From 2dd65cf55254d47873b114fec466e67b4130d3ec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Anand B Jyoti Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 10:50:41 +0530 Subject: Docs: Review and update the docs for E-release JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-82 Review and update the the E-release docsuments. Change-Id: I1eeb0dead18559b8f05039b81512d944a862bbb4 Signed-off-by: Anand B Jyoti --- docs/testing/developer/design/02-Get_started_Guide.rst | 14 +++++++------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/testing/developer/design/02-Get_started_Guide.rst') diff --git a/docs/testing/developer/design/02-Get_started_Guide.rst b/docs/testing/developer/design/02-Get_started_Guide.rst index 4bcff899..995a2270 100644 --- a/docs/testing/developer/design/02-Get_started_Guide.rst +++ b/docs/testing/developer/design/02-Get_started_Guide.rst @@ -59,11 +59,11 @@ In this way, individual commits can be traced to JIRA issues and we also know wh commits were used to resolve a JIRA issue. If you want to contribute to samplevnf, you can pick a issue from SampleVNF's JIRA dashboard or you can create you own issue and submit it to JIRA. - + Submitting code to Gerrit Installing and configuring Git and Git-Review is necessary in order to submit code to Gerrit. The Getting to the code page will provide you with some help for that. - + Comitting the code with Git Open a terminal window and set the project's directory to the working directory using the cd command. In this case "/home/opnfv/samplevnf" is the path to the samplevnf project folder on my computer. @@ -97,11 +97,11 @@ it is time to actually commit your work to your local Git repository. :: git commit --signoff -m "Title of change - + Test of change that describes in high level what was done. There is a lot of documentation in code so you do not need to repeat it here. - + JIRA: SAMPLEVNF-XXX" The message that is required for the commit should follow a specific set of rules. @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ This will automatically push your local commit into Gerrit. Code review You can add Samplevnf committers and contributors to review your codes. - + Modifying the code under review in Gerrit At the same time the code is being reviewed in Gerrit, you may need to edit it to make some changes and then send it back for review. The following steps go through the procedure. @@ -132,7 +132,7 @@ The 'status' command is very helpful at this point as it provides an overview of :: git status The output of the command provides us with the files that have been modified after the latest commit. - + You can now stage the files that have been modified as part of the Gerrit code review edition/modification/improvement using git add command. It is now time to commit the newly modified files, but the objective here is not to @@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ You can achieve that with the '--amend' option on the 'commit' command: If the commit was successful, the 'status' command should not return the updated files as about to be commited. - + The final step consists in pushing the newly modified commit to Gerrit. :: -- cgit 1.2.3-korg