Re: community bonding - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Charles Cui
Subject Re: community bonding
Date
Msg-id CA+SXE9twOU5RVAUwy3OjRKUmMoMBAdgXeZ-hsLoeQSZh+EwmTw@mail.gmail.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: community bonding  (Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com>)
List pgsql-hackers
Thanks for your comments, Craig!

2018-04-26 21:03 GMT-07:00 Craig Ringer <craig@2ndquadrant.com>:
On 24 April 2018 at 12:22, Charles Cui <charles.cui1984@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi PostgreSQL community and mentors:
>
> Thanks for selecting my project as one of GSoC student projects! Pretty
> exciting and honor to join the development for PostgreSQL (the best database
> in the world :)). So for the first phase of this project (community
> bonding), I am planning to go ahead to set up my developing environment and
> familiar with the related code bases. And I have several questions regarding
> this.
> 1. What ide or command line tools do you guys used most for PostgreSQL
> development?

Varies.

vim, emacs, whatever editor you want. Some people use VS Code. Some
use Eclipse. You could code on Windows in Visual Studio if you want,
or XCode on Mac OS X.

I use vim with a bunch of plugins. Whatever floats your boat, really,
so long as you set it up to help you follow the coding conventions and
source structure rules re tab/spaces etc.

> 2. What version control do you use for postgres? Is github acceptable?

git. But patches are emailed to the list. Github is fine, but we don't
use its pull request facilities, and the PostgreSQL source on github
is a mirror of git.postgresql.org.

The stuff about context diff on the wiki is pretty outdated, I think
most people use unified diff now.

> 3. How do you look at code in PostgreSQL code base? do you have cross
> function reference where I can search function and definition online?

Use whatever facilities your editor and tools provide. I use vim and
cscope mostly, via "vim -t" and "ctrl-]". Visual Studio's Intellisense
works, whatever you want really.

There's doxygen generated documentation too, see
https://doxygen.postgresql.org/ . I don't find it that useful.

--
 Craig Ringer                   http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
 PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Training & Services

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