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Maintainer Guidelines
This guide is for maintainers. These special people have write access to Homebrew’s repository and help merge the contributions of others. You may find what is written here interesting, but it’s definitely not a beginner’s guide.
Maybe you were looking for the Formula Cookbook?
Quick Checklist
This is all that really matters:
- Ensure the name is correct. This cannot be changed later, so it must be right the first time!
- Add aliases
- Ensure it is not a dupe of anything that comes with OS X
- Ensure it is not a library that can be installed with gem, cpan or pip.
- Ensure that any dependencies are accurate and minimal. We don't need to support every possible optional feature for the software.
- Use
brew pull
when possible to add messages to auto-close pull requests (which may take ~5m, be patient) and pull bottles built by BrewTestBot. - Thank people for contributing.
Checking dependencies is important, because they will probably stick around
forever. Nobody really checks if they are necessary or not. Use the
:optional
and :recommended
modifiers as appropriate.
Depend on as little stuff as possible. Disable X11 functionality by default. For example, we build Wireshark, but not the monolithic GUI. If users want that, they should just grab the DMG that Wireshark themselves provide.
Homebrew is about Unix software. Stuff that builds to an .app
should
be accepted frugally. That is, rarely.
Naming
The name is the strictest item, because we can’t change it afterwards.
Choose a name that’s the colloquial (most common) name for the project.
For example, we chose objective-caml
, but we should have chosen ocaml
.
Choose what people say to each other when talking about the project.
Add other names as aliases as symlinks in Library/Aliases
. Ensure the name
referenced on the homepage is one of these, as it may be different and have
underscores and hyphens and so on.
We don’t allow versions in formula names (e.g. bash4.rb
); these should be in
the homebrew/versions
tap. This is sometimes frustrating, but we’re trying to
solve this properly. (python3.rb
is a rare exception, because it’s basically
a “new” language and installs no conflicting executables.)
For now, if someone submits a formula like this, we’ll leave them in their own tree.
Merging, rebasing, cherry-picking
Merging is mainly useful when new work is being done. Please use brew pull
(or rebase
/cherry-pick
contributions) rather than fill Homebrew's Git
history up with noisy merge commits.
Don’t rebase
until you finally push
. Once master
is pushed, you can’t
rebase
: you’re a maintainer now!
Cherry-picking changes the date of the commit, which kind of sucks.
Don’t merge
unclean branches. So if someone is still learning git
their branch is filled with nonsensical merges, then rebase
and squash
the commits. Our main branch history should be useful to other people,
not confusing.
Testing
We need to at least check it builds. Use Brew Test Bot for this.
Verify the formula works if possible. If you can’t tell (e.g. if it’s a
library) trust the original contributor, it worked for them, so chances are it
is fine. If you aren’t an expert in the tool in question, you can’t really
gauge if the formula installed the program correctly. At some point an expert
will come along, cry blue murder that it doesn’t work, and fix it. This is how
open source works. Ideally, request a test do
block to test that
functionality is consistently available.
If the formula uses a repository, then the url
parameter should have a
tag or revision. url
s have versions and are stable (not yet
implemented!).
Testing in /usr/local
and somewhere else
If not completely annoying, test in both /usr/local
and somewhere
else. Preferably on different machines to ensure the /usr/local
install doesn’t effect the other one.
The reason for this is some build systems suck, and fail if deps aren’t
installed in /usr/local
, even though Homebrew goes to some lengths to
try to make this work.
Common “Gotchas”
- Ensure you have set your username and email address properly
- Sign off cherry-picks if you amended them, GitX-dev can do this, otherwise there is a command line flag for it)
- If the commit fixes a bug, use “Fixes #104” syntax to close the bug report and link to the commit
Build “Gotchas”
Often parallel builds work with 2-core systems, but fail on 4-core systems.
Duplicates
The main repository avoids duplicates as much as possible. The exception is
libraries that OS X provides but have bugs, and the bugs are fixed in a
newer version. Or libraries that OS X provides, but they are too old for
some other formula. The rest should be in the homebrew/dupes
tap.
Still determine if it possible to avoid the duplicate. Be thorough. Duped libraries and tools cause bugs that are tricky to solve. Once the formula is pulled, we can’t go back on that willy-nilly.
If it duplicates anything ask another maintainer first. Some dupes are okay, some can cause subtle issues we don’t want to have to deal with in the future.
Dupes we have allowed:
libxml
<— OS X version is old and buggylibpng
<— Ditto
Add comments!
It may be enough to refer to an issue ticket, but make sure changes that if you came to them unaware of the surrounding issues would make sense to you. Many times on other projects I’ve seen code removed because the new guy didn’t know why it was there. Regressions suck.
Don’t allow bloated diffs
Amend a cherry-pick to remove commits that are only changes in
whitespace. They are not acceptable because our history is important and
git blame
should be useful.
Whitespace corrections (to Ruby standard etc.) are allowed (in fact this is a good opportunity to do it) provided the line itself has some kind of modification that is not whitespace in it. But be careful about making changes to inline patches—make sure they still apply.