2018-03-17 18:26:18 +05:30
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# Automatic CE->EE merge
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GitLab Community Edition is merged automatically every 3 hours into the
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Enterprise Edition (look for the [`CE Upstream` merge requests]).
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This merge is done automatically in a
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[scheduled pipeline](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/release-tools/-/jobs/43201679).
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## What to do if you are pinged in a `CE Upstream` merge request to resolve a conflict?
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1. Please resolve the conflict as soon as possible or ask someone else to do it
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2018-11-20 20:47:30 +05:30
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- It's ok to resolve more conflicts than the one that you are asked to resolve.
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In that case, it's a good habit to ask for a double-check on your resolution
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by someone who is familiar with the code you touched.
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2018-03-17 18:26:18 +05:30
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1. Once you have resolved your conflicts, push to the branch (no force-push)
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1. Assign the merge request to the next person that has to resolve a conflict
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1. If all conflicts are resolved after your resolution is pushed, keep the merge
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request assigned to you: **you are now responsible for the merge request to be
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green**
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2018-03-17 18:26:18 +05:30
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1. If you need any help, you can ping the current [release managers], or ask in
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2018-11-20 20:47:30 +05:30
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the `#ce-to-ee` Slack channel
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2018-03-17 18:26:18 +05:30
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A few notes about the automatic CE->EE merge job:
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- If a merge is already in progress, the job
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[doesn't create a new one](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/release-tools/-/jobs/43157687).
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- If there is nothing to merge (i.e. EE is up-to-date with CE), the job doesn't
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create a new one
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- The job posts messages to the `#ce-to-ee` Slack channel to inform what's the
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current CE->EE merge status (e.g. "A new MR has been created", "A MR is still pending")
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[`CE Upstream` merge requests]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/merge_requests?label_name%5B%5D=CE+upstream
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[release managers]: https://about.gitlab.com/release-managers/
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## Always merge EE merge requests before their CE counterparts
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**In order to avoid conflicts in the CE->EE merge, you should always merge the
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EE version of your CE merge request first, if present.**
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The rationale for this is that as CE->EE merges are done automatically every few
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hours, it can happen that:
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1. A CE merge request that needs EE-specific changes is merged
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1. The automatic CE->EE merge happens
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1. Conflicts due to the CE merge request occur since its EE merge request isn't
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merged yet
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1. The automatic merge bot will ping someone to resolve the conflict **that are
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already resolved in the EE merge request that isn't merged yet**
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That's a waste of time, and that's why you should merge EE merge request before
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their CE counterpart.
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## Avoiding CE->EE merge conflicts beforehand
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To avoid the conflicts beforehand, check out the
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[Guidelines for implementing Enterprise Edition features](ee_features.md).
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In any case, the CI `ee_compat_check` job will tell you if you need to open an
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EE version of your CE merge request.
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### Conflicts detection in CE merge requests
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For each commit (except on `master`), the `ee_compat_check` CI job tries to
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detect if the current branch's changes will conflict during the CE->EE merge.
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The job reports what files are conflicting and how to setup a merge request
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against EE.
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#### How the job works
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1. Generates the diff between your branch and current CE `master`
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1. Tries to apply it to current EE `master`
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1. If it applies cleanly, the job succeeds, otherwise...
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1. Detects a branch with the `ee-` prefix or `-ee` suffix in EE
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1. If it exists, generate the diff between this branch and current EE `master`
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1. Tries to apply it to current EE `master`
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1. If it applies cleanly, the job succeeds
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In the case where the job fails, it means you should create an `ee-<ce_branch>`
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or `<ce_branch>-ee` branch, push it to EE and open a merge request against EE
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`master`.
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At this point if you retry the failing job in your CE merge request, it should
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now pass.
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Notes:
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- This task is not a silver-bullet, its current goal is to bring awareness to
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developers that their work needs to be ported to EE.
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- Community contributors shouldn't be required to submit merge requests against
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EE, but reviewers should take actions by either creating such EE merge request
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or asking a GitLab developer to do it **before the merge request is merged**.
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- If you branch is too far behind `master`, the job will fail. In that case you
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should rebase your branch upon latest `master`.
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- Code reviews for merge requests often consist of multiple iterations of
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feedback and fixes. There is no need to update your EE MR after each
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iteration. Instead, create an EE MR as soon as you see the
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`ee_compat_check` job failing. After you receive the final approval
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from a Maintainer (but **before the CE MR is merged**) update the EE MR.
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This helps to identify significant conflicts sooner, but also reduces the
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number of times you have to resolve conflicts.
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- Please remember to
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[always have your EE merge request merged before the CE version](#always-merge-ee-merge-requests-before-their-ce-counterparts).
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2018-11-18 11:00:15 +05:30
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- You can use [`git rerere`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-rerere)
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to avoid resolving the same conflicts multiple times.
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2018-03-27 19:54:05 +05:30
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### Cherry-picking from CE to EE
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For avoiding merge conflicts, we use a method of creating equivalent branches
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for CE and EE. If the `ee-compat-check` job fails, this process is required.
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This method only requires that you have cloned both CE and EE into your computer.
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If you don't have them yet, please go ahead and clone them:
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- Clone CE repo: `git clone git@gitlab.com:gitlab-org/gitlab-ce.git`
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- Clone EE repo: `git clone git@gitlab.com:gitlab-org/gitlab-ee.git`
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And the only additional setup we need is to add CE as remote of EE and vice-versa:
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- Open two terminal windows, one in CE, and another one in EE:
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- In EE: `git remote add ce git@gitlab.com:gitlab-org/gitlab-ce.git`
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- In CE: `git remote add ee git@gitlab.com:gitlab-org/gitlab-ee.git`
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That's all setup we need, so that we can cherry-pick a commit from CE to EE, and
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from EE to CE.
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Now, every time you create an MR for CE and EE:
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1. Open two terminal windows, one in CE, and another one in EE
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1. In the CE terminal:
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1. Create the CE branch, e.g., `branch-example`
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1. Make your changes and push a commit (commit A)
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1. Create the CE merge request in GitLab
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1. In the EE terminal:
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1. Create the EE-equivalent branch ending with `-ee`, e.g.,
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`git checkout -b branch-example-ee`
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1. Fetch the CE branch: `git fetch ce branch-example`
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1. Cherry-pick the commit A: `git cherry-pick commit-A-SHA`
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1. If Git prompts you to fix the conflicts, do a `git status`
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to check which files contain conflicts, fix them, save the files
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1. Add the changes with `git add .` but **DO NOT commit** them
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1. Continue cherry-picking: `git cherry-pick --continue`
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1. Push to EE: `git push origin branch-example-ee`
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1. Create the EE-equivalent MR and link to the CE MR from the
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description "Ports [CE-MR-LINK] to EE"
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1. Once all the jobs are passing in both CE and EE, you've addressed the
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feedback from your own team, and got them approved, the merge requests can be merged.
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1. When both MRs are ready, the EE merge request will be merged first, and the
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CE-equivalent will be merged next.
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**Important notes:**
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- The commit SHA can be easily found from the GitLab UI. From a merge request,
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open the tab **Commits** and click the copy icon to copy the commit SHA.
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- To cherry-pick a **commit range**, such as [A > B > C > D] use:
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```shell
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git cherry-pick "oldest-commit-SHA^..newest-commit-SHA"
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```
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For example, suppose the commit A is the oldest, and its SHA is `4f5e4018c09ed797fdf446b3752f82e46f5af502`,
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and the commit D is the newest, and its SHA is `80e1c9e56783bd57bd7129828ec20b252ebc0538`.
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The cherry-pick command will be:
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```shell
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git cherry-pick "4f5e4018c09ed797fdf446b3752f82e46f5af502^..80e1c9e56783bd57bd7129828ec20b252ebc0538"
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```
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- To cherry-pick a **merge commit**, use the flag `-m 1`. For example, suppose that the
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merge commit SHA is `138f5e2f20289bb376caffa0303adb0cac859ce1`:
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```shell
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git cherry-pick -m 1 138f5e2f20289bb376caffa0303adb0cac859ce1
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```
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- To cherry-pick multiple commits, such as B and D in a range [A > B > C > D], use:
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```shell
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git cherry-pick commmit-B-SHA commit-D-SHA
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```
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For example, suppose commit B SHA = `4f5e4018c09ed797fdf446b3752f82e46f5af502`,
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and the commit D SHA = `80e1c9e56783bd57bd7129828ec20b252ebc0538`.
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The cherry-pick command will be:
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```shell
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git cherry-pick 4f5e4018c09ed797fdf446b3752f82e46f5af502 80e1c9e56783bd57bd7129828ec20b252ebc0538
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```
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This case is particularly useful when you have a merge commit in a sequence of
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commits and you want to cherry-pick all but the merge commit.
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- If you push more commits to the CE branch, you can safely repeat the procedure
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to cherry-pick them to the EE-equivalent branch. You can do that as many times as
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necessary, using the same CE and EE branches.
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- If you submitted the merge request to the CE repo and the `ee-compat-check` job passed,
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you are not required to submit the EE-equivalent MR, but it's still recommended. If the
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job failed, you are required to submit the EE MR so that you can fix the conflicts in EE
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before merging your changes into CE.
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2018-03-17 18:26:18 +05:30
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---
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[Return to Development documentation](README.md)
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