Code reviews are a central part of developing high-quality code for Chromium. All changes must be reviewed.
The bigger patch-upload-and-land process is covered in more detail the contributing code page.
Ideally the reviewer is someone who is familiar with the area of code you are touching. Any committer can review code, but an owner must provide a review for each directory you are touching. If you have doubts, look at the git blame for the file and the OWNERS
files (see below).
To indicate a positive review, the reviewer types “LGTM” (case insensitive) into a comment on the code review. This stands for “Looks Good To Me.” The text “not LGTM” will cancel out a previous positive review.
If you have multiple reviewers, make it clear in the message you send requesting review what you expect from each reviewer. Otherwise people might assume their input is not required or waste time with redundant reviews.
Aim to provide some kind of actionable response within 24 hours of receipt (not counting weekends and holidays). This doesn't mean you have to have done a complete review, but you should be able to give some initial feedback, request more time, or suggest another reviewer.
It can be nice to indicate if you‘re away in your name in the code review tool. If you do this, indicate when you’ll be back.
Don't generally discourage people from sending you code reviews. This includes writing a blanket (“slow”) after your name in the review tool.
In various directories there are files named OWNERS
that list the email addresses of people qualified to review changes in that directory. You must get a positive review from an owner of each directory your change touches.
Owners files are recursive, so each file also applies to its subdirectories. It's generally best to pick more specific owners. People listed in higher-level directories may have less experience with the code in question. More detail on the owners file format is provided in the “More information” section below.
Tip: The git cl owners
command can help find owners.
While owners must approve all patches, any committer can contribute to the review. In some directories the owners can be overloaded or there might be people not listed as owners who are more familiar with the low-level code in question. In these cases it‘s common to request a low-level review from an appropriate person, and then request a high-level owner review once that’s complete. As always, be clear what you expect of each reviewer to avoid duplicated work.
Owners do not have to pick other owners for reviews. Since they should already be familiar with the code in question, a thorough review from any appropriate committer is sufficient.
The existing owners of a directory approve additions to the list. It is preferrable to have many directories, each with a smaller number of specific owners rather than large directories with many owners. Owners must:
Demonstrate excellent judgment, teamwork and ability to uphold Chrome development principles.
Be already acting as an owner, providing high-quality reviews and design feedback
Be a Chromium project member with full commit access of at least 6 months tenure.
Have submitted a substantial number of non-trivial changes to the affected directory.
Have committed or reviewed substantial work to the affected directory within the last 90 days.
Have the bandwidth to contribute to reviews in a timely manner. If the load is unsustainable, work to expand the number of owners. Don't try to discourage people from sending reviews, including writing “slow” or “emeritus” after your name.
Seldom-updated directories may have exceptions. Directories in third_party
should list those most familiar with the library.
“TBR” is our mechanism for post-commit review. It should be used rarely and only in cases where a review is unnecessary or as described below. The most common use of TBR is to revert patches that broke the build.
TBR does not mean “no review.” A reviewer TBR-ed on a change should still review the change. If there comments after landing the author is obligated to address them in a followup patch.
Do not use TBR just because a change is urgent or the reviewer is being slow. Contact the reviewer directly or find somebody.
To send a change TBR, annotate the description and send email like normal. Otherwise the reviewer won't know to review the patch.
Add the reviewer‘s email address in the code review tool’s reviewer field like normal.
Add a line “TBR=<reviewer's email>” to the bottom of the change list description.
Push the “send mail” button.
Sometimes you might do something that affects many callers in different directories. For example, adding a parameter to a common function in //base. If the updates to the callers is mechanical, you can:
Get a normal owner of the lower-level directory you're changing (in this example, //base
) to do a proper review of those changes.
Get somebody to review the downstream changes. This is often the same person from the previous step but could be somebody else.
Add the owners of the affected downstream directories as TBR.
This process ensures that all code is reviewed prior to checkin and that the concept of the change is reviewed by a qualified person, but you don't have to track down many individual owners for trivial changes to their directories.
You can TBR documentation updates. Documentation means markdown files, text documents, and high-level comments in code. At finer levels of detail, comments in source files become more like code and should be reviewed normally (not using TBR). Non-TBR-able stuff includes things like function contracts and most comments inside functions.
Use good judgement. If you're changing something very important, tricky, or something you may not be very familiar with, ask for the code review up-front.
Don't TBR changes to policy documents like the style guide or this document.
Don't mix unrelated documentation updates with code changes.
Be sure to actually send out the email for the code review. If you get one, please actually read the changes.
Refer to the source code for all details on the file format.
This example indicates that two people are owners, in addition to any owners from the parent directory. git cl owners
will list the comment after an owner address, so this is a good place to include restrictions or special instructions.
# You can include comments like this. a@chromium.org b@chromium.org # Only for the frobinator.
A *
indicates that all committers are owners:
*
The text set noparent
will stop owner propagation from parent directories. This is used for specialized code. In this example, only the two listed people are owners:
set noparent a@chromium.org b@chromium.org
The per-file
directive allows owners to be added that apply only to files matching a pattern. In this example, owners from the parent directiory apply, plus one person for some classes of files, and all committers are owners for the readme:
per-file foo_bar.cc=a@chromium.org per-file foo.*=a@chromium.org per-file readme.txt=*
Other OWNERS
files can be included by reference by listing the path to the file with file://...
. This example indicates that only the people listed in //ipc/SECURITY_OWNERS
can review the messages files:
per-file *_messages*.h=set noparent per-file *_messages*.h=file://ipc/SECURITY_OWNERS