From 82cf43dd887801b8b22b8aae8c02854d921915d5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Mueller Date: Fri, 24 May 2019 18:07:22 -0700 Subject: Update libc crate to 0.2.55 This change updates the libc crate to version 0.2.55. Import subrepo libc/:libc at caf17a0641d29dc624621177f5756804dd180c13 --- libc/CONTRIBUTING.md | 66 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 66 insertions(+) create mode 100644 libc/CONTRIBUTING.md (limited to 'libc/CONTRIBUTING.md') diff --git a/libc/CONTRIBUTING.md b/libc/CONTRIBUTING.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0e5d0c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/libc/CONTRIBUTING.md @@ -0,0 +1,66 @@ +# Contributing to `libc` + +Welcome! If you are reading this document, it means you are interested in contributing +to the `libc` crate. + +## Adding an API + +Want to use an API which currently isn't bound in `libc`? It's quite easy to add +one! + +The internal structure of this crate is designed to minimize the number of +`#[cfg]` attributes in order to easily be able to add new items which apply +to all platforms in the future. As a result, the crate is organized +hierarchically based on platform. Each module has a number of `#[cfg]`'d +children, but only one is ever actually compiled. Each module then reexports all +the contents of its children. + +This means that for each platform that libc supports, the path from a +leaf module to the root will contain all bindings for the platform in question. +Consequently, this indicates where an API should be added! Adding an API at a +particular level in the hierarchy means that it is supported on all the child +platforms of that level. For example, when adding a Unix API it should be added +to `src/unix/mod.rs`, but when adding a Linux-only API it should be added to +`src/unix/notbsd/linux/mod.rs`. + +If you're not 100% sure at what level of the hierarchy an API should be added +at, fear not! This crate has CI support which tests any binding against all +platforms supported, so you'll see failures if an API is added at the wrong +level or has different signatures across platforms. + +With that in mind, the steps for adding a new API are: + +1. Determine where in the module hierarchy your API should be added. +2. Add the API. +3. Send a PR to this repo. +4. Wait for CI to pass, fixing errors. +5. Wait for a merge! + +### Test before you commit + +We have two automated tests running on [Travis](https://travis-ci.org/rust-lang/libc): + +1. [`libc-test`](https://github.com/alexcrichton/ctest) + - `cd libc-test && cargo test` + - Use the `skip_*()` functions in `build.rs` if you really need a workaround. +2. Style checker + - `rustc ci/style.rs && ./style src` + +### Releasing your change to crates.io + +Now that you've done the amazing job of landing your new API or your new +platform in this crate, the next step is to get that sweet, sweet usage from +crates.io! The only next step is to bump the version of libc and then publish +it. If you'd like to get a release out ASAP you can follow these steps: + +1. Update the version number in `Cargo.toml`, you'll just be bumping the patch + version number. +2. Run `cargo update` to regenerate the lockfile to encode your version bump in + the lock file. You may pull in some other updated dependencies, that's ok. +3. Send a PR to this repository. It should [look like this][example], but it'd + also be nice to fill out the description with a small rationale for the + release (any rationale is ok though!) +4. Once merged the release will be tagged and published by one of the libc crate + maintainers. + +[example]: https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/583 -- cgit v1.2.1