What To Look For in a Pull Request
The goal should be for smaller PRs rather than giant ones. And to differentiate a PR from a QA task. Fundamentally a Pull Request is simply asking another dev to review work before committing it to a code repository and publishing it. At Kalamuna, the process involves the original developer(s) who worked on the task (the author); another developer who reviews the task for quality and completeness (the reviewer); and ideally a Project Manager to provide a Quality Assurance check. These steps are necessary to ensure that Kalamuna continues to provide high-quality, version-controlled code that follows our best practices.
PR Process
Dev takes completes work on a JIRA Jira ticket Dev completes the work and assigns the ticket it to the a reviewer in JIRA
Dev creates Pull Request for the reviewer in GitHub following best practices below
Reviewer pulls the branch locally, tests per the ticket guidelines, and verifies it works as expected
Reviewer adds notes to the ticket on how to QA it (links to relevant pages on dev where the change appears, how to check to see if it’s working, etc)
Reviewer assigns ticket to PM for QA review
PM reviews the outcome to ensure it accomplishes the client’s goals
If approved, PM contacts the client for approval or updates
If not approved, PM documents the issue(s) and reassigns to the reviewer
Once client approval is received, code is merged to the main branch and deployed
Responsibilities
The Author: The author of the PR has the responsibility and room to make sure the PR is clear and approachable to other team members so that they can give a confident review.
Provide context to what brought about the Pull Request
Provide a summary of the problem the Pull Request is solving
Provide a summary of the solution that the Pull Request provides
The Reviewer: The reviewer of a PR has the responsibility to unblock the work of the author. They do this by approving the pull request, or by requesting needed changes and providing explicit feedback when necessary. No matter which way the review goes, it’s crucial that the review is timely so that they don’t block and frustrate their team members.
Unblocking the PR author
Validate the code: Make sure that the code in the PR looks like it is doing what the author intended it to do. This includes ensuring that there is proper testing.
Provide good feedback, which should include the following:
Clear, actionable advice with examples of what (if anything) should be changed.
Reasons for why the changes have been suggested, with documentation or evidence that supports that point of view.
An impersonal tone, so the review does not feel like overt criticism.
Do all this in a reasonable amount of time
Provide clear instructions for the QA person to follow to validate the task if approved
QA: The person doing the QA review should generally be the person who interacted directly with the client to create the issue originally, as they have the best overall picture of what the ticket was supposed to accomplish.
Follow the provided guide to validating the business goals of the original ticket have been met
Provide clear guidance for the Reviewer if additional work is needed
Do all this in a reasonable amount of time.
The Team Itself: Good PR practices are helpful at an individual level, but to be most effective, the team should agree on and adopt a set of standards that the team can collectively hold PRs to.
Decide a reasonable time table
Decide what should be blocking vs non-blocking
Blocking
Bugs: This could be “This code will error when X happens. X happens often”
Untested code changes: How do we know if the code works if we can’t verify it?
Hard-to-Comprehend code: When a section of code is hard to read and hard to understand what it’s doing, it adds uncertainty to the code as well as a maintenance burden if it ever needs changes. We decided that’s a good enough reason to block code.
Non-blocking
Code styles: This is stuff like “could use .map here”. I call these “code flavors” because there is more than one way to do things and everyone has their own preference on what’s more “readable”.
Improvements: - This is stuff like, “What if we extracted this out to its own method/class?”
Opinions as Standards - Some people hold certain coding authors and their rules to a high standard. I love and take inspiration from some book authors, but I think that it’s important to see their recommendations as best practice opinions rather than rules to follow. Because of that, I find comments to follow those patterns as code styles and improvements and therefore non-blocking.
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Respect People's Time
Always Provide Constructive Feedback
Keep Your Ego Out of Code Reviews
Reasons not feelings
Be open to other ways of doing things
Be Precise About What Needs to be Improved
Don't Just Hope for the Code to Work
Reinforce Code Submission Best Practices
Be Strict About Temporary Code
Check the Project’s Satellite Files (documentation, etc)
Visualize the Bigger Picture
Title the Pull Requests clearly, linking to the original JIRA issue if possible
For example: PROJ-123: Description
Provide a clear description of what is accomplished with the code change in the Pull Request, and link to the original JIRA issue when possible. For example:
This change turns the button color GREEN, because RED wasn’t very user friendly.### References-
Jira Legacy server System JIRA serverId 41d68d07-61a5-32f6-8aef-2e24159645c2 key PROJ-123
For small 1-5 line inline changes use GitHub’s inline comments feature, along with inline suggestions. For example… The button size should be 5 instead of 3. ``` suggestion $buttonSize = 5; ```
To Consider
When is a PR appropriate
Who is responsible for resolving merge conflicts
Goal of knowledge sharing as much as “approval”
How to prioritize/review style guide issues
Be generous of spirit – the goal is to produce code that works for functional web sites.
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