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Names changed from ReadMe* to README* and I also upper-cased the remainder bug 240082
117 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
117 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
The Netscape Development Process
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Tinderbox was originally written at Netscape to support their software
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development model. (Now fthe original Netscape development effort has
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split into both the Netscape and Mozilla organization I will refer to
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their efforts as if they were a single company called Netscape. This
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split does not effect the discussion of their processes.) Tinderbox
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does not require that a company closely follow this model but the full
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set of features are easily explained by the Netscape organization.
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The implied "tinderbox development process" its a variant of
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the "daily build" idea which is common in many companies.
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At Netscape developers are geographically dispersed and often
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telecommute from foreign countries. There are hundreds of developers
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working on a given product and this can lead to difficult
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communication problems. Developers get feature enhancement requests
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and bug reports via a bug ticketing system. The tickets are
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prioritized by a Project Management Group call "Drivers". The
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developers work on the highest priority tickets in their queue and
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when the changes are ready they look to the tinderbox web page to see
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the current state of the source code. If Tinderbox shows that some
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tests do not work or code does not not compile then the developer must
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wait until tinderbox indicates that everything is working. When a
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developer checks in code tinderbox must verify that it compiles on all
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architectures and all tests pass before a developer can leave that
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night.
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Should a programmer ever check in code which does not compile or does
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not pass all tests then he is responsible for fixing the problem
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immediately. By looking at the tinderbox history it is easy to see
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approximately the time the problem was introduced. This limits the
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set of possible changes which caused the problem to a small fraction
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of the changes introduced that day and limits the number of possible
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programmers who could have made this mistake to a small number. Thus
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the scope of the problem is clearly bounded in time, in source files
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and in possible suspects. If another developer was to check-in
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additional changes at this time it would only confuse the issue and
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possibly entangle the problem with other changes. No further checkins
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are allowed until the problem is fixed. All this information is
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clearly visible to all developers and management on the tinderbox
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web-page. When a problem occurs developers must quickly post a message
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explaining that they are actively fixing the problem. Since
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development can not proceed until the problem is fixed it is in
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everyone interest to solve problems quickly.
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When all problems are cleared then the developer looks at the "tree
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state" this indicates the management policies in effect. At Netscape
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the convention is that "Open" means checkins are allowed, "Closed"
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Means checkins are allowed only with QA approval and "Restricted"
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means that changes can only be made with Drivers approval. The
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approving person must be noted in the check-in comments along with the
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bug ticket number which this fix was intended to address. Tree states
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change according to managements need. The restricted state is used to
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ensure coordination between developers and the drivers group. The
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drivers group monitors the Tinderbox web-page to ensure that proper
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check-in procedures are being carried out through out the day.
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Usually the tree is "Open", there are some predictable times when the
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tree enters another state. Each morning the QA group closes the tree
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and reopens it when they have verified the quality of the previous
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days changes. The Drivers group will restrict the tree for several
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days when a major release of the product is imminent. Occasionally the
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drivers group may need to restrict the ability of checkins
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temporarily, like when a group intends to merge a large development
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branch into the main branch. During a complex merge it is important
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that developers not involved in the merge do not check in their
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changes and confuse the merging group. Merging can take a few hours
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to complete and it is easiest to do when the source code tree is
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frozen except for use by the merging group. At Netscape large merges
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are typically done right after QA opens the tree.
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By having the management policy clearly stated at the top of the
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Tinderbox page everyone is aware of the current check-in requirements
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and these can be quickly changed and the results communicated to all
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developers if needed. If there is a sudden need for an unexpected
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policy change, it is still expected that every developer will know the
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current policy at the moment they try to check code in. In Tinderbox2
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the tree state is also indicated with every check-in so it is possible
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to look back at the history and see if George's last check-in was done
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before or after the tree closed.
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Each morning QA closes the tree and begins testing all of last nights
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changes. To ensure that QA has the support it needs to quickly finish
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this work QA has a list of all the programmers who made changes
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yesterday and a list of the changed files and check-in comment. This
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list of programmers is refered to as "The hook" and management
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considers it imperative that everyone 'on the hook' be ready each
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morning to fix or back out their changes. When QA runs their daily,
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mostly manual, tests no further checkins can occur till QA is
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satisfied that the new code is at least as good as the old
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code. Checkins are only made at QA's request to fix problems which
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arise during testing. Any problems which QA flags must be fixed or
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backed out before the day's development can begin. Once QA approves
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daily build all programmers are expected to synchronize their code
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with the latest known good sources. QA maintains a database of tree
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opening times, so that it is easy to find older source code which has
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been approved by QA. The "hook" is simply the list of all checkins
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since the last time the tree was opened.
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The focus for daily testing is on whether the set of day's changes is
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good enough to be accepted into the main branch. This is a separate
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QA effort than the reporting of "bugs" which may take hours of QA time
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to find and weeks of developer time to fix. When QA is ready the tree
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is opened and the day's development can begin. If there is ever a
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serious problem with the development code it is always possible to
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check out the version of the code at the time when the tree was opened.
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This is the build which QA approved and is the last know good.
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So there are daily QA milestones which ensure that the code works, and
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that all developers can move forward. The tinderbox tool monitors the
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progress of all effort between milestones and reports what is going on
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on a short time scale. There are additional QA milestones which are
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project dependent. The longer term focus of these other milestones is
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not an issue for the tinderbox system.
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