On Thu, Jun 29, 2023 at 10:38:42PM -0500, Alexander Westbrooks via Fortran wrote: > I have finished my testing, and updated my patch and relevant Changelogs. I > added 4 new tests and all the existing tests in the current testsuite > for gfortran passed or failed as expected. Do I need to attach the test > results here?
Yes. It helps others also do testing to have one self-contained patch (which I don't know to generate with git and new files :-( ). It may also be a good idea to attach the patch and test cases to the PR in bugzilla so that they don't accidentally get lost. > The platform I tested on was a Docker container running in Docker Desktop, > running the "mcr.microsoft.com/devcontainers/universal:2-linux" image. > > I also made sure that my code changes followed the coding standards. Please > let me know if there is anything else that I need to do. I don't have > write-access to the repository. See the legal link that Harald provided. At one time, one needed to assign copyright to the FSF with a wet-ink signature on some form. Now, I think you just need to attest that you have the right to provide the code to the gcc project. PS: Welcome to the gfortran development world. Don't be put off if there is a delay in getting feedback/review. There are too few contributors and too little time. If a week passes simply ping the mailing list. I'll try to carve out some time to look over your patch this weekend. -- steve > > Thanks, > > Alexander > > On Wed, Jun 28, 2023 at 4:14 PM Harald Anlauf <anl...@gmx.de> wrote: > > > Hi Alex, > > > > welcome to the gfortran community. It is great that you are trying > > to get actively involved. > > > > You already did quite a few things right: patches shall be sent to > > the gcc-patches ML, but Fortran reviewers usually notice them only > > where they are copied to the fortran ML. > > > > There are some general recommendations on the formatting of C code, > > like indentation, of the patches, and of the commit log entries. > > > > Regarding coding standards, see https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/ . > > > > Regarding testcases, a recommendation is to have a look at > > existing testcases, e.g. in gcc/testsuite/gfortran.dg/, and then > > decide if the testcase shall test the compile-time or run-time > > behaviour, and add the necessary dejagnu directives. > > > > You should also verify if your patch passes regression testing. > > For changes to gfortran, it is usually sufficient to run > > > > make check-fortran -j <n> > > > > where <n> is the number of parallel tests. > > You would need to report also the platform where you tested on. > > > > There is also a legal issue to consider before non-trivial patches can > > be accepted for incorporation: https://gcc.gnu.org/contribute.html#legal > > > > If your patch is accepted and if you do not have write-access to the > > repository, one of the maintainers will likely take care of it. > > If you become a regular contributor, you will probably want to consider > > getting write access. > > > > Cheers, > > Harald > > > > > > > > On 6/24/23 19:17, Alexander Westbrooks via Gcc-patches wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > > > I am new to the GFortran community. Over the past two weeks I created a > > > patch that should fix PR82943 for GFortran. I have attached it to this > > > email. The patch allows the code below to compile successfully. I am > > > working on creating test cases next, but I am new to the process so it > > may > > > take me some time. After I make test cases, do I email them to you as > > well? > > > Do I need to make a pull-request on github in order to get the patch > > > reviewed? > > > > > > Thank you, > > > > > > Alexander Westbrooks > > > > > > module testmod > > > > > > public :: foo > > > > > > type, public :: tough_lvl_0(a, b) > > > integer, kind :: a = 1 > > > integer, len :: b > > > contains > > > procedure :: foo > > > end type > > > > > > type, public, EXTENDS(tough_lvl_0) :: tough_lvl_1 (c) > > > integer, len :: c > > > contains > > > procedure :: bar > > > end type > > > > > > type, public, EXTENDS(tough_lvl_1) :: tough_lvl_2 (d) > > > integer, len :: d > > > contains > > > procedure :: foobar > > > end type > > > > > > contains > > > subroutine foo(this) > > > class(tough_lvl_0(1,*)), intent(inout) :: this > > > end subroutine > > > > > > subroutine bar(this) > > > class(tough_lvl_1(1,*,*)), intent(inout) :: this > > > end subroutine > > > > > > subroutine foobar(this) > > > class(tough_lvl_2(1,*,*,*)), intent(inout) :: this > > > end subroutine > > > > > > end module > > > > > > PROGRAM testprogram > > > USE testmod > > > > > > TYPE(tough_lvl_0(1,5)) :: test_pdt_0 > > > TYPE(tough_lvl_1(1,5,6)) :: test_pdt_1 > > > TYPE(tough_lvl_2(1,5,6,7)) :: test_pdt_2 > > > > > > CALL test_pdt_0%foo() > > > > > > CALL test_pdt_1%foo() > > > CALL test_pdt_1%bar() > > > > > > CALL test_pdt_2%foo() > > > CALL test_pdt_2%bar() > > > CALL test_pdt_2%foobar() > > > > > > > > > END PROGRAM testprogram > > > > -- Steve