Hi,

 

I really like the idea of using tags in the commit message, but the rigidity of the spec puts me off. Frankly, I believe we just need a way to identify commits and their intent. So, I would like to propose an approach that builds on the “Conventional Commits” spec.

 

The approach would be

  1. Add an identifier (e.g. Tags: fix) to the commit message footer.
  2. At the start of the release window run “git log”* to print a list of features, bug fixes, performance improvements, deprecations etc.
  3. Either update the main changelog manually or use a script to append individual sections.

 

*git log v2.4...HEAD --no-merges --pretty='- %s (%C(auto)%h)' --grep "Tags: fix">

 

‘git log’ can be easily modified to look for other metadata as long as we agree to add it to the commit message.

 

Advantages

  1. Light(er)
  2. No impact to the subject header
  3. Flexibility to define project specific tags
  4. Training needs at par with “Conventional Commits” proposal

 

Thoughts?

 

-Varun

 

From: TF-A <tf-a-bounces@lists.trustedfirmware.org> On Behalf Of Chris Kay via TF-A
Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2021 9:31 AM
To: tf-a@lists.trustedfirmware.org
Subject: Re: [TF-A] Adoption of Conventional Commits

 

External email: Use caution opening links or attachments

 

Thanks to all those who attended the Tech Forum today!

 

It’s become apparent that the initial 2 week deadline for alternative proposals or implementations is too short, so – as agreed – we’ll push the deadline for the investigation period to the end of March. This period is dedicated to evaluating the changelog automation proposal made, or to identifying alternative solutions. If you have an alternative proposal, any proof-of-concept tooling would be highly appreciated so we can get a clear idea of what sort of work and maintenance is going to be involved.

 

If you do find a solution you wish to propose, please give it just a short name (e.g. “Update it manually”) and make it obvious you want to propose it formally – I’ll collect up the proposals made on the mailing list thread at the end of March and set up a Wiki poll so we can get a clear picture of where the community wants to take this.

 

Chris

 

From: TF-A <tf-a-bounces@lists.trustedfirmware.org> on behalf of Chris Kay via TF-A <tf-a@lists.trustedfirmware.org>
Reply to: Chris Kay <Chris.Kay@arm.com>
Date: Thursday, 11 February 2021 at 13:59
To: "tf-a@lists.trustedfirmware.org" <tf-a@lists.trustedfirmware.org>
Subject: [TF-A] Adoption of Conventional Commits

 

Hi all,

 

Recently we had an internal discussion on the merits of introducing semantics to commit messages pushed to the main TF-A repository, the conclusion being that we would look to adopting the Conventional Commits specification in the near future. There was one major reason for this, which was to help us in automating the changelog in future releases, but it might also help us to dramatically reduce the overall amount of work needed to make a formal release in the future.

 

This requires some buy-in (or buy-out, in this case) from maintainers because - even though it’s to only a relatively minor extent - it does involve an adjustment to everybody’s workflow. Notably, commit messages will be expected to adopt the structure defined by the specification, which will be enforced by the CI. Most commits that go upstream today adhere to “something that looks like Conventional Commits”, so the change is not exactly sweeping, but any change has the potential be an inconvenience.

 

With that in mind, I propose the following:

 

Installation of these tools will be optional, but I believe they can help with the transition. In the patches currently in review, they are installed as Git hooks automatically upon execution of npm install, so it requires no manual installation or configuration (other than a relatively up-to-date Node.js installation).

 

You’ll find the patches here, and specifically the changes to the prerequisites documentation here. Feel free to review these changes if you have comments specifically on their implementation.

 

Let me know if you have any questions or concerns. If everybody’s on board, we can look to have this upstreamed shortly.

 

Chris