Mercurial > mplayer.hg
view DOCS/tech/patches.txt @ 12170:8db1b587d16a
lavf ASF support
author | michael |
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date | Sun, 11 Apr 2004 19:03:12 +0000 |
parents | a79d9b3a83fd |
children | 52de6cbd0842 |
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Sending patches: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Note: We know our rules place a burden on you, but rest assured that maintaining a big and complex software project is even harder, so please accept our rules. We cannot afford to spend our time fixing buggy, broken or outdated patches. 0. Do not send complete files. These need to be diffed by hand to see the changes, which makes reviews harder and less likely to occur. Besides as soon as one of the files changes, your version becomes harder to apply, thus reducing its chances of being accepted. 1. Always make patches for the CVS version. The README describes how to check out CVS and daily CVS snapshots are available from our download page. We do not accept patches for releases or outdated CVS versions. 2. Make unified diffs ('diff -Naur' or 'cvs diff -u'). Unified diffs can easily be applied with 'patch'. This is much harder with other diff types. 3. Test the functionality of your patch. We'll *refuse* it if it breaks something, even if it extends other features! 4. Read your patch. We'll *refuse* it if it changes indentation of the code or if it does tab/space conversion or other cosmetical changes! 5. Comment parts that really need it (tricky side-effects etc). Commenting trivial code not required. Comments must be English! 6. If you implement new features, add or change command line switches or modify the behavior of existing features, please do not forget to also update the documentation. The documentation maintainers will assist you in doing this. Updating the English documentation is enough. If you speak several languages you are of course welcome to update translations as well. 7. Send your patch to the mplayer-dev-eng mailing list as a base64-encoded attachment (use gzip or bzip2 *only* if it's bigger than 80k or if you know that your mailer messes up (reformats) text attachments) with the subject line: '[PATCH] very short description of the patch'. In the mail, describe in a few sentences what you change and why. If you made independent changes, try to send them as separate patches. The subject line is very important if you do not want your patch to get lost in the noise. We need the uppercase [PATCH] to be able to search for unapplied patches, so please use it. You have to subscribe to mplayer-dev-eng since we blocked postings from non-subscribers after spam problems and because patches get reviewed by the developers on the list. We want you to be available for discussing your code, you might be asked to make modifications before we accept it. Don't worry, mplayer-dev-eng is not high traffic and you can subscribe with the nomail option if you do not wish to receive all the mails. 8. Give us a few days to react. We try to review patches as fast as possible, but unfortunately we are constantly overloaded with work, be it MPlayer related or from our day to day lives. If your patch seems to be ignored, please resend it and mention that you got ignored. We are interested in your work and will eventually either accept it or reject it with an explanation what and why we disliked about your patch. 9. Do not immediately ask for CVS write access. If you contributed one or more nice, acceptable patches and they need maintaining or you want to be an MPlayer developer, you'll get CVS write access. 10. For consistency reasons all option names must use '-' instead of '_'. 11. If you made a nontrivial contribution and wish to be mentioned in the AUTHORS file, include that in your patch. Thank you!