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  1. Dashboard
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  4. JDK11u
  5. How to contribute or backport a fix

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  1. Check the original JBS issue on https://bugs.openjdk.org/
    1. Carefully check linked issues and whether there are follow-up fixes that need to be brought with the backport. See below how to handle fixes depending on each other.
    2. If there are relevant issues that prevent a clean backport, consider backporting those first (within reason).
    3. To avoid others picking up the same issue, you can add a preliminary "Fix request 11u|17u" (see step 6.) comment saying that you work on this.  Once you reach step 6.), just edit the comment and add the required information.
  2. Create the backport commit
    • Option 1 - Use the /backport comment command on GitHub:
      1. Make sure GitHub Actions is enabled for you on the OpenJDK Bots jdk11u-dev repository resp. OpenJDK Bots jdk17u-dev repository.
      2. Open the link of the original commit in GitHub and issue the /backport command by adding the comment: "/backport jdk11u-dev" or "/backport jdk17u-dev"
      3. For a clean backport, the bot will provide you with a branch in his own repository and a link to create a pull request. If the backport needs manual resolving, it will provide you with instructions, similar to option 3.
    • Option 2 - Use SKARA CLI tooling:
      1. Create a branch for your backport, e.g. "git checkout -b my-backport-branch master"
      2. "git backport --from https://github.com/openjdk/jdk <commit-sha>". See the SKARA Wiki for more info.
      3. If necessary, resolve changes and follow the instructions.
    • Option 3 - Use plain Git to create the change:
      1. Create a branch for your backport, e.g. "git checkout -b my-backport-branch master"
      2. "git fetch --no-tags https://github.com/openjdk/jdk <commit-sha>"
      3. "git cherry-pick --no-commit <commit-sha>"
      4.  If necessary, resolve changes.
      5. "git commit -a -m "Backport <commit sha>"
  3. Test the patch

Your testing should make sure that your new functionality works, but, more important, it must make sure that you do not break anything. It should not break other platforms, other GCs etc.  Testing of a change with low risk should comprise at least:

    1. "tier1" tests should be passing at all times, use "make run-test TEST=tier1" to run. 
    2. "tier2" provides a larger coverage if you have the resources to run it. Use "make run-test TEST=tier2" to run
    3. Run tests from the area that the patch affects, use "make run-test TEST=<path-to-tests>" to run specific tests
    4. New regression tests that come with the patch should pass
    5. Enabling GitHub Actions for your personal fork of the jdk11u-dev repository before publishing your branch will provide you with builds and a tier1 test run via GitHub Actions on many platforms.  If tests are failing, analyze why they are failing and share this information.

  1. Create a pull request at https://github.com/openjdk/jdk11u-dev | https://github.com/openjdk/jdk17u-dev
    1. If you have created a backport via Option1, the /backport command, and the backport was clean, you can use the provided link to create a PR
    2. In all other cases, push the new branch to your fork of https://github.com/openjdk/jdk11u-dev | https://github.com/openjdk/jdk17u-dev
    3. and open a PR. You can do this in one step via the SKARA command "git pr create --publish". If it is a backport, make sure the title of the PR is "Backport <SHA hash of original commit>" to have the bots correctly recognize your change as a backport.

  2. If your patch is not a clean backport (labeled as clean by the bots), get the change reviewed by some jdk-updates reviewer
    1. Note: the change review is not the approval, which you would get at the next step
    2. The PR message is automatically posted to the jdk-updates-dev mailing list. You might optionally cc the original mailing list or other OpenJDK mailing lists to get some more attention to your PR by using the /label command.
    3. It is helpful to In case of a backport state in the PR description what changes were needed and why: the difference against the original patch, motivations for doing things differently, etc... The description is addressed to the reviewers who assess whether the change is correct for the update release.

      Code Block
      titleExample PR message
      collapsetrue
      Hi,
      
      This is a backport of JDK-8888888: My Hovercraft Is Full Of Eels
      
      Original patch does not apply cleanly to 11u, because eels are all different sizes 
      and shapes. Notably, I had to change the com/antioch/holy/Grenade.cpp to avoid API 
      that only exists in 12+. 
      
      Testing: x86_64 build, affected tests, tier1
      
      Thanks,
      -Monty
  3. Request and await approval for the fix (if the issue is not public, go to step 8 first)

Do this only if you finished the previous steps. Among others, you should have the "ready" label on your PR, but this is not sufficient as the ready label is not tailored to this process.

    1. Add a "Fix Request <java version>" comment to the JBS issue that explains why the fix should be backported, gives a risk estimate of introducing new errors, explains the dependencies on other backports (if any), shows what testing was done to verify the backport etc. The goal for the "Fix Request" comment is to give maintainers all the information about the change to make an informed decision for inclusion into the update release. Then put the jdk11u-fix-request or the jdk17u-fix-requestlabel on the JBS issue.  Now the JBS issue will appear in the filters used by the maintainers. The maintainers might remove the label if the issue is not ready to be decided upon.  Add the label again if all preconditions are fulfilled.
    2. Wait for maintainer approval or rejection, which will manifest as either jdkXXu-fix-yes or jdkXXu-fix-no label on the issue.

      Code Block
      titleExample Fix Request comment with RFR
      collapsetrue
      Fix Request 11u|17u
      
      Backporting this patch eliminates the critical eel overflow.
      The risk is medium. It changes the critical component xyz, where little changes sometimes have unexpected effects. But this only touches abc and not the primary functionality of xyz. Fixing the issue overweights the risk.
      Patch does not apply cleanly to 11u and requires adjustments. 
      Backport requires JDK-8423421 and JDK-8771177 to be applied first.
      Included test passes. Ran tier1 and tier2 and a big application to rule out secondary effects.
      
      
      Code Block
      titleExample Fix Request comment without RFR
      collapsetrue
      Fix Request 11u|17u
      
      Backporting this patch eliminates the eel overflow. 
      Low risk as this only touches tests.
      Patch applies cleanly to 11u. 
      Backport requires follow up issue JDK-8282288.
      New test fails without the product patch, and passes with it. Tier1 and tier2 tests pass with the patch and 8282288.
      

In case of a larger change or backport, you might not want to invest the work for steps 1-5. and only then find out that the change is not accepted.  In this case, you can add the "Fix Request" comment and label in advance or address the maintainers for advice in some other ways.

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