This document provides a short guide explaining how to perform a backport.
Backporting refers to applying changes to a stable branch from a newer branch.
The changes comprise one or more commits in the form of a PR and the newer
branch is generally the main
branch.
Since new features are not added to stable branches, backported changes are generally bug fixes and security fixes. See the stable branch strategy document for further details.
Note: This guide does not cover all eventualities that might be encountered while performing a backport, and only documents one potential Git based workflow. It does serve as a short introduction and reminder of the basic stable backport process.
The two branches used in the examples in this guide are:
- The
main
branch (which contains all commits). - A
stable-1.2
branch which will be the target of the backport: commits will be selectively "copied" ("cherry-picked") into this branch from themain
branch.
This document assumes an understanding of:
- The
git(1)
tool. - The standard PR workflow.
- The stable branch strategy.
Imagine that initially both the main
branch and the stable branch
(stable-1.2
) contain only the commits A
, B
and C
:
+ (stable-1.2 branch)
/
A---B---C (main branch)
New commits (D
, E
, F
and G
) are added to the main
branch:
+ (stable-1.2 branch)
/
A---B---C---D---E---F---G (main branch)
Imagine that:
- Commits
E
andG
are bug or security fixes which need to be backported. - Commits
D
andF
are new features which must not be backported.
After the backporting:
+-----E-------G (stable-1.2 branch)
/ ^ ^
A---B---C---D---E---F---G (main branch)
After the backport, the stable-1.2
branch contains commits A
, B
and
C
, E
and G
.
Auto-backporting is a helpful feature than can be used to speed up the backport process.
The project uses Backport Action to handle the backporting and another GitHub workflow to automatically add the auto-backport
label.
The following PRs will automatically have the auto-backport
label added:
- PRs whose associated issue has the
bug
label set. - PR contains
backport-needed
label
PRs with the no-backport-needed
label will automatically have their auto-backport
label removed, superseding the above conditions.
Additionally, the auto-backport
label can be added or removed manually.
Note: The check for labels is triggered whenever a label is added or removed from the PR.
The Backport Action executes the following steps:
auto-backport
label is checked when the PR is merged.- The action will look for all labels of the form
backport-to-BRANCHNAME
. - The action will then attempt to generate a backport for each label, leaving a notification reporting success or failure.
Note: This does require labels to be made and added to the corresponding branches that one intends to backport to.
Automatic backports should be reviewed for correctness.
The basic workflow involves:
- Creating a new local branch from the stable tree you are targeting.
- Selecting (or "cherry picking") the commits from your main branch PR into the stable branch.
- Submitting your branch to GitHub as a PR against the stable branch (not to the
main
branch).
-
Ensure your local repo is up to date:
$ cd ${GOPATH}/src/github.com/kata-containers/runtime $ git fetch origin
Check the list of stable branches:
$ git branch -r | grep origin/stable
-
Create your branch to work on, based on the
stable-1.2
branch:$ git checkout -b my_1.2_pr_backport origin/stable-1.2
To list all commits in the main
branch which are not in the stable-1.2
branch:
$ git log --oneline --no-merges ..main
Make a note of the SHA values for the commits in the PR to backport.
Note: If your PR is in a local branch, substitute
main
for the name of that branch.
-
Pull in your commits:
If you are pulling the commits in from the
main
branch, you can add the-x
argument togit cherry-pick
to automatically add a reference in the commit to the original commits. This is strongly recommended to aid traceability. If you pick the commits from your local branch do not use-x
; this potentially adds references to SHAs that only exist in your local branch, which is not useful for future tracability.It is also required that you add the
-s
signoff to the commits, if you did not create the original commits.$ git cherry-pick -x <commit>...
Note: You should only cherry pick the original commits - do not cherry pick merge commits (see Locate commits to cherry pick).
You can cherry pick ranges of commits. Please see the
git-cherry-pick(1)
man page for more information.Note: You do not need to open a new
Issue
or add an extraFixes: nnn
item to the commits. They should re-use theFixes:
entry from the original commits, so all related commits refer back to the common Issue. It does not matter that the originalIssue
is closed, the references still work correctly. -
Resolve any conflicts:
You might encounter conflicts during your cherry pick, which need to be resolved before you continue. Follow standard practices for Git conflict resolution, and see the guidance printed by
git cherry-pick
on processing and applying those fixes.If you hit a conflict, any effects of
-x
tocherry-pick
might not be applied. In this case, consider hand-adding themain
SHA references and a note that you resolved a conflict to the commit message.
-
Test your changes:
Before you push your changes, you should test that they work and nothing has been broken. No matter how small the change, running the test suite is always recommended.
-
Push your branch to your GitHub repo:
$ git push my_remote my_1.2_pr_backport
-
Submit a PR from your branch to the stable branch:
When you submit your PR on GitHub, make sure to choose the stable branch that you based your branch on and are submitting to. This should be the same as the base branch for the PR.
-
Add a special comment to the original PR with a reference to the backport PR(s). See the contributing guide for further information.
-
Add the
backport
label to the PR to denote it is a backport.
For further information on porting, see the contributing guide.