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# Developer Guide
[TOC]
## Building
Gitiles requires [Bazel](https://bazel.build/) to build.
You need to use Java for building Gitiles. You can install Bazel from
bazel.build: https://bazel.build/versions/master/docs/install.html
```
bazel build //...
bazel test //...
```
## Testing
```
cd /path/to/repositories # Don't run from the gitiles repo.
/path/to/gitiles/tools/run_dev.sh
```
This will recompile and start a development server. Open
http://localhost:8080/ to view your local copy of gitiles, which
will serve any repositories under `/path/to/repositories`.
To run unit tests, run `bazel test ...`.
## Eclipse IDE
If you'd like to use Eclipse to edit Gitiles, first generate a project file:
```
tools/eclipse/project.sh
```
Import the project in Eclipse:
```
File -> Import -> Existing Projects into Workpace
```
The project only needs to be rebuilt if the source roots or third-party
libraries have changed. For best results, ensure the project is closed in
Eclipse before rebuilding.
## Running/Debugging from Eclipse IDE
Running Gitiles from Eclipse requires setting the
`com.google.gitiles.sourcePath` system property. The property value has to be
the root folder of the Gitiles source code, for example:
````
-Dcom.google.gitiles.sourcePath=/home/johndoe/git/gitiles
````
## Code Style
Java code in Gitiles follows the [Google Java Style Guide][java-style]
with a 100-column limit.
Code should be automatically formatted using [google-java-format][fmt]
prior to sending a code review. There is currently no Eclipse
formatter, but the tool can be run from the command line:
```
java -jar /path/to/google-java-format-1.0-all-deps.jar -i path/to/java/File.java
```
CSS in Gitiles follows the [SUIT CSS naming conventions][suit].
[java-style]: https://google.github.io/styleguide/javaguide.html
[fmt]: https://github.com/google/google-java-format
[suit]: https://github.com/suitcss/suit/blob/master/doc/naming-conventions.md
## Code Review
Gitiles uses Gerrit for code review:
https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/
Gitiles uses the ["git push" workflow][1] with server
https://gerrit.googlesource.com/gitiles. You will need a
[generated cookie][2].
[1]: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/Documentation/user-upload.html#_git_push
[2]: https://gerrit.googlesource.com/new-password
Gerrit depends on "Change-Id" annotations in your commit message.
If you try to push a commit without one, it will explain how to
install the proper git-hook:
```
curl -Lo `git rev-parse --git-dir`/hooks/commit-msg \
https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/tools/hooks/commit-msg
chmod +x `git rev-parse --git-dir`/hooks/commit-msg
```
Before you create your local commit (which you'll push to Gerrit)
you will need to set your email to match your Gerrit account:
```
git config --local --add user.email foo@bar.com
```
Normally you will create code reviews by pushing for master:
```
git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
```
## Releases
Gitiles artifacts are published to the [gerrit-maven
bucket](http://gerrit-maven.storage.googleapis.com/). To release a new version,
you must have write access to this bucket.
First, increment `GITILES_VERSION` in `version.bzl`. Technically, Gitiles uses
the
["build number" scheme](http://mojo.codehaus.org/versions-maven-plugin/version-rules.html),
which in practice just means incrementing the last component (after the `-`) by
one. Get your change reviewed and submitted.
Then, run:
```
./tools/maven/mvn.sh deploy
```
Tag the release with an annotated tag matching the version number.
Once released, Maven projects can consume the new version as long as they point
at the proper repository URL. Similarly, Bazel projects using the `maven_jar`
bazlet can use the new version with `repository = GERRIT`.