=head1 NAME dgit-sponsorship - tutorial for Debian upload sponsorship, using git =head1 INTRODUCTION AND SCOPE This tutorial describes how a Debian sponsored contributor and a sponsoring DD (or DM) can collaborate and publish using git. The sponsor must to be intending to use dgit for the upload. (If the sponsor does not use dgit, it is not possible to properly publish a sponsee's git branch.) It is best if the sponsee also uses dgit; but also covered (later on) is the case where the sponsee provides a proposed upload in source package form, but the sponsor would like to work in git. This tutorial does not provide a checklist for the sponsor's review. Both contributors are expected to be familiar with Debian packaging and Debian's processes, and with git. =head1 SPONSEE WORKFLOW This section is addressed to the sponsee: =head2 General You should prepare the package as if you were going to upload it with C or C yourself. For a straightforward NMU, consult L. If you are the (prospective) maintainer, you can adopt any suitable (dgit-compatible) git workflow. The L tutorials describe some of the possibilities. =head2 Upload preparation You should go through all of the steps a self-uploading maintainer would do, including building for ad hoc tests, and checking via a formal build (eg using C) that the package builds on sid (or the target release). At the point where you would, if you were a DD, do the actual upload by running dgit push, you hand off to your sponsor. If you were going to use one of the C<--quilt=> options to dgit, or C or C, you must specify that in your handoff email - see below. =head2 git+origs based handoff The elements of the handoff consists of: =over =item * The git branch. =item * Any .orig tarballs which will be needed, or sample git-archive(1) or gbp-buildpackage(1) command(s) to generate them. =item * A sample dgit push command, containing any dgit --quilt=, --gbp or --dpm option needed =item * Plus of course all the usual information about the state of the package, any caveats or areas you would like the sponsor to focus their review, constraints about upload timing, etc. =back If the handoff is done by email, the elements above should be a in a single, signed, message. This could be an RFS submission against the sponsorship-requests pseudo-package. =head3 git branch =over 4 The sponsee should push their HEAD as a git branch to any suitable git server. They can use their own git server; salsa is another possibility. The branch names used by the sponsee on their local machine, and on the server, do not matter. Instead, the sponsee should include the git commit id of their HEAD in their handover email. =back =head3 orig tarballs =over 4 If there are any .origs that are not in the archive already, the sponsor will need them as part of the upload. If the sponsee generated these tarballs with git-archive(1) or gbp-buildpackage(1), they can simply include a sample invocation of git-archive(1) or ensure that a suitable gbp.conf is present in the source package to generate the tarball. Otherwise, the simplest approach is to commit the orig tarballs with pristine-tar(1), e.g. =over 4 % pristine-tar commit ../foo_1.2.3.orig.tar.xz upstream/1.2.3 =back and be sure to push the pristine-tar branch. If you are using git-buildpackage(1), just pass I<--git-pristine-tar> and I<--git-pristine-tar-commit>. Alternatively, the sponsee can put them on a suitable webserver, or attach to the e-mail, if they are small. The sponsee should quote sha256sums of the .origs in their handoff email, unless they supplied commands to generate them. =back =head3 quilt options =over 4 Some workflows involve git branches which are not natively dgit-compatible. Normally dgit will convert them as needed, during push. Supply a sample "dgit push" command including any C<--gbp> (aka C<--quilt=gbp>), C<--dpm> (aka C<--quilt=dpm>), or other C<--quilt=> option they need to use. e.g. =over 4 % dgit --gbp push =back =back =head1 SPONSOR WORKFLOW This part is addressed to the sponsor: =head2 Receiving and validating the sponsorship request You should check the signature on the email. Use C or C to obtain the git branch prepared by your sponsee, and obtain any .origs mentioned by the sponsee (to extract .origs committed with pristine-tar, you can use origtargz(1), or use "gbp clone --pristine-tar".) Check the git commit ID of the sponsee's branch tip, and the sha256sums of the .origs, against the handoff email. Now you can check out the branch tip, and do your substantive review. =head2 Dealing with branches that want --quilt= If your sponsee mentioned a C<--quilt> option, and you don't want to grapple with their preferred tree format, you can convert their tree into the standard dgit view: =over 4 % dgit -wgf --quilt=foo --dgit-view-save=unquilted quilt-fixup % git checkout unquilted =back You should check that what you're looking at is a descendant of the sponsee's branch. =head2 Some hints which may help the review C will get you an up-to-date C showing what's in the archive already. C will check that dgit can build an appropriate source package. There is no need to run debdiff. dgit will not upload anything that doesn't unpack to exactly the git commit you are pushing, so you can rely on what you see in C. =head2 Doing the upload When you have completed your source review, and use C or similar, to to the build, and then C or C to do the upload. Check whether the sponsee made a debian/I tag. If they did, ensure you have their tag in the repository you are pushing from, or pass C<--no-dep14tag>. This avoids identically named, non-identical tags, which can be confusing. (It is possible to upload from the quilt-cache dgit view. If you want to do this, B pass the C<--quilt> or C<--gbp> or C<--dpm> options again, and B pass C<--no-dep14tag>, since the debian/I tag should go on the sponsee's branch.) If this was the first upload done with dgit, you may need to pass C<--overwrite> to dgit. Alternatively, if this was the first ever dgit push of the package, you can pass C<--deliberately-not-fast-forward> instead of C<--overwrite>. This avoids introducing a new origin commit into the dgit view of the sponsee's git history which is unnecessary and could be confusing. =head1 SPONSORING A NON-GIT-USING SPONSEE This part is addressed to the sponsor: If your sponsee does not use git, you can still do your review with git, and use dgit for the upload. Your sponsee will provide you with a source package: that is, a .dsc and the files it refers to. Obtain these files, and check signatures as appropriate. Then: =over 4 % dgit clone PACKAGE % cd PACKAGE % dgit import-dsc /path/to/sponsee's.dsc +sponsee % git checkout sponsee =back Or for an entirely new package: =over 4 % mkdir PACKAGE % cd PACKAGE % git init % dgit -pPACKAGE import-dsc /path/to/sponsee's.dsc +sponsee =back This will leave you looking at the sponsee's package, formatted as a dgit branch. When you have finished your review and your tests, you can do the dgit sbuild and dgit push directly from the "sponsee" branch. You will need to pass C<--overwrite> to dgit push for every successive upload. This disables a safety catch which would normally spot situations where changes are accidentally lost. When your sponsee is sending you source packages - perhaps multiple source pacakges with the same version number - these safety catches are inevitably ineffective. =head1 SEE ALSO dgit(1), dgit(7), dgit-nmu-simple(7), dgit-maint-*(7)