- Issues and Pull Requests
- Accepting Modifications
- Landing Pull Requests
- Who to CC in the issue tracker
This document explains how Collaborators manage the Node.js project. Collaborators should understand the guidelines for new contributors and the project governance model.
Mind these guidelines, the opinions of other Collaborators, and guidance of the TSC. Notify other qualified parties for more input on an issue or a pull request. See Who to CC in the issue tracker.
Always show courtesy to individuals submitting issues and pull requests. Be welcoming to first-time contributors, identified by the GitHub badge.
For first-time contributors, check if the commit author is the same as the pull request author. This way, once their pull request lands, GitHub will show them as a Contributor. Ask if they have configured their git username and email to their liking.
Collaborators may close any issue or pull request that is not relevant to the future of the Node.js project. Where this is unclear, leave the issue or pull request open for several days to allow for discussion. Where this does not yield evidence that the issue or pull request has relevance, close it. Remember that issues and pull requests can always be re-opened if necessary.
A pull request is author ready when:
- There is a CI run in progress or completed.
- There are at least two Collaborator approvals, or at least one approval if the pull request is older than 7 days.
- There are no outstanding review comments.
Please always add the author ready
label to the pull request in that case.
Please always remove it again as soon as the conditions are not met anymore.
When you open a pull request, start a CI right away and post the link to it in a comment in the pull request. Later, after new code changes or rebasing, start a new CI.
As soon as the pull request is ready to land, please do so. This allows other
Collaborators to focus on other pull requests. If your pull request is not ready
to land but is author ready, add the
author ready
label. If you wish to land the pull request yourself, use the
"assign yourself" link to self-assign it.
Contributors propose modifications to Node.js using GitHub pull requests. This includes modifications proposed by TSC members and other Collaborators. A pull request must pass code review and CI before landing into the codebase.
At least two Collaborators must approve a pull request before the pull request lands. (One Collaborator approval is enough if the pull request has been open for more than 7 days.) Approving a pull request indicates that the Collaborator accepts responsibility for the change. Approval must be from Collaborators who are not authors of the change.
In some cases, it may be necessary to summon a GitHub team to a pull request for review by @-mention. See Who to CC in the issue tracker.
If you are unsure about the modification and are not prepared to take full responsibility for the change, defer to another Collaborator.
If you are the first Collaborator to approve a pull request that has no CI yet, please start one (see testing and CI for further information on how to do that) and post the link to the CI in the PR. Please also start a new CI in case the PR creator pushed new code since the last CI run (due to e.g., an addressed review comment or a rebase).
In case there are already enough approvals (LGTM
), a CI run, and the PR is
open longer than the minimum waiting time without any open comments, please do
not (only) add another approval. Instead go ahead and land the PR after checking
the CI outcome.
If there are no objecting Collaborators, a pull request may land if it has the
needed approvals, CI, and
wait time. If a pull request meets all requirements
except the wait time, please add the
author ready
label.
Where there is disagreement among Collaborators, consensus should be sought if possible. If reaching consensus is not possible, a Collaborator may escalate the issue to the TSC.
Collaborators should not block a pull request without providing a reason. Another Collaborator may ask an objecting Collaborator to explain their objection. If the objector is unresponsive, another Collaborator may dismiss the objection.
Breaking changes must receive
TSC review. If two TSC members approve the pull request
and no Collaborators object, then it may land. If there are objections, a
Collaborator may apply the tsc-agenda
label. That will put the pull request on
the TSC meeting agenda.
- How to respectfully and usefully review code, part one and two
- How to write a positive code review
Before landing pull requests, sufficient time should be left for input from other Collaborators. In general, leave at least 48 hours to account for international time differences and work schedules. However, certain types of pull requests can be fast-tracked and may be landed after a shorter delay. For example:
- Focused changes that affect only documentation and/or the test suite:
code-and-learn
tasks typically fall into this category.good-first-issue
pull requests may also be suitable.
- Changes that fix regressions:
- Regressions that break the workflow (red CI or broken compilation).
- Regressions that happen right before a release, or reported soon after.
When a pull request is deemed suitable to be fast-tracked, label it with
fast-track
and add a comment that collaborators may upvote. Please mention any
Collaborators that previously approved the pull request. If someone disagrees
with the fast-tracking request, remove the label and leave a comment indicating
why the pull request should not be fast-tracked. The pull request can be landed
once two or more Collaborators approve both the pull request and the
fast-tracking request, and the necessary CI testing is done. A request to
fast-track a PR made by a different Collaborator than the pull-request author
counts as a fast-track approval.
All bugfixes require a test case which demonstrates the defect. The test should fail before the change, and pass after the change.
All pull requests that modify executable code should also include a test case and must be subjected to continuous integration tests on the project CI server. The pull request should have a CI status indicator.
Do not land any Pull Requests without passing (green or yellow) CI runs. If you
believe any failed (red or grey) CI sub-tasks are unrelated to the change in the
Pull Request, use "Resume Build" in the left navigation of the relevant
node-test-pull-request
job. It will create a new node-test-pull-request
run
that preserves all the green results from the current job but re-runs everything
else.
-
node-test-pull-request
is the standard CI run we do to check Pull Requests. It triggersnode-test-commit
, which runs thebuild-ci
andtest-ci
targets on all supported platforms. -
node-test-pull-request-lite-pipeline
only runs the linter job, as well as the tests on LinuxONE, which is very fast. This is useful for changes that only affect comments or documentation. -
citgm-smoker
usesCitGM
to allow you to runnpm install && npm test
on a large selection of common modules. This is useful to check whether a change will cause breakage in the ecosystem. To test Node.js ABI changes you can runcitgm-abi-smoker
. -
node-stress-single-test
is designed to allow one to run a group of tests over and over on a specific platform to confirm that the test is reliable. -
node-test-commit-v8-linux
is designed to allow validation of changes to the copy of V8 in the Node.js tree by running the standard V8 tests. It should be run whenever the level of V8 within Node.js is updated or new patches are floated on V8. -
node-test-commit-custom-suites
can be used to customize what tests are run and with what parameters. For example, it can be used to execute tests which are not executed in a typicalnode-test-commit
run (such as tests in theinternet
orpummel
directories). It can also be used to make sure tests pass when provided with a flag not typically used in other CI test runs (such as--worker
).
Due to the nature of the JavaScript language, it can often be difficult to establish a clear distinction between which parts of the Node.js implementation represent the public API Node.js users should assume to be stable and which are part of the internal implementation details of Node.js itself. A rule of thumb is to base the determination off what functionality is actually documented in the official Node.js API documentation. However, it has been repeatedly demonstrated that either the documentation does not completely cover implemented behavior or that Node.js users have come to rely heavily on undocumented aspects of the Node.js implementation.
The following general rules should be followed to determine which aspects of the Node.js API are internal:
- All functionality exposed via
process.binding(...)
is internal. - All functionality implemented in
lib/internal/**/*.js
is internal unless it is re-exported by code inlib/*.js
or documented as part of the Node.js Public API. - Any object property or method whose key is a non-exported
Symbol
is an internal property. - Any object property or method whose key begins with the underscore
_
prefix is internal unless it is documented as part of the Node.js Public API. - Any object, property, method, argument, behavior, or event not documented in the Node.js documentation is internal.
- Any native C/C++ APIs/ABIs exported by the Node.js
*.h
header files that are hidden behind theNODE_WANT_INTERNALS
flag are internal.
Exceptions can be made if use or behavior of a given internal API can be demonstrated to be sufficiently relied upon by the Node.js ecosystem such that any changes would cause too much breakage. The threshold for what qualifies as too much breakage is to be decided on a case-by-case basis by the TSC.
If it is determined that a currently undocumented object, property, method, argument, or event should be documented, then a pull request adding the documentation is required in order for it to be considered part of the public API.
Making a determination about whether something should be documented can be difficult and will need to be handled on a case-by-case basis. For instance, if one documented API cannot be used successfully without the use of a second currently undocumented API, then the second API should be documented. If using an API in a manner currently undocumented achieves a particular useful result, a decision will need to be made whether or not that falls within the supported scope of that API; and if it does, it should be documented.
See Breaking Changes to Internal Elements on how to handle those types of changes.
Backwards-incompatible changes may land on the master branch at any time after sufficient review by Collaborators and approval of at least two TSC members.
Examples of breaking changes include:
- removal or redefinition of existing API arguments
- changing return values
- removing or modifying existing properties on an options argument
- adding or removing errors
- altering expected timing of an event
- changing the side effects of using a particular API
Purely additive changes (e.g. adding new events to EventEmitter
implementations, adding new arguments to a method in a way that allows
existing code to continue working without modification, or adding new
properties to an options argument) are semver-minor changes.
With a few exceptions outlined below, when backward-incompatible changes to a Public API are necessary, the existing API must be deprecated first and the new API either introduced in parallel or added after the next major Node.js version following the deprecation as a replacement for the deprecated API. In other words, as a general rule, existing Public APIs must not change (in a backward-incompatible way) without a deprecation.
Exceptions to this rule may be made in the following cases:
- Adding or removing errors thrown or reported by a Public API;
- Changing error messages for errors without error code;
- Altering the timing and non-internal side effects of the Public API.
Such changes must be handled as semver-major changes but MAY be landed without a Deprecation cycle.
Note that errors thrown, along with behaviors and APIs implemented by dependencies of Node.js (e.g. those originating from V8) are generally not under the control of Node.js and therefore are not directly subject to this policy. However, care should still be taken when landing updates to dependencies when it is known or expected that breaking changes to error handling may have been made. Additional CI testing may be required.
From time-to-time, in particularly exceptional cases, the TSC may be asked to consider and approve additional exceptions to this rule.
For more information, see Deprecations.
Breaking changes to internal elements are permitted in semver-patch or semver-minor commits but Collaborators should take significant care when making and reviewing such changes. Before landing such commits, an effort must be made to determine the potential impact of the change in the ecosystem by analyzing current use and by validating such changes through ecosystem testing using the Canary in the Goldmine tool. If a change cannot be made without ecosystem breakage, then TSC review is required before landing the change as anything less than semver-major.
If a determination is made that a particular internal API (for instance, an
underscore _
prefixed property) is sufficiently relied upon by the ecosystem
such that any changes may break user code, then serious consideration should be
given to providing an alternative Public API for that functionality before any
breaking changes are made.
Because breaking (semver-major) changes are permitted to land on the master branch at any time, at least some subset of the user ecosystem may be adversely affected in the short term when attempting to build and use Node.js directly from the master branch. This potential instability is why Node.js offers distinct Current and LTS release streams that offer explicit stability guarantees.
Specifically:
- Breaking changes should never land in Current or LTS except when:
- Resolving critical security issues.
- Fixing a critical bug (e.g. fixing a memory leak) requires a breaking change.
- There is TSC consensus that the change is required.
- If a breaking commit does accidentally land in a Current or LTS branch, an attempt to fix the issue will be made before the next release; If no fix is provided then the commit will be reverted.
When any changes are landed on the master branch and it is determined that the changes do break existing code, a decision may be made to revert those changes either temporarily or permanently. However, the decision to revert or not can often be based on many complex factors that are not easily codified. It is also possible that the breaking commit can be labeled retroactively as a semver-major change that will not be backported to Current or LTS branches.
Commits are reverted with git revert <HASH>
, or git revert <FROM>..<TO>
for
multiple commits. Commit metadata and the reason for the revert should be
appended. Commit message rules about line length and subsystem can be ignored.
A Pull Request should be raised and approved like any other change.
Semver-minor commits that introduce new core modules should be treated with extra care.
The name of the new core module should not conflict with any existing module in the ecosystem unless a written agreement with the owner of those modules is reached to transfer ownership.
If the new module name is free, a Collaborator should register a placeholder in the module registry as soon as possible, linking to the pull request that introduces the new core module.
Pull requests introducing new core modules:
- Must be left open for at least one week for review.
- Must be labeled using the
tsc-review
label. - Must have signoff from at least two TSC members.
New core modules must be landed with a Stability Index of Experimental, and must remain Experimental until a semver-major release.
N-API provides an ABI stable API that we will have to support in future versions without the usual option to modify or remove existing APIs on SemVer boundaries. Therefore, additions need to be managed carefully.
This
guide
outlines the requirements and principles that we should follow when
approving and landing new N-API APIs (any additions to node_api.h
and
node_api_types.h
).
Deprecation is "the discouragement of use of some … feature … or practice, typically because it has been superseded or is no longer considered efficient or safe, without completely removing it or prohibiting its use. It can also imply that a feature, design, or practice will be removed or discontinued entirely in the future."
Node.js uses three Deprecation levels:
-
Documentation-Only Deprecation: A deprecation notice is added to the API documentation but no functional changes are implemented in the code. By default, there will be no warnings emitted for such deprecations at runtime. Documentation-only deprecations may trigger a runtime warning when Node.js is started with the
--pending-deprecation
flag or theNODE_PENDING_DEPRECATION=1
environment variable is set. -
Runtime Deprecation: A warning is emitted at runtime the first time that a deprecated API is used. The
--throw-deprecation
flag can be used to escalate such warnings into runtime errors that will cause the Node.js process to exit. As with Documentation-Only Deprecation, the documentation for the API must be updated to clearly indicate the deprecated status. -
End-of-life: The API is no longer subject to the semantic versioning rules. Backward-incompatible changes including complete removal of such APIs may occur at any time.
Documentation-Only Deprecations may be handled as semver-minor or semver-major changes. Such deprecations have no impact on the successful operation of running code and therefore should not be viewed as breaking changes.
Runtime Deprecations and End-of-life APIs (internal or public) must be handled as semver-major changes unless there is TSC consensus to land the deprecation as a semver-minor.
All Documentation-Only and Runtime deprecations will be assigned a unique identifier that can be used to persistently refer to the deprecation in documentation, emitted process warnings, or errors thrown. Documentation for these identifiers will be included in the Node.js API documentation and will be immutable once assigned. Even if End-of-Life code is removed from Node.js, the documentation for the assigned deprecation identifier must remain in the Node.js API documentation.
A Deprecation cycle is a major release during which an API has been in one of the three Deprecation levels. Documentation-Only Deprecations may land in a minor release but must not be upgraded to a Runtime Deprecation until the next major release.
No API can be moved to End-of-life without first having gone through a Runtime Deprecation cycle. However, there is no requirement that deprecated code must progress ultimately to End-of-Life. Documentation-only and runtime deprecations may remain indefinitely.
Communicate pending deprecations and associated mitigations with the ecosystem
as soon as possible (preferably before the pull request adding the deprecation
lands on the master branch). Use the notable-change
label on all pull requests
that add a new deprecation or move an existing deprecation to a new deprecation
level.
Collaborators may opt to elevate pull requests or issues to the TSC. This should be done where a pull request:
- is labeled
semver-major
, or - has a significant impact on the codebase, or
- is inherently controversial, or
- has failed to reach consensus amongst the Collaborators who are actively participating in the discussion.
Assign the tsc-review
label or @-mention the
@nodejs/tsc
GitHub team if you want to elevate an issue to the TSC.
Do not use the GitHub UI on the right-hand side to assign to
@nodejs/tsc
or request a review from @nodejs/tsc
.
The TSC should serve as the final arbiter where required.
- Avoid landing PRs that are assigned to someone else. Authors who wish to land their own PRs will self-assign them, or delegate to someone else. If in doubt, ask the assignee whether it is okay to land.
- Never use GitHub's green "Merge Pull Request" button. Reasons for not
using the web interface button:
- The "Create a merge commit" method will add an unnecessary merge commit.
- The "Squash and merge" method will add metadata (the PR #) to the commit title. If more than one author has contributed to the PR, squashing will only keep the most recent author.
- The "Rebase and merge" method has no way of adding metadata to the commit.
- Make sure the CI is done and the result is green. If the CI is not green, check for flaky tests and infrastructure failures. Please check if those were already reported in the appropriate repository (node and build) or not and open new issues in case they are not. If no CI was run or the run is outdated because code was pushed after the last run, please first start a new CI and wait for the result. If no CI is required, please leave a comment in case none is already present.
- Review the commit message to ensure that it adheres to the guidelines outlined in the contributing guide.
- Add all necessary metadata to commit messages before landing. If you are unsure exactly how to format the commit messages, use the commit log as a reference. See this commit as an example.
For PRs from first-time contributors, be welcoming. Also, verify that their git settings are to their liking.
All commits should be self-contained, meaning every commit should pass all tests. This makes it much easier when bisecting to find a breaking change.
In most cases, using the git-node
command of node-core-utils
should be enough to help you land a Pull Request. If you discover a problem when
using this tool, please file an issue
to the issue tracker.
Quick example:
$ npm install -g node-core-utils
$ git node land $PRID
If it's the first time you have used node-core-utils
, you will be prompted
to type the password of your GitHub account and the two-factor authentication
code in the console so the tool can create the GitHub access token for you.
If you do not want to do that, follow
the node-core-utils
guide
to set up your credentials manually.
Clear any am
/rebase
that may already be underway:
$ git am --abort
$ git rebase --abort
Checkout proper target branch:
$ git checkout master
Update the tree (assumes your repo is set up as detailed in CONTRIBUTING.md):
$ git fetch upstream
$ git merge --ff-only upstream/master
Apply external patches:
$ curl -L https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/xxx.patch | git am --whitespace=fix
If the merge fails even though recent CI runs were successful, then a 3-way merge may be required. In this case try:
$ git am --abort
$ curl -L https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/xxx.patch | git am -3 --whitespace=fix
If the 3-way merge succeeds you can proceed, but make sure to check the changes against the original PR carefully and build/test on at least one platform before landing. If the 3-way merge fails, then it is most likely that a conflicting PR has landed since the CI run and you will have to ask the author to rebase.
Check and re-review the changes:
$ git diff upstream/master
Check the number of commits and commit messages:
$ git log upstream/master...master
Squash commits and add metadata:
$ git rebase -i upstream/master
This will open a screen like this (in the default shell editor):
pick 6928fc1 crypto: add feature A
pick 8120c4c add test for feature A
pick 51759dc crypto: feature B
pick 7d6f433 test for feature B
# Rebase f9456a2..7d6f433 onto f9456a2
#
# Commands:
# p, pick = use commit
# r, reword = use commit, but edit the commit message
# e, edit = use commit, but stop for amending
# s, squash = use commit, but meld into previous commit
# f, fixup = like "squash", but discard this commit's log message
# x, exec = run command (the rest of the line) using shell
#
# These lines can be re-ordered; they are executed from top to bottom.
#
# If you remove a line here THAT COMMIT WILL BE LOST.
#
# However, if you remove everything, the rebase will be aborted.
#
# Note that empty commits are commented out
Replace a couple of pick
s with fixup
to squash them into a
previous commit:
pick 6928fc1 crypto: add feature A
fixup 8120c4c add test for feature A
pick 51759dc crypto: feature B
fixup 7d6f433 test for feature B
Replace pick
with reword
to change the commit message:
reword 6928fc1 crypto: add feature A
fixup 8120c4c add test for feature A
reword 51759dc crypto: feature B
fixup 7d6f433 test for feature B
Save the file and close the editor. You'll be asked to enter a new
commit message for that commit. This is a good moment to fix incorrect
commit logs, ensure that they are properly formatted, and add
Reviewed-By
lines.
- The commit message text must conform to the commit message guidelines.
-
Modify the original commit message to include additional metadata regarding the change process. (The
git node metadata
command can generate the metadata for you.)- Required: A
PR-URL:
line that references the full GitHub URL of the original pull request being merged so it's easy to trace a commit back to the conversation that led up to that change. - Optional: A
Fixes: X
line, where X either includes the full GitHub URL for an issue, and/or the hash and commit message if the commit fixes a bug in a previous commit. MultipleFixes:
lines may be added if appropriate. - Optional: One or more
Refs:
lines referencing a URL for any relevant background. - Required: A
Reviewed-By: Name <email>
line for yourself and any other Collaborators who have reviewed the change.- Useful for @mentions / contact list if something goes wrong in the PR.
- Protects against the assumption that GitHub will be around forever.
- Required: A
Run tests (make -j4 test
or vcbuild test
). Even though there was a
successful continuous integration run, other changes may have landed on master
since then, so running the tests one last time locally is a good practice.
Validate that the commit message is properly formatted using core-validate-commit.
$ git rev-list upstream/master...HEAD | xargs core-validate-commit
Optional: When landing your own commits, force push the amended commit to the
branch you used to open the pull request. If your branch is called bugfix
,
then the command would be git push --force-with-lease origin master:bugfix
.
Don't manually close the PR, GitHub will close it automatically later after you
push it upstream, and will mark it with the purple merged status rather than the
red closed status. If you close the PR before GitHub adjusts its status, it will
show up as a 0 commit PR and the changed file history will be empty. Also if you
push upstream before you push to your branch, GitHub will close the issue with
red status so the order of operations is important.
Time to push it:
$ git push upstream master
Close the pull request with a "Landed in <commit hash>
" comment. If
your pull request shows the purple merged status then you should still
add the "Landed in .." comment if you added
multiple commits.
Sometimes, when running git push upstream master
, you may get an error message
like this:
To https://github.com/nodejs/node
! [rejected] master -> master (fetch first)
error: failed to push some refs to 'https://github.com/nodejs/node'
hint: Updates were rejected because the remote contains work that you do
hint: not have locally. This is usually caused by another repository pushing
hint: to the same ref. You may want to first integrate the remote changes
hint: (e.g. 'git pull ...') before pushing again.
hint: See the 'Note about fast-forwards' in 'git push --help' for details.
That means a commit has landed since your last rebase against upstream/master
.
To fix this, pull with rebase from upstream and run the tests again (to make
sure no interactions between your changes and the new changes cause any
problems), and push again:
git pull upstream master --rebase
make -j4 test
git push upstream master
- Ping a TSC member.
#node-dev
on freenode- With
git
, there's a way to override remote trees by force pushing (git push -f
). This should generally be seen as forbidden (since you're rewriting history on a repository other people are working against) but is allowed for simpler slip-ups such as typos in commit messages. However, you are only allowed to force push to any Node.js branch within 10 minutes from your original push. If someone else pushes to the branch or the 10 minute period passes, consider the commit final.- Use
--force-with-lease
to minimize the chance of overwriting someone else's change. - Post to
#node-dev
(IRC) if you force push.
- Use
Long Term Support (often referred to as LTS) guarantees application developers a 30-month support cycle with specific versions of Node.js.
You can find more information in the full release plan.
Once a Current branch enters LTS, changes in that branch are limited to bug fixes, security updates, possible npm updates, documentation updates, and certain performance improvements that can be demonstrated to not break existing applications. Semver-minor changes are only permitted if required for bug fixes and then only on a case-by-case basis with LTS WG and possibly Technical Steering Committee (TSC) review. Semver-major changes are permitted only if required for security-related fixes.
Once a Current branch moves into Maintenance mode, only critical bugs, critical security fixes, and documentation updates will be permitted.
The default policy is to not land semver-minor or higher commits in any LTS branch. However, the LTS WG or TSC can evaluate any individual semver-minor commit and decide whether a special exception ought to be made. It is expected that such exceptions would be evaluated, in part, on the scope and impact of the changes on the code, the risk to ecosystem stability incurred by accepting the change, and the expected benefit that landing the commit will have for the ecosystem.
Any Collaborator who feels a semver-minor commit should be landed in an LTS
branch should attach the lts-agenda
label to the pull request. The LTS WG
will discuss the issue and, if necessary, will escalate the issue up to the
TSC for further discussion.
There are multiple LTS branches, e.g. v10.x
and v8.x
. Each of these is
paired with a staging branch: v10.x-staging
and v8.x-staging
.
As commits land on the master branch, they are cherry-picked back to each staging branch as appropriate. If the commit applies only to the LTS branch, the PR must be opened against the staging branch. Commits are selectively pulled from the staging branch into the LTS branch only when a release is being prepared and may be pulled into the LTS branch in a different order than they were landed in staging.
Only the members of the @nodejs/backporters team should land commits onto LTS staging branches.
When you send your pull request, please include information about whether your change is breaking. If you think your patch can be backported, please include that information in the PR thread or your PR description. For more information on backporting, please see the backporting guide.
Several LTS related issue and PR labels have been provided:
lts-watch-v10.x
- tells the LTS WG that the issue/PR needs to be considered for landing in thev10.x-staging
branch.lts-watch-v8.x
- tells the LTS WG that the issue/PR needs to be considered for landing in thev8.x-staging
branch.lts-watch-v6.x
- tells the LTS WG that the issue/PR needs to be considered for landing in thev6.x-staging
branch.land-on-v10.x
- tells the release team that the commit should be landed in a future v10.x release.land-on-v8.x
- tells the release team that the commit should be landed in a future v8.x release.land-on-v6.x
- tells the release team that the commit should be landed in a future v6.x release.
Any Collaborator can attach these labels to any PR/issue. As commits are
landed into the staging branches, the lts-watch-
label will be removed.
Likewise, as commits are landed in a LTS release, the land-on-
label will
be removed.
Collaborators are encouraged to help the LTS WG by attaching the appropriate
lts-watch-
label to any PR that may impact an LTS release.
When the LTS working group determines that a new LTS release is required, selected commits will be picked from the staging branch to be included in the release. This process of making a release will be a collaboration between the LTS working group and the Release team.
Subsystem | Maintainers |
---|---|
benchmark/* |
@nodejs/benchmarking, @mscdex |
doc/* , *.md |
@nodejs/documentation |
lib/assert |
@nodejs/assert |
lib/async_hooks |
@nodejs/async_hooks for bugs/reviews (+ @nodejs/diagnostics for API) |
lib/buffer |
@nodejs/buffer |
lib/child_process |
@nodejs/child_process |
lib/cluster |
@nodejs/cluster |
lib/{crypto,tls,https} |
@nodejs/crypto |
lib/dgram |
@nodejs/dgram |
lib/domains |
@nodejs/domains |
lib/fs , src/{fs,file} |
@nodejs/fs |
lib/{_}http{*} |
@nodejs/http |
lib/inspector.js , src/inspector_* |
@nodejs/v8-inspector |
lib/internal/bootstrap/* |
@nodejs/process |
lib/internal/url , src/node_url |
@nodejs/url |
lib/net |
@bnoordhuis, @indutny, @nodejs/streams |
lib/repl |
@nodejs/repl |
lib/{_}stream{*} |
@nodejs/streams |
lib/timers |
@nodejs/timers |
lib/util |
@nodejs/util |
lib/zlib |
@nodejs/zlib |
src/async_wrap.* |
@nodejs/async_hooks |
src/node_api.* |
@nodejs/n-api |
src/node_crypto.* |
@nodejs/crypto |
test/* |
@nodejs/testing |
tools/node_modules/eslint , .eslintrc |
@nodejs/linting |
build | @nodejs/build |
src/module_wrap.* , lib/internal/modules/* , lib/internal/vm/module.js |
@nodejs/modules |
GYP | @nodejs/gyp |
performance | @nodejs/performance |
platform specific | @nodejs/platform-{aix,arm,freebsd,macos,ppc,smartos,s390,windows} |
python code | @nodejs/python |
upgrading c-ares | @rvagg |
upgrading http-parser | @nodejs/http, @nodejs/http2 |
upgrading libuv | @nodejs/libuv |
upgrading npm | @fishrock123, @MylesBorins |
upgrading V8 | @nodejs/V8, @nodejs/post-mortem |
Embedded use or delivery of Node.js | @nodejs/delivery-channels |
When things need extra attention, are controversial, or semver-major
:
@nodejs/tsc
If you cannot find who to cc for a file, git shortlog -n -s <file>
may help.