fork will be the primary repo for this feature branch, and which branch on that fork you are going to use. If a new branch is needed, the owner of that fork start the new branch as follows.  First make sure that you have done steps 1 and 2 in  
<li>Decide which user's fork will be the primary repo for this feature branch, and which branch on that fork you are going to use. If a new branch is needed, the owner of that fork start the new branch as follows.  First make sure that you have done steps 1 and 2 in  
[[#Developer_Workflow]].  Then do the following:</li>
[[#Developer_Workflow]].  Then do the following:</li>
   git fetch mu2e master
   git fetch mu2e main
   git checkout --no-track -b <branch name> mu2e/master
   git checkout --no-track -b <branch name> mu2e/main
   git push -u origin <branch name>
   git push -u origin <branch name>
<li>There are then a couple options for moving forward: either add all other developers as collaborators on the primary fork, or use pull requests to the primary fork</li>
<li>There are then a couple options for moving forward: either add all other developers as collaborators on the primary fork, or use pull requests to the primary fork</li>
Line 202: Line 209:
<li>In the collaborators box, type the github user name of each other developer and hit "Add collaborator"</li>
<li>In the collaborators box, type the github user name of each other developer and hit "Add collaborator"</li>
<li>The other collaborators can then either create a read/write access clone of the primary fork, or add it as a remote to an existing offline repo</li>
<li>The other collaborators can then either create a read/write access clone of the primary fork, or add it as a remote to an existing offline repo</li>
  git clone git@github.com:<primary user name>/Offline
  git clone https://github.com/<primary user name>/Offline
or
or
  git remote add primaryfork git@github.com:<primary user name>/Offline
  git remote add primaryfork https://github.com/<primary user name>/Offline
<li>The other collaborators can now push directly to the primary fork as if it was their own:</li>
<li>The other collaborators can now push directly to the primary fork as if it was their own:</li>
  git push primaryfork <branch name>
  git push primaryfork <branch name>
Line 212: Line 219:
<li>The owner of the primary fork can just push to it as normal following the normal developer workflow</li>
<li>The owner of the primary fork can just push to it as normal following the normal developer workflow</li>
<li>Other developers clone their own fork, but add the primary fork as a remote</li>
<li>Other developers clone their own fork, but add the primary fork as a remote</li>
   git remote add primaryfork git@githbub.com:<primary user name>/Offline
   git remote add primaryfork https://githbub.com/<primary user name>/Offline
<li>Other developers can pull in and merge changes from collaborators by fetching/pulling/merging from this remote</li>
<li>Other developers can pull in and merge changes from collaborators by fetching/pulling/merging from this remote</li>
   git fetch primaryfork
   git fetch primaryfork
Line 218: Line 225:
<li>Other developers push to their own fork</li>
<li>Other developers push to their own fork</li>
   git push origin <branch namee>
   git push origin <branch namee>
<li>Like in the normal developer workflow, they open a pull request. But then in the compare window before creating the request, change the "base repository" from mu2e/Offline to <primary user name>/Offline (see [https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-pull-request#changing-the-branch-range-and-destination-repository here])</li>
<li>Like in the normal developer workflow, they open a pull request. But then in the compare window before creating the request, change the "base repository" from Mu2e/Offline to <primary user name>/Offline (see [https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-pull-request#changing-the-branch-range-and-destination-repository here])</li>
<li>the owner of the primary fork will need to accept and merge it in</li>
<li>the owner of the primary fork will need to accept and merge it in</li>
<li>everything else goes like the normal workflow</li>
<li>everything else goes like the normal workflow</li>
</ol>
</ol>
</ol>
</ol>
==Rebasing==
There will be times when want to, or need to, bring your development branch up-to-date with the head of GitHub Mu2e/Offline/main.  One such time is when GitHub reports that your PR has conflicts.  There are two ways to bring your branch up-to-date. This section will discuss the preferred method, rebasing your development branch onto the head of GitHub Mu2e/Offline/main; you should not use the other method, merging the head of GitHub/Mu2e/Offline/main onto your development branch.
You can learn about rebasing in the GitHub documentation:
# [https://git-scm.com/docs/git-rebase git-rebase Documentation]
# [https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing merging vs rebasing].
Until you are comfortable with rebasing we suggest that, before rebasing, you backup your work by making a gzipped tar file of your working area, excluding .so and .os files.
The instructions below presume that your GitHub fork is the remote named "origin" and that the GitHub Mu2e/Offline repo is the remote named "mu2e".  The simplest workflow is:
git checkout <your development branch>
git fetch mu2e main
git rebase mu2e/main
# resolve conflicts if needed; see the [https://git-scm.com/docs/git-rebase git-rebase Documentation] and [[#Tips_For_Resolving_Conflicts]]
git push origin <your development branch>
Note that "fetch" wants whitespace between "mu2e" and "main" but "rebase" needs a slash "/".  You can now put in a pull request on your development branch.
A second option is to keep your development branch as a backup, start a new branch and rebase that branch:
git checkout <your development branch>
git checkout -b <a new development branch>
git fetch mu2e main
git rebase mu2e/main
# resolve conflicts if needed;  see the [https://git-scm.com/docs/git-rebase git-rebase Documentation] and [[#Tips_For_Resolving_Conflicts]]
git push origin <a new development branch>
When this process is complete, you will have two branches in your clone: <your development branch> and <a new development branch>.  If you pushed both branches, they will also be in your GitHub fork of Offline.  You can now create a pull request on <a new development branch>, leaving <your development branch> unchanged.
Chose the second option if it is important to retain the original branch, perhaps because you performed detailed validation using that branch and you wish to preserve the validation work and its source code for future reference.
===Tips For Resolving Conflicts===
When conflicts are identified by a Pull Request it is your responsibility to resolve them before continuing. There is no formula for this step; you will have to look at the 2 versions of the conflicting code blocks and decide how to best merge both functionality.  If you have questions about the intent of the previously-merged conflicting code, work together with the author of those changes to figure that out.  You can figure out who last changed a line in a file using the 'git blame' command.
  git blame mu2e/main <name of file that has conflicts>
When you think you are done, it's a good idea to grep to code to look for unresolved [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7901864/git-conflict-markers conflict markers].  If you make extensive changes during rebasing, it's a good idea to check that the code builds;  normally this is not necessary because the CI tests are there to catch such problems.
Once all conflicts from the merge are resolved, commit the merge and push it back to your fork.  After this, GitHub will allow you to request a pull.
  git add <files that were edited as part of resolving conflicts>
  git remove <any files that need to be removed to resolve conflicts>
  git commit -m "Resolve conflicts message"  file1 [ file2 file3 ... ]
  git push origin <branch name>


==Code Review==
==Code Review==
Line 236: Line 292:
they or the PR author should contact the assigned repo manager to request a substitution.  The Offline repo managers should be alerted if a review becomes stuck for any reason.
they or the PR author should contact the assigned repo manager to request a substitution.  The Offline repo managers should be alerted if a review becomes stuck for any reason.


Reviewers should look at the content of the PR commits for code correctness, good design and efficient implementation.  Reviewers don’t need to build or run the code, that’s for the automated tests.  The github commit differences referenced in the PR are the easiest way to see and review the changes.  Review feedback should be inserted as comments at the relevant lines in the github diff where the reviewer has a concern.  After reviewing all files and commits, reviewers should complete their review using the github interface.  If you feel changes are required submit your review with that box checked.
Reviewers should look at the content of the PR commits for code correctness, good design and efficient implementation.  Reviewers don??t need to build or run the code, that??s for the automated tests.  The github commit differences referenced in the PR are the easiest way to see and review the changes.  Review feedback should be inserted as comments at the relevant lines in the github diff where the reviewer has a concern.  After reviewing all files and commits, reviewers should complete their review using the github interface.  If you feel changes are required submit your review with that box checked.
If you simply have questions submit your review checking the 'neutral' box; this neither approves
If you simply have questions submit your review checking the 'neutral' box; this neither approves
the review or requires changes, it just requires a response on the part of the author.
the review or requires changes, it just requires a response on the part of the author.
Line 243: Line 299:
The repo manager assigned to the PR should merge the PR after all reviewers have approved it.
The repo manager assigned to the PR should merge the PR after all reviewers have approved it.


==I have a branch on Redmine that's not on GitHub! How do I use it now?==
One of the reviewers should check for the following:
 
* All modules, services and tools included in the PR must be upgraded to use validated fhicl.
* Parameters that affect physics performance must not have default values in the code; the recommended values must be specified in the appropriate .fcl files.  Parameters that affect debugging and verbosity may be initialized in code and need not be present in the .fcl files.
 
 
 
==GitHub Pull Request Procedures and FNALbuild==
 
When you open a Pull Request (PR) on the Mu2e/Offline GitHub repository, you will receive a greeting message from @FNALbuild, which is Fermilab's build bot account. @FNALbuild acts as a glue between the GitHub collaborative environment and Jenkins, and is used by the repository maintainers to trigger tests that may be required to pass before your changes are merged. The tests (or continuous integration, CI, actions) currently are a supplement to the existing review process.


The official Mu2e GitHub repo will usually have only the master branch (+ maybe some tagged release branches). Currently Redmine has >100 branches. If you have a Redmine branch that is not merged in to master, you will move this branch to your fork to work on it instead.
'''N.B. buildmaster.fnal.gov links (Jenkins server) can only be accessed via Fermilab onsite VPN.'''


To start, you should read the development workflow and understand remotes and forks, and have a github account and a fork of the Mu2e Offline repo.
'''Accessing log files'''


<ol style="list-style-type:roman">
If you are not connected to VPN, an alternative approach to reading the logs can be used while logged into '''mu2egpvm##''' machines.
<li>Create a local clone of your Offline fork. This will be identical to cloning the official mu2e repo (if your fork is up to date), except that the default remote (called "origin") where you will push to by default will point to your fork instead of the official mu2e version.</li>
 
  git clone git@github.com:<your user name>/Offline
@FNALbuild will provide "Log file." links that can be copied, then the logfiles can be downloaded and viewed in a mu2egpvm SSH session using one of the following:
<li>Add Redmine as a remote to your local clone:</li>
 
  cd Offline
  $ curl -L [paste link] | less
  git remote add redmine http://cdcvs.fnal.gov/projects/mu2eofflinesoftwaremu2eoffline/Offline.git
  $ curl -O [paste link]
<li>Fetch a list of the commits and branches from redmine, and check out whatever branch you need</li>
The second style will copy the log file into your current working directory.
  git fetch redmine
 
  git checkout -b <branch name> redmine/<branch name>
'''Supported commands'''
<li>Push this branch to your fork</li>
 
  git push origin <branch name>
The supported CI actions are listed below.  The first of these is triggered automatically by the creation of a PR. In addition, any CI action can be triggered at any time by posting a command in a comment on a Pull Request.  The '''fnalbuild-users''' GitHub Team indicates which GitHub users in the Mu2e organisation are able to trigger CI actions; some branches have additional users authorized to trigger actions; finally, the requestor of a PR may trigger actions on that PR
<li>You should now be able to see your branch on github.com/<your user name>/Offline. You can now continue working on that branch and pushing to your fork, and when it is ready you can submit a pull request to the main Mu2e repo using the developer workflow</li>
 
'''@FNALbuild run build test [with #[PR], Mu2e/[REPO]#[PR], ...] [without merge]'''
 
In regular use. Merges the PR branch into the current HEAD of the base branch and builds the code, then runs a series of small jobs to check for runtime errors.
 
The extra arguments in square brackets are optional and can be used to modify the behaviour of a test:
 
* '''[with #[PR], Mu2e/[REPO]#[PR], ...]''' tests the current pull request with other pull requests, including those in other Mu2e repositories. This may be useful if one PR depends on another to work correctly.
 
e.g. '''@FNALbuild run build test with #555''' in a Mu2e/Offline pull request will:
 
1. Mu2e/Offline: checkout the base branch (e.g. main) at the current HEAD
 
2. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with PR #555
 
3. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with the PR being tested
 
4. Build the resulting Muse workspace and test the build.
 
e.g. '''@FNALbuild run build test with #555, Mu2e/Production#333'''
 
1. Mu2e/Offline: checkout the base branch (e.g. main) at the current HEAD
 
2. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with Mu2e/Offline PR #555
 
3. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with the PR being tested
 
4. Mu2e/Production: checkout the HEAD of the base branch of Production PR #333
 
5. Mu2e/Production: merge the branch associated with PR #333
 
6. Build the resulting Muse workspace and test the build.
 
'''''Important note about specifying other PR's to test with:''''' Make sure not to use Markdown-formatted links for test-with PR's. If you type or copy/paste "@FNALbuild run build tests with Mu2e/Production#333", Jenkins will include the Production PR correctly. However, if what you actually enter is "@FNALbuild run build tests with [Mu2e/Production#333](https://github.com/Mu2e/Production/pull/333)", GitHub will display this exactly the same as the plain string, but Jenkins will not receive the same data. In that case, your GitHub comment will look the same to you, but Jenkins will not recognize what PR you are trying to test with, will stop the test, and report a confused emoji.
 
* '''[without merge]''' will NOT perform a trial merge of the PR into the HEAD of the base branch. However, this does not test the 'merged result' of the PR, which means that the tests may not detect bugs unforeseen by the author (especially if the branch was created at an old version of Offline and not rebased recently.)
 
e.g. '''@FNALbuild run build test without merge''' in a Mu2e/Offline pull request will:
 
1. Mu2e/Offline: checkout the branch of the PR being tested
 
2. Build the resulting Muse workspace and test the build.
 
'''Default base branch when building workspace:''' If you make a PR to be merged into the '''Mu2eII_SM21''' branch of Offline and do not specify a Production PR to "test with", Jenkins will default to using the Mu2eII_SM21 branch for both Offline and Production when building the workspace for the tests. Similarly, if you make a PR to be merged into the Mu2eII_SM21 branch of Production and do not specify an Offline PR to test with, Jenkins will default to using the Mu2eII_SM21 branch for both Offline and Production when building the workspace for the tests. Otherwise, the default branch when building the workspace is '''main'''.
 
 
'''@FNALbuild run code checks'''
 
Currently not in use. Checks the files that were changed by a PR for trailing whitespace and hard tabs - fails if modifications are needed. FNALbuild will provide a patch to fix these problems, if any.
 
This is not an integration test - it only tests the PR branch as-is.
 
 
'''@FNALbuild run validation'''
 
Not in regular use. Pulls the built code from a build test and runs a validation job (ceSimReco) over 5000 events, and produces validation plots.
Builds, or pulls a cached build of main (not containing any PR changes) and runs the same validation job, producing plots.
Runs valCompare between the two sets of plots, and produces a comparison which is published on the PR in a comment.
 
The Jenkins jobs that run the tests are located [https://buildmaster.fnal.gov/buildmaster/view/mu2e/job/GitHubPRTests/ here]
 
 
'''Where the code is stored'''
 
The scripts that are run to test a PR are kept on GitHub in [https://github.com/Mu2e/codetools/tree/master/bin/github/jenkins_tests Mu2e/codetools].
 
The FNALbuild handler scripts are kept [https://github.com/Mu2e/CI here]. Information about this repo and how it is maintained can be found at [[Github CI Maintenance|Github_CI_Maintenance]].
 
The Mu2e version of this bot was based on and re-written using the original process_pr.py script from FNALbuild/cms-bot:
 
* '''process_pr.py''': Where everything happens. given a PR, process all comments and figure out which tests to trigger based on those comments.
* '''comment_gh_pr.py''': this is called from the Jenkins jobs to post a comment on the PR when the result of a test has been determined, or when the status of a test has changed e.g. it is running.
* '''test_suites.py''': some configuration variables to set up the regular expressions that are used to search for commands that trigger tests.
* '''watchers.yaml''': Users may add themselves to this to 'watch' a specific folder in Offline for changes, such that they are notified when someone wishes to change it. Regex is supported.
* '''auth_teams.yaml''': Configuration file of which GitHub teams are able to launch CI actions on a base branch.
 
==If Your PR requires an Updated UPS product ==
 
Sometimes you will be working on a PR and simultaneously be working on a UPS product that is external to Offline, perhaps KinKal or mu2e_artdaq_core.  When you do this, please follow the steps below before submitting a PR on your work
 
# The PR author should work with the maintainer of the external product to produce a new tag.
# The author should prepare a new pnnn file (unnn while you are testing in your own muse working area).
# If your working area is far enough behind the the head of Offline/main that it uses a different envset, then merge Offline/main into your working branch, and update your unnn file. Then test and iterate until it works.
# The author should tell the build and release manager about the new tag of the external product and the new pnnn file.
# The build and release manager should build and install the new product version in cvmfs; and also install the new pnnn file in cvmfs.
# After this is done, the PR author can submit their PR.
# Iterate until the CI passes.
# The PR can now be reviewed and, eventually. merged.
# After the PR is approved, the build and release manager can add the new pnnn file to the muse repo.
==Tips and Tricks==
 
===Branch prompt===
 
Many people work in a style where they are switching between branches frequently, and everyone does this switch at times.  You can put the branch name in your prompt so you are unlikely to get confused about what branch you are on.
 
In .bash_profile:
<pre>
parse_git_branch() {
    git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -e '/^[^*]/d' -e 's/* (.*)/(1)/'
}
 
export PS1="\h \w $(parse_git_branch) "
</pre>
 
===Finding deleted files===
 
As a policy we have decided to not keep code that does not compile.  Some code may be useful as examples or to revive an abandoned effort, so we should be able to recover them.  Here are three methods:
<ol>
<li>grep the release notes </li>
grep mystring ReleaseNotes/*/*
<li>if you know the file name, look at its history</li>
git log myfile
<li>search git history. The following git command will list every commit that contained the
deletion of a a file and it will list the names of all files deleted in that commit:</li>
git log --diff-filter=D --summary
and can be pipe do to grep
</ol>
</ol>
Once you find the file name, you can check it out based on the commit that deleted it.
git checkout <deleting_commit>^ -- <file_path>
If you are deleting non-trivial files, please note the full file paths in the releases notes.
===What branch is Tracking What Other Branch?===
<pre>
git branch -avv
</pre>
will show a list of all branches in your working area, both local and remote braches.  The additional information provided by -vv is:
# The SHA of the commit at the head of the branch
# The comment text associcated with that commit
# If the branch is tracking another, there is a notation of the form [branch name] between items 1 and 2.
In the example below the local branch main is tracking Mu2e/main.
<pre>
* work                            9e5e9f0 Merge pull request #152 from goodenou/MT_fcl_fix
  main                          9e5e9f0 [Mu2e/main] Merge pull request #152 from goodenou/MT_fcl_fix
  remotes/Mu2e/MDC2018            7da9814 Merge pull request #74 from gianipez/trkTrig1
  remotes/Mu2e/main              9e5e9f0 Merge pull request #152 from goodenou/MT_fcl_fix
  remotes/origin/HEAD              -> origin/main
  remotes/origin/MDC2018          7da9814 Merge pull request #74 from gianipez/trkTrig1
  remotes/origin/bfield_xyzvec_1  8207ed0 Add accessor that uses XYZVec for input argument and return value.
  remotes/origin/branch_with_error 7b70a3e Deliberate error in order to see how CMS-BOT behaves with an error.
  remotes/origin/main            26bb554 Merge pull request #1 from Mu2e/main
</pre>
===What Remotes are Available in my Working area===
<pre>
git remote -v
</pre>
Combined with git branch -avv this allows you to determine which remote branches are attached to which remote repositories.
===Long commit histories===
[https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16306012/github-pull-request-showing-commits-that-are-already-in-target-branch avoid] posting long commit histories
===Commits on local branch not on main===
Show commits from head of branch MyBranch down to the main branch
git log MyBranch --not mu2e/main
===Looking at the Merge History===
So long as we only modify main by merging in pull requests, the following procedure will allow us to find the state main at an arbitrary time in the past.  The procedure is robust against people merging main into their working branches.
This information is taken from:
[https://stackoverflow.com/questions/21623699/is-it-possible-to-get-a-list-of-merges-into-a-branch-from-the-github-website-or] and I made a few small modifications in the details of the printout.
The following git command will list all merge commits of merges into main and print some information about each.
<pre>
git log --merges --first-parent main --pretty=format:"%h %<(10,trunc)%ae %C(yellow)%<(15)%aI%Creset %C(red bold)%<(15)%D%Creset %s"
</pre>
The result on the morning of Jan 29, 2020 looks like:
<pre>
f6bdbaebc kutschke.. 2020-01-28T14:33:45-06:00 HEAD -> main, tag: v08_02_01, Mu2e/main Merge pull request #125 from goodenou/art3_MT
651cf9425 kutschke.. 2020-01-28T14:31:30-06:00 tag: v08_02_00  Merge pull request #124 from resnegfk/g4105
14eeda454 kutschke.. 2020-01-25T17:27:40-06:00 tag: v08_01_00  Merge pull request #123 from ryuwd/refactor-useprodTracker
ae02fa010 kutschke.. 2020-01-24T13:32:14-06:00                Merge pull request #121 from resnegfk/g4stepper
2c1fd533c Dave_Bro.. 2020-01-23T17:25:06-08:00                Merge pull request #122 from bonventre/reflections
040a6fd0d kutschke.. 2020-01-22T20:31:50-06:00                Merge pull request #120 from brownd1978/schema1
</pre>
The color information was removed by the shell when I captured the output.  If you run the command yourself you will see the coloring.
===About Reverting Commits===
If you revert a commit and, at a later date, wish to reapply the same commit, you need to take a few extra steps.  The simple obvious method won't work.  To learn how to do this, see [https://www.datree.io/resources/git-undo-merge].
===About Reverting Merges===
This is messy; see [https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/Documentation/howto/revert-a-faulty-merge.txt].  The short version is
# Revert the merge commit.
# Keep working on the originally-merged branch.
# When the updated branch is ready to remerge then
## revert-the-revert
## re-merge the updated branch.
The recommendation from the GitHub docs is:
''Reverting a merge commit declares that you will never want the tree changes brought in by the merge. As a result, later merges will only bring in tree changes introduced by commits that are not ancestors of the previously reverted merge.''
Thus, if there is anything of value in the commits that were merged then you should NOT revert the merge
===Listing all of the Repos in the Mu2e Organization===
This unix command will list all of the public repos in the Mu2e Organization:
  curl  https://api.github.com/orgs/Mu2e/repos?per_page=100 > public_repos.txt
The default for per_page is 30; as of Jan 2023 we have 44 public repos.  To see all of the private repos visit the url:
  https://github.com/orgs/Mu2e/repositories?q=&type=private&language=&sort=
There may be a way to provide credentials to the curl command so that you can list private repos from the command line.  See:
  https://docs.github.com/en/rest/repos/repos?apiVersion=2022-11-28#list-organization-repositories
You can do the same for a user, not an organization.  For example,
  curl -O  https://api.github.com/users/kutschke/repos?per_page=100 > public_repos.txt
Note the change in the url from /orgs/ to /users/.

Latest revision as of 17:02, 22 July 2024

Introduction

The primary source code management system for the Mu2e Offline software is a git repository. Git is a popular open-source software version control system. Based on the git repository's url, you can check out code, and, if you are a code developer, check in modifications. Git also has capabilities for tagging code, tracking history and supports splitting off and merging development branches, among many other features. A general description and tips about using Git are on the git introduction page.

Our main code repositories are stored on the commercial hosting site GitHub. The Mu2e computing group manages the github Mu2e organization. Most Mu2e repositories are public (visible to all GitHub users and the larger web), some are restricted to Mu2e organization members, per the Mu2e software policy.

Make your Own GitHub Account and Join the Mu2e GitHub Organization

Most of the repositories in the Mu2e GitHub organization are publicly readable but some are private. To be a full participant in the Mu2e computing effort, you will need to create and GitHub account and ask that your account be invited to join the Mu2e GitHub organization. If you don't already have one, you can create an account at github.com. You can use whatever username you would like for your account. If you are not a FNAL employee, do not use your fnal.gov email as your primary email; if you do, messages from GitHub activity may be blocked. Once you have an account, you can request to join the Mu2e organization by sending an email to mu2e-hn-helpbug@listserv.fnal.gov. In the email please tell us who you are and which Mu2e institution you are with; and tell us your github username. mu2e-hn-helpbug is one of the Mu2e hypernews forums. You must send this email from the email account that is registered in the mu2emailing listserv.

Once you have an account, you can configure it according to your personal preferences by selecting the 'Settings' menu under you account. For instance, under that menu you can configure GitHub to send you email notifications when code you are currently working with changes or has change requests made against it. You can also or provide a picture or icon for your account. We would very much appreciate it if you add enough identifying information to your GitHub account's public page that your colleagues can figure who you are.

Workflows

There are two supported git workflows for use with the Mu2e Offline code in GitHub, one for regular users and one for developers. A list of requirements follows.

  1. To execute either of these workflows make sure you have defined the Mu2e environment by executing mu2einit in your shell. This ensures that you have known version of git.
  2. To execute the developer workflow, your GitHub Id must be added to the Mu2e GitHub organization (https://github.com/orgs/Mu2e/people). If it's not already there, please request this from the computing coordinator.
  3. In order to authenticate with github, you will need to set up your ssh keys on the machine from which you plan to clone/push, following the instructions here.
    • Password based authentication on GitHub is now deprecated and is scheduled to be disabled soon, as described here.
  4. Before you do any developing, go to your GitHub account and create your own fork of the official Mu2e Offline repo using the GitHub web interface (instructions here).

The main Mu2e repository is 'Offline', which contains the algorithms, data structures, art modules and configuration used in simulation production, online filtering, offline reconstruction, and other tasks. The main development branch within Offline is 'main', which should be used for all code development. Offline also contains legacy branches associated with particular data sets, which are maintained for a limited time after the main branch has been developed past those data, as described in the table below.

Mue2/Offline branches
branch name branch purpose support end date
main development end of Mu2e
MDC2018 MDC2018 dataset support end of 2020
Mu2eII_SM21 Mu2eII code for Snowmass end of 2022

Some additional smaller repositories important to Mu2e are in the Fermilab redmine git server.

Authentication

If you are asking for readonly access to a public repository, such as Mu2e Offline and most other Mu2e repositories, you do not need to authenticate yourself to GitHub. For getting started with Mu2e, this is all you need to know; just follow the instructions. You should also recognize two styles of clone urls:

https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline 
git@github.com:Mu2e/Offline

The first style gives unauthenticated readonly access to public repositories; the second style requires that you authenticate to GitHub.

There are two important cases in which you will need to authenticate to GitHub: to write to your own GitHub fork and to read the few Mu2e repositories that have access restricted to Mu2e members. You will never write directly to the Mu2e GitHub repositories. We recommend that you establish authentication to GitHub using ssh keys and all GitHub examples on the Mu2e wiki assume that you have done so. You may delay this step until it is needed. The page Authenticating to GitHub has instructions. Remember that based authentication to GitHub will be disabled in the near future.

Downloading Offline as a user and NOT a developer

Option 1: you want the default primary version of the code (most people):

  1. clone the repo:
  2. git clone https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline cd Offline
  3. Done!

Option 2: A particular collaborator has a version or branch you want to use:

  1. Find their github user name
  2. Learn the name of the branch they are working on; this may be main but it normally should not be.
  3. Clone their fork:
  4. git clone https://github.com/<their GitHub user name>/Offline cd Offline git checkout origin/<branch name>
  5. Done!

Option 3: You want to checkout and build only a part of the Offline repo
This partial checkout allows you to build only a small part of the Offline repo with this local part overriding the rest of the Offline build coming from a complete backing build. This procedure is part of the Muse multi-repo build system. Please see those instructions.

Developer Workflow

This section assumes basic familiarity with git, including:


  1. Create your own fork of the official Mu2e Offline repo using the GitHub web interface (instructions here).
    • This fork will be your personal sandbox on GitHub; you can do anything you want to it and it will have no effect on anyone else!
    • You only need to do this once; you can reuse this fork for all your development projects.
  2. On your development machine, create a local clone of your Offline fork. This is another step that you only need to do once and you can use this local clone for multiple development projects in you want to. When you push code to another repository, the default will be to push to your fork; you will never push code directly to the GitHub Mu2e/Offline repository.
  3. mu2einit
    git clone git@github.com:<your GitHub username>/Offline
    cd Offline
    git remote add -f mu2e https://github.com/Mu2e/Offline
    
  4. The above steps will create a local clone of your fork of the Offline repository with the following properties:
    • There are two remotes: your fork (origin), and mu2e.
    • All of the branches from your fork and from Ofline will be visible as remote branches
    • The only local branch will be the HEAD branch (usually main) of your local fork.
    • The checked out local branch will be the HEAD of your local fork.
    • You can inspect the status of remotes and branches using git remote -v and git branch -avv.
    • In general the head of the main branch of your local fork will be out of date; you should never work from this branch. Therefore you must do the next step before you can begin development work.

    Optionally, the same local repo can be setup as a partial checkout, with a small part of the repo being built locally, which can save build time. This procedure is provided by mgit, part of the Muse multi-repo build system, after understanding the concepts and procedures here, please see those instructions. With a partial checkout, you can still commit and push normally.

  5. Make a new local branch on which to do your development work.
    • If two or more development efforts are not intrinsically coupled, each should be done on its own branch.
    • This branch is local to your clone, so has no impact on the main Offline; when you push it, it will be to your fork. Therefore it has on effect on the GitHub Mu2e version of Offline.
    • The branch name is used for sharing your development work with other people while it is still in progress, and for making your pull request, but has no special meaning to git. Choose a name that will be meaningful.
      git checkout --no-track -b <development branch name> mu2e/main
    
  6. Do your work and commit it.
  7. git commit -m "brief comment describing the changes you are committing" file1 [ file2 file3 .... ]
  8. When you wish to back up your work, or share your work with others, push your branch to your GitHub fork. If you are working on a disk that his not backed up, such as /mu2e/app, we encourage you to push frequently in order to backup your work:
  9.   git push -u origin <development branch name>
    

    The -u option tells git that your local branch should track the branch in your fork. If you push the branch again, the -u option is not needed but it won't hurt if it is present. You can use git branch -avv to see that your development branch is now tracking the version of itself in your github fork and your local clone.

  10. When your development is complete and tested, go to the web site of your GitHub fork and, using the GUI, request that your branch be pulled into Mu2e/Offline. Your pull request (PR) will start the code review process (see Code Review), which may take anywhere from a few hours to a few days.
    1. In a web browser, open https://github.com/<your GitHub user name>/Offline
    2. Click on the icon that shows all branches
    3. Click on the 'New pull request' button associated with your development branch
    4. There will be an informational message near the top of the page saying if your branch is "Able to merge" or if conflicts exist.
    5. After conflicts, if any, are resolved, fill requested information and click the "Create Pull Request" button.
    6. More info is available at the GitHub instructions for Pull Requests
  11. After you submit your PR, GitHub will automatically start a Continuous Integration (CI), which includes:
    1. In a scratch area it will merge your PR into main and will build your code (prof build only)
    2. It will run several standard fcl scripts; the test passes if the art executable returns a status of 0. There are no checks on the output.
    3. It will run two tests that check that the geometry description has no illegal constructions: the Geant4 surface check and the root overlap check.
    4. It also run code formatting and static analysis checks; at this time these are informational only and their recommendations are not enforced.
    5. It reports how many time it sees the strings "FIXME" or "TODO" in the code in the PR.

    The results of these tests are posted to the PR Conversation page. These tests must pass before your PR will be merged.

  12. If changes are requested during the code review process, make those on the same development branch as your PR. When the changes are complete, commit them, and push your changes back to your fork. GitHub will automatically update your PR to include your new commits. This is because the target of a PR is a branch, not the commit that happened to be at the head of the branch at the time of your initial PR
  13.   <edit code as requested by reviewer>
      git commit -m "Address review comment X"  file1 [file2 file3 ...] 
      git push origin <development branch name>
    
  14. When the code reviewers are satisfied, one of the software coordinators will merge the PR into Mu2e/Offline. Once your PR is merged your changes (commits) will be part of Mu2e/Offline main, and your development branch can be deleted. If you are uncertain if your branch has been merged or not, select the branch, and push the 'compare' button. If this comes back stating there is 'nothing to compare to', it means all your changes were already merged. If it shows differences, those have NOT been merged, so do NOT delete your branch. To delete your branch in GitHub, just push the trash can icon. You can also delete the branch in your shell, as
  15.   git branch -d <my branch name>
      git push origin --delete <my branch name> (this deletes the branch from your github fork as well)
    
  16. Every night the head of the main branch is used as input to a series of validation tests; these are similar to the CI tests discussed above; however some of the jobs run many events and the output of these jobs is compared to reference output. On the morning following the merge of your PR, you may be asked if the nightly validation behaved as you expected.
  17. To reuse your working directory for a new development, first refresh to the current head of main, then create a new branch as described above. Do NOT reuse branches for new development, as updating those to the head of Mu2e/Offline main will confuse the git history.
  18.   git fetch mu2e main
      git checkout -b <new development branch name>
    
  19. We encourage you to commit your work frequently and push to your github fork frequently; this is the best way to backup your work. You do NOT need to wait until you are ready for a PR request to push to your fork.

Tips for Good GitHub Hygiene

  1. Prefer many PRs, each on a self contained topic, instead of a single PR that includes many topics.
    1. Of course, extensive changes are sometimes necessary and will require a single large PR.
  2. Within a PR, prefer many commits with a small number of related changes to few commits with many changes each.
  3. Do not make spurious white space changes or formatting changes; if you want to make such changes, do so in a separate PR that includes only those changes.
  4. Mu2e has coding standards that exclude the use of hard tabs in most places and trailing whitespace. Your PR will be held until these errors are fixed. See Editors; you can customize your editor's configuration to do this automatically.

Collaborating on a feature

Sometimes you may want to collaborate on a feature branch with other developers. In this case since the main Offline repository no longer has all the development branches we need to do a couple extra steps

  1. First make sure you actually need to work on the same branch. Are you actually working on the same feature? Can the problem be split into smaller features that can be developed asynchronously? Just because features are related doesn't mean they need to be developed on the same branch
  2. Determine if a large number of people will be developing on the same branch for a significant amount of time. In this case it should become an official branch in the mu2e/Offline, like MDC2018
  3. Decide which user's fork will be the primary repo for this feature branch, and which branch on that fork you are going to use. If a new branch is needed, the owner of that fork start the new branch as follows. First make sure that you have done steps 1 and 2 in #Developer_Workflow. Then do the following:
  4. git fetch mu2e main git checkout --no-track -b <branch name> mu2e/main git push -u origin <branch name>
  5. There are then a couple options for moving forward: either add all other developers as collaborators on the primary fork, or use pull requests to the primary fork
  6. To add developers as collaborators:
    1. The owner of the primary fork opens https://github.com/<their user name>/Offline
    2. click settings on the right, then collaborators
    3. In the collaborators box, type the github user name of each other developer and hit "Add collaborator"
    4. The other collaborators can then either create a read/write access clone of the primary fork, or add it as a remote to an existing offline repo
    5. git clone https://github.com/<primary user name>/Offline or git remote add primaryfork https://github.com/<primary user name>/Offline
    6. The other collaborators can now push directly to the primary fork as if it was their own:
    7. git push primaryfork <branch name>
  7. To use pull requests:
    1. The owner of the primary fork can just push to it as normal following the normal developer workflow
    2. Other developers clone their own fork, but add the primary fork as a remote
    3. git remote add primaryfork https://githbub.com/<primary user name>/Offline
    4. Other developers can pull in and merge changes from collaborators by fetching/pulling/merging from this remote
    5. git fetch primaryfork git merge primaryfork/<branch name>
    6. Other developers push to their own fork
    7. git push origin <branch namee>
    8. Like in the normal developer workflow, they open a pull request. But then in the compare window before creating the request, change the "base repository" from Mu2e/Offline to <primary user name>/Offline (see here)
    9. the owner of the primary fork will need to accept and merge it in
    10. everything else goes like the normal workflow

Rebasing

There will be times when want to, or need to, bring your development branch up-to-date with the head of GitHub Mu2e/Offline/main. One such time is when GitHub reports that your PR has conflicts. There are two ways to bring your branch up-to-date. This section will discuss the preferred method, rebasing your development branch onto the head of GitHub Mu2e/Offline/main; you should not use the other method, merging the head of GitHub/Mu2e/Offline/main onto your development branch.

You can learn about rebasing in the GitHub documentation:

  1. git-rebase Documentation
  2. merging vs rebasing.

Until you are comfortable with rebasing we suggest that, before rebasing, you backup your work by making a gzipped tar file of your working area, excluding .so and .os files.

The instructions below presume that your GitHub fork is the remote named "origin" and that the GitHub Mu2e/Offline repo is the remote named "mu2e". The simplest workflow is:

git checkout <your development branch>
git fetch mu2e main
git rebase mu2e/main
# resolve conflicts if needed; see the git-rebase Documentation and #Tips_For_Resolving_Conflicts
git push origin <your development branch>

Note that "fetch" wants whitespace between "mu2e" and "main" but "rebase" needs a slash "/". You can now put in a pull request on your development branch.

A second option is to keep your development branch as a backup, start a new branch and rebase that branch:

git checkout <your development branch>
git checkout -b <a new development branch> 
git fetch mu2e main
git rebase mu2e/main
# resolve conflicts if needed;  see the git-rebase Documentation and #Tips_For_Resolving_Conflicts
git push origin <a new development branch>

When this process is complete, you will have two branches in your clone: <your development branch> and <a new development branch>. If you pushed both branches, they will also be in your GitHub fork of Offline. You can now create a pull request on <a new development branch>, leaving <your development branch> unchanged.

Chose the second option if it is important to retain the original branch, perhaps because you performed detailed validation using that branch and you wish to preserve the validation work and its source code for future reference.


Tips For Resolving Conflicts

When conflicts are identified by a Pull Request it is your responsibility to resolve them before continuing. There is no formula for this step; you will have to look at the 2 versions of the conflicting code blocks and decide how to best merge both functionality. If you have questions about the intent of the previously-merged conflicting code, work together with the author of those changes to figure that out. You can figure out who last changed a line in a file using the 'git blame' command.

 git blame mu2e/main <name of file that has conflicts>

When you think you are done, it's a good idea to grep to code to look for unresolved conflict markers. If you make extensive changes during rebasing, it's a good idea to check that the code builds; normally this is not necessary because the CI tests are there to catch such problems.

Once all conflicts from the merge are resolved, commit the merge and push it back to your fork. After this, GitHub will allow you to request a pull.

 git add <files that were edited as part of resolving conflicts> 
 git remove <any files that need to be removed to resolve conflicts> 
 git commit -m "Resolve conflicts message"  file1 [ file2 file3 ... ]
 git push origin <branch name>

Code Review

An important part of the GitHub workflow is reviewing new code before putting it back into the repository. Reviews are intended to minimize the risk that the requested changes break anything, check that the content of the changes are sensible, and enforce Mu2e coding standards and policies. Some reviews are automated, such as testing that the code builds and can run a few events of some standard apps. Automated code formatting checks will also be deployed soon.

Offline repo managers are responsible for assigning reviewers to each Pull Request (PR), as well as a manager in charge of each particular PR. The PR author may also assign or suggest reviewers. All assigned reviewers must approve the PR before the assigned manager will merge it in.

PRs can cover multiple subject areas. Reviewers should concentrate on reviewing code in areas in which they have personal expertise and/or subject knowledge. Reviewers are not expected to learn about areas outside their experience, as other reviewers will cover those. If you feel you were incorrectly assigned to a review, contact the repo manager assigned to the PR to request clarification or to be removed as reviewer. Reviewers should attempt to complete their reviews within a few days. Large PRs may take longer to review, and PR authors should plan accordingly. If an assigned reviewer is unavailable, they or the PR author should contact the assigned repo manager to request a substitution. The Offline repo managers should be alerted if a review becomes stuck for any reason.

Reviewers should look at the content of the PR commits for code correctness, good design and efficient implementation. Reviewers don??t need to build or run the code, that??s for the automated tests. The github commit differences referenced in the PR are the easiest way to see and review the changes. Review feedback should be inserted as comments at the relevant lines in the github diff where the reviewer has a concern. After reviewing all files and commits, reviewers should complete their review using the github interface. If you feel changes are required submit your review with that box checked. If you simply have questions submit your review checking the 'neutral' box; this neither approves the review or requires changes, it just requires a response on the part of the author. PR requesters should respond to all review comments or questions in the PR thread and/or by making a new commit inside the PR. Once all the reviewer's concerns and questions have been addressed, the reviewer should re-submit their review checking the 'approved' box. The repo manager assigned to the PR should merge the PR after all reviewers have approved it.

One of the reviewers should check for the following:

  • All modules, services and tools included in the PR must be upgraded to use validated fhicl.
  • Parameters that affect physics performance must not have default values in the code; the recommended values must be specified in the appropriate .fcl files. Parameters that affect debugging and verbosity may be initialized in code and need not be present in the .fcl files.


GitHub Pull Request Procedures and FNALbuild

When you open a Pull Request (PR) on the Mu2e/Offline GitHub repository, you will receive a greeting message from @FNALbuild, which is Fermilab's build bot account. @FNALbuild acts as a glue between the GitHub collaborative environment and Jenkins, and is used by the repository maintainers to trigger tests that may be required to pass before your changes are merged. The tests (or continuous integration, CI, actions) currently are a supplement to the existing review process.

N.B. buildmaster.fnal.gov links (Jenkins server) can only be accessed via Fermilab onsite VPN.

Accessing log files

If you are not connected to VPN, an alternative approach to reading the logs can be used while logged into mu2egpvm## machines.

@FNALbuild will provide "Log file." links that can be copied, then the logfiles can be downloaded and viewed in a mu2egpvm SSH session using one of the following:

  $ curl -L [paste link] | less
  $ curl -O [paste link]

The second style will copy the log file into your current working directory.

Supported commands

The supported CI actions are listed below. The first of these is triggered automatically by the creation of a PR. In addition, any CI action can be triggered at any time by posting a command in a comment on a Pull Request. The fnalbuild-users GitHub Team indicates which GitHub users in the Mu2e organisation are able to trigger CI actions; some branches have additional users authorized to trigger actions; finally, the requestor of a PR may trigger actions on that PR

@FNALbuild run build test [with #[PR], Mu2e/[REPO]#[PR], ...] [without merge]

In regular use. Merges the PR branch into the current HEAD of the base branch and builds the code, then runs a series of small jobs to check for runtime errors.

The extra arguments in square brackets are optional and can be used to modify the behaviour of a test:

  • [with #[PR], Mu2e/[REPO]#[PR], ...] tests the current pull request with other pull requests, including those in other Mu2e repositories. This may be useful if one PR depends on another to work correctly.

e.g. @FNALbuild run build test with #555 in a Mu2e/Offline pull request will:

1. Mu2e/Offline: checkout the base branch (e.g. main) at the current HEAD

2. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with PR #555

3. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with the PR being tested

4. Build the resulting Muse workspace and test the build.

e.g. @FNALbuild run build test with #555, Mu2e/Production#333

1. Mu2e/Offline: checkout the base branch (e.g. main) at the current HEAD

2. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with Mu2e/Offline PR #555

3. Mu2e/Offline: merge the branch associated with the PR being tested

4. Mu2e/Production: checkout the HEAD of the base branch of Production PR #333

5. Mu2e/Production: merge the branch associated with PR #333

6. Build the resulting Muse workspace and test the build.

Important note about specifying other PR's to test with: Make sure not to use Markdown-formatted links for test-with PR's. If you type or copy/paste "@FNALbuild run build tests with Mu2e/Production#333", Jenkins will include the Production PR correctly. However, if what you actually enter is "@FNALbuild run build tests with [Mu2e/Production#333](https://github.com/Mu2e/Production/pull/333)", GitHub will display this exactly the same as the plain string, but Jenkins will not receive the same data. In that case, your GitHub comment will look the same to you, but Jenkins will not recognize what PR you are trying to test with, will stop the test, and report a confused emoji.

  • [without merge] will NOT perform a trial merge of the PR into the HEAD of the base branch. However, this does not test the 'merged result' of the PR, which means that the tests may not detect bugs unforeseen by the author (especially if the branch was created at an old version of Offline and not rebased recently.)

e.g. @FNALbuild run build test without merge in a Mu2e/Offline pull request will:

1. Mu2e/Offline: checkout the branch of the PR being tested

2. Build the resulting Muse workspace and test the build.

Default base branch when building workspace: If you make a PR to be merged into the Mu2eII_SM21 branch of Offline and do not specify a Production PR to "test with", Jenkins will default to using the Mu2eII_SM21 branch for both Offline and Production when building the workspace for the tests. Similarly, if you make a PR to be merged into the Mu2eII_SM21 branch of Production and do not specify an Offline PR to test with, Jenkins will default to using the Mu2eII_SM21 branch for both Offline and Production when building the workspace for the tests. Otherwise, the default branch when building the workspace is main.


@FNALbuild run code checks

Currently not in use. Checks the files that were changed by a PR for trailing whitespace and hard tabs - fails if modifications are needed. FNALbuild will provide a patch to fix these problems, if any.

This is not an integration test - it only tests the PR branch as-is.


@FNALbuild run validation

Not in regular use. Pulls the built code from a build test and runs a validation job (ceSimReco) over 5000 events, and produces validation plots. Builds, or pulls a cached build of main (not containing any PR changes) and runs the same validation job, producing plots. Runs valCompare between the two sets of plots, and produces a comparison which is published on the PR in a comment.

The Jenkins jobs that run the tests are located here


Where the code is stored

The scripts that are run to test a PR are kept on GitHub in Mu2e/codetools.

The FNALbuild handler scripts are kept here. Information about this repo and how it is maintained can be found at Github_CI_Maintenance.

The Mu2e version of this bot was based on and re-written using the original process_pr.py script from FNALbuild/cms-bot:

  • process_pr.py: Where everything happens. given a PR, process all comments and figure out which tests to trigger based on those comments.
  • comment_gh_pr.py: this is called from the Jenkins jobs to post a comment on the PR when the result of a test has been determined, or when the status of a test has changed e.g. it is running.
  • test_suites.py: some configuration variables to set up the regular expressions that are used to search for commands that trigger tests.
  • watchers.yaml: Users may add themselves to this to 'watch' a specific folder in Offline for changes, such that they are notified when someone wishes to change it. Regex is supported.
  • auth_teams.yaml: Configuration file of which GitHub teams are able to launch CI actions on a base branch.

If Your PR requires an Updated UPS product

Sometimes you will be working on a PR and simultaneously be working on a UPS product that is external to Offline, perhaps KinKal or mu2e_artdaq_core. When you do this, please follow the steps below before submitting a PR on your work

  1. The PR author should work with the maintainer of the external product to produce a new tag.
  2. The author should prepare a new pnnn file (unnn while you are testing in your own muse working area).
  3. If your working area is far enough behind the the head of Offline/main that it uses a different envset, then merge Offline/main into your working branch, and update your unnn file. Then test and iterate until it works.
  4. The author should tell the build and release manager about the new tag of the external product and the new pnnn file.
  5. The build and release manager should build and install the new product version in cvmfs; and also install the new pnnn file in cvmfs.
  6. After this is done, the PR author can submit their PR.
  7. Iterate until the CI passes.
  8. The PR can now be reviewed and, eventually. merged.
  9. After the PR is approved, the build and release manager can add the new pnnn file to the muse repo.

Tips and Tricks

Branch prompt

Many people work in a style where they are switching between branches frequently, and everyone does this switch at times. You can put the branch name in your prompt so you are unlikely to get confused about what branch you are on.

In .bash_profile:

parse_git_branch() {
    git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -e '/^[^*]/d' -e 's/* (.*)/(1)/'
}

export PS1="\h \w $(parse_git_branch) "

Finding deleted files

As a policy we have decided to not keep code that does not compile. Some code may be useful as examples or to revive an abandoned effort, so we should be able to recover them. Here are three methods:

  1. grep the release notes
  2. grep mystring ReleaseNotes/*/*
  3. if you know the file name, look at its history
  4. git log myfile
  5. search git history. The following git command will list every commit that contained the deletion of a a file and it will list the names of all files deleted in that commit:
  6. git log --diff-filter=D --summary and can be pipe do to grep

Once you find the file name, you can check it out based on the commit that deleted it.

git checkout <deleting_commit>^ -- <file_path>

If you are deleting non-trivial files, please note the full file paths in the releases notes.

What branch is Tracking What Other Branch?

 git branch -avv

will show a list of all branches in your working area, both local and remote braches. The additional information provided by -vv is:

  1. The SHA of the commit at the head of the branch
  2. The comment text associcated with that commit
  3. If the branch is tracking another, there is a notation of the form [branch name] between items 1 and 2.

In the example below the local branch main is tracking Mu2e/main.

* work                             9e5e9f0 Merge pull request #152 from goodenou/MT_fcl_fix
  main                           9e5e9f0 [Mu2e/main] Merge pull request #152 from goodenou/MT_fcl_fix
  remotes/Mu2e/MDC2018             7da9814 Merge pull request #74 from gianipez/trkTrig1
  remotes/Mu2e/main              9e5e9f0 Merge pull request #152 from goodenou/MT_fcl_fix
  remotes/origin/HEAD              -> origin/main
  remotes/origin/MDC2018           7da9814 Merge pull request #74 from gianipez/trkTrig1
  remotes/origin/bfield_xyzvec_1   8207ed0 Add accessor that uses XYZVec for input argument and return value.
  remotes/origin/branch_with_error 7b70a3e Deliberate error in order to see how CMS-BOT behaves with an error.
  remotes/origin/main            26bb554 Merge pull request #1 from Mu2e/main

What Remotes are Available in my Working area

 git remote -v

Combined with git branch -avv this allows you to determine which remote branches are attached to which remote repositories.

Long commit histories

avoid posting long commit histories


Commits on local branch not on main

Show commits from head of branch MyBranch down to the main branch

git log MyBranch --not mu2e/main


Looking at the Merge History

So long as we only modify main by merging in pull requests, the following procedure will allow us to find the state main at an arbitrary time in the past. The procedure is robust against people merging main into their working branches.

This information is taken from: [1] and I made a few small modifications in the details of the printout.

The following git command will list all merge commits of merges into main and print some information about each.

git log --merges --first-parent main --pretty=format:"%h %<(10,trunc)%ae %C(yellow)%<(15)%aI%Creset %C(red bold)%<(15)%D%Creset %s" 

The result on the morning of Jan 29, 2020 looks like:

f6bdbaebc kutschke.. 2020-01-28T14:33:45-06:00 HEAD -> main, tag: v08_02_01, Mu2e/main Merge pull request #125 from goodenou/art3_MT
651cf9425 kutschke.. 2020-01-28T14:31:30-06:00 tag: v08_02_00  Merge pull request #124 from resnegfk/g4105
14eeda454 kutschke.. 2020-01-25T17:27:40-06:00 tag: v08_01_00  Merge pull request #123 from ryuwd/refactor-useprodTracker
ae02fa010 kutschke.. 2020-01-24T13:32:14-06:00                 Merge pull request #121 from resnegfk/g4stepper
2c1fd533c Dave_Bro.. 2020-01-23T17:25:06-08:00                 Merge pull request #122 from bonventre/reflections
040a6fd0d kutschke.. 2020-01-22T20:31:50-06:00                 Merge pull request #120 from brownd1978/schema1

The color information was removed by the shell when I captured the output. If you run the command yourself you will see the coloring.

About Reverting Commits

If you revert a commit and, at a later date, wish to reapply the same commit, you need to take a few extra steps. The simple obvious method won't work. To learn how to do this, see [2].

About Reverting Merges

This is messy; see [3]. The short version is

  1. Revert the merge commit.
  2. Keep working on the originally-merged branch.
  3. When the updated branch is ready to remerge then
    1. revert-the-revert
    2. re-merge the updated branch.


The recommendation from the GitHub docs is:

Reverting a merge commit declares that you will never want the tree changes brought in by the merge. As a result, later merges will only bring in tree changes introduced by commits that are not ancestors of the previously reverted merge.

Thus, if there is anything of value in the commits that were merged then you should NOT revert the merge

Listing all of the Repos in the Mu2e Organization

This unix command will list all of the public repos in the Mu2e Organization:

 curl  https://api.github.com/orgs/Mu2e/repos?per_page=100 > public_repos.txt

The default for per_page is 30; as of Jan 2023 we have 44 public repos. To see all of the private repos visit the url:

 https://github.com/orgs/Mu2e/repositories?q=&type=private&language=&sort=

There may be a way to provide credentials to the curl command so that you can list private repos from the command line. See:

 https://docs.github.com/en/rest/repos/repos?apiVersion=2022-11-28#list-organization-repositories

You can do the same for a user, not an organization. For example,

 curl -O  https://api.github.com/users/kutschke/repos?per_page=100 > public_repos.txt

Note the change in the url from /orgs/ to /users/.