GIT Examples
Contributing code to PX4
Adding a feature to PX4 follows a defined workflow. In order to share your contributions on PX4, you can follow this example.
- Sign up for github if you haven’t already
- Fork the Firmware (see here)
- Clone your forked repository to your local computer
cd ~/wherever/
git clone https://github.com/<your git name>/Firmware.git
- Go into the new directory, initialize and update the submodules, and add the original upstream Firmware
cd Firmware
git submodule update --init --recursive
git remote add upstream https://github.com/PX4/Firmware.git
- You should have now two remote repositories: One repository is called upstream that points to the PX4 Firmware,
and one repository that points to your forked repository of the PX4 repository. - This can be checked with the following command:
git remote -v
- Make the changes that you want to add to the current master.
- Create a new branch with a meaningful name that represents your feature
you can use the commandgit checkout -b <your feature branch name>
git branch
to make sure you’re on the right branch. - Add your changes that you want to be part of the commit by adding the respective files
If you prefer having a GUI to add your files see Gitk orgit add <file name>
git add -p
. - Commit the added files with a meaningful message explaining your changes
For a good commit message, please refer to Contributing section.git commit -m "<your commit message>"
- Some time might have passed and the upstream master has changed. PX4 prefers a linear commit history and uses git rebase. To include the newest changes from upstream in your local branch, switch to your master branch
Then pull the newest commits from upstream mastergit checkout master
Now your local master is up to date. Switch back to your feature branchgit pull upstream master
and rebase on your updated mastergit checkout <your feature branch name>
git rebase master
- Now you can push your local commits to your forked repository
git push origin <your feature branch name>
- You can verify that the push was successful by going to your forked repository in your browser:
https://github.com/<your git name>/Firmware.git
There you should see the message that a new branch has been pushed to your forked repository. - Now it’s time to create a pull request (PR). On the right hand side of the “new branch message” (see one step before), you should see a green button saying “Compare & Create Pull Request”. Then it should list your changes and you can (must) add a meaningful title (in case of a one commit PR, it’s usually the commit message) and message (explain what you did for what reason. Check other pull requests for comparison)
- You’re done! Responsible members of PX4 will now have a look at your contribution and decide if they want to integrate it. Check if they have questions on your changes every once in a while.
Update Submodule
There are several ways to update a submodule. Either you clone the repository or you go in the submodule directory and follow the same procedure as in Contributing code to PX4.
Do a PR for a submodule update
This is required after you have done a PR for a submodule X repository and the bug-fix / feature-add is in the current master of submodule X. Since the Firmware still points to a commit before your update, a submodule pull request is required such that the submodule used by the Firmware points to the newest commit.
cd Firmware
- Make a new branch that describes the fix / feature for the submodule update:
git checkout -b pr-some-fix
- Go to submodule subdirectory
cd <path to submodule>
- PX4 submodule might not necessarily point to the newest commit. Therefore, first checkout master and pull the newest upstream code.
git checkout master
git pull origin master
- Go back to Firmware directory, and as usual add, commit and push the changes.
cd -
git add <path to submodule>
git commit -m "Update submodule to include ..."
git push upstream pr-some-fix
Checkout pull requests
You can test someone’s pull request (changes are not yet merged) even if the branch to merge only exists on the fork from that person. Do the following
git fetch upstream pull/<PR ID>/head:<branch name>
PR ID
is the number right next to the PR’s title (without the #) and the <branch name>
can also be found right below the PR ID
, e.g. <the other persons git name>:<branch name>
. After that you can see the newly created branch locally with
git branch
Then switch to that branch
git checkout <branch name>
Common pitfalls
Force push to forked repository
After having done the first PR, people from the PX4 community will review your changes. In most cases this means that you have to fix your local branch according to the review. After changing the files locally, the feature branch needs to be rebased again with the most recent upstream/master. However, after the rebase, it is no longer possible to push the feature branch to your forked repository directly, but instead you need to use a force push:
git push --force-with-lease origin <your feature branch name>
Rebase merge conflicts
If a conflict occurs during a git rebase
, please refer to this guide.
Pull merge conflicts
If a conflict occurs during a git pull
, please refer to this guide.