different ways.
The full repository takes up about 80MB of disk space. A check out of
-the blead branch (that is, the master branch, which contains bleadperl,
-the development version of perl 5) takes up about 160MB of disk space
-(including the repository). A build of bleadperl takes up about 200MB
-(including the repository and the check out).
+the blead branch (that is, the main development branch, which contains
+bleadperl, the development version of perl 5) takes up about 160MB of
+disk space (including the repository). A build of bleadperl takes up
+about 200MB (including the repository and the check out).
=head1 GETTING ACCESS TO THE REPOSITORY
The C<fetch> command just updates the C<camel> refs, as the objects
themselves should have been fetched when pulling from C<origin>.
+The committers have access to 2 servers that serve perl5.git.perl.org.
+One is camel.booking.com, which is the 'master' repository. The
+perl5.git.perl.org IP address also lives on this machine. The second
+one is dromedary.booking.com, which can be used for general testing and
+development. Dromedary syncs the git tree from camel every few minutes,
+you should not push there. Both machines also have a full CPAN mirror.
+To share files with the general public, dromedary serves your
+~/public_html/ as http://users.perl5.git.perl.org/~yourlogin/
+
=head1 OVERVIEW OF THE REPOSITORY
Once you have changed into the repository directory, you can inspect
% git checkout blead
% git pull
-(It's preferable to patch against the latest blead version, since
-patches are usually integrated from blead to the maintenance branches.
-This does not apply, obviously, in the rare case where your patch is
-specific to a maintaince release.)
+It's preferable to patch against the latest blead version, since this
+is where new development occurs for all changes other than critical bug
+fixes. Critical bug fix patches should be made against the relevant
+maint branches, or should be submitted with a note indicating all the
+branches where the fix should be applied.
Now that we have everything up to date, we need to create a temporary
new branch for these changes and switch into it:
file that may have gotten copied while building the source
distribution, consult the C<MANIFEST>.
-=head2 A note on binary files
-
-Since the patch(1) utility cannot deal with binary files, it's
-important that you either avoid the use of binary files in your patch,
-generate the files dynamically, or that you encode any binary files
-using the F<uupacktool.pl> utility.
-
-Assuming you needed to include a gzip-encoded file for a module's test
-suite, you might do this as follows using the F<uupacktool.pl> utility:
+=for XXX
- $ perl uupacktool.pl -v -p -D lib/Some/Module/t/src/t.gz
- Writing lib/Some/Module/t/src/t.gz into lib/Some/Module/t/src/t.gz.packed
-
-This will replace the C<t.gz> file with an encoded counterpart. During
-C<make test>, before any tests are run, perl's Makefile will restore
-all the C<.packed> files mentioned in the MANIFEST to their original
-name. This means that the test suite does not need to be aware of this
-packing scheme and will not need to be altered.
+What should we recommend about binary files now? Do we need anything?
=head2 Getting your patch accepted
=head1 COMMITTING TO MAINTENANCE VERSIONS
+Maintenance versions should only be altered to add critical bug fixes.
+
To commit to a maintenance version of perl, you need to create a local
tracking branch: