Notes on maintaining the Neovim project.
In practice we haven't found a way to forecast more precisely than "next" and "after next". So there are usually one or two (at most) planned milestones:
The forecasting problem might be solved with an explicit priority system (like Vim's todo.txt). Meanwhile the Neovim priority system is defined by:
has:plan
label increases the ticket's priority merely
for having a plan written down: it is closer to completion than tickets
without a plan.Anything that isn't in the next milestone, and doesn't have a finished PR—is just not something you care very much about, by construction. Post-release you can review open issues, but chances are your next milestone is already getting full... :)
Release "often", but not "early".
The (unreleased) master
branch is the "early" channel; it should not be
released if it's not stable. High-risk changes may be merged to master
if
the next release is not imminent.
For maintenance releases, create a release-x.y
branch. If the current release
has a major bug:
master
.release-x.y
.release-x.y
.
./scripts/release.sh
(requires git cliff)Neovim automation includes a backport bot.
Trigger the action by labeling a PR with ci:backport release-x.y
. See .github/workflows/backport.yml
.
Neovim inherits many features and design decisions from Vim, not all of which align with the goals of this project. It is sometimes desired or necessary to remove existing features, or refactor parts of the code that would change user's workflow. In these cases, a deprecation policy is needed to properly inform users of the change.
When a (non-experimental) feature is slated to be removed it should:
@deprecated
).deprecated.txt
.vim.deprecate()
. The specified version is the
current minor version + 2. For example, if the current version is
v0.10.0-dev-1957+gd676746c33
then use 0.12
.v:lua.vim.deprecate()
. Use the same version
as described for Lua features.vim.deprecate(…, 'x.y.z')
where major version x
is greater than the
current Nvim major version, is always treated as soft deprecation.Example:
Deprecation Removal
┆ ┆ ┆
┆ Soft ┆ Hard ┆
┆ Deprecation ┆ Deprecation ┆
┆ Period ┆ Period ┆
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Version: 0.10 0.11 0.12
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Old code Old code Old code
+ +
New code New code New code
Feature removals which may benefit from community input or further discussion should also have a tracking issue (which should be linked to in the release notes).
Exceptions to this policy may be made (for experimental subsystems or when there is broad consensus among maintainers). The rationale for the exception should be stated explicitly and publicly.
For some dependencies we maintain temporary "forks", which are simply private
branches with a few extra patches, while we wait for the upstream project to
merge the patches. This is done instead of maintaining the patches as (fragile)
CMake PATCH_COMMAND
steps.
These "bundled" dependencies can be updated by bumping their versions in cmake.deps/deps.txt
.
Some can be auto-bumped by scripts/bump_deps.lua
.
master
branch.These dependencies are "vendored" (inlined), we must update the sources manually:
src/mpack/
: libmpack
src/xdiff/
: xdiffsrc/cjson/
: lua-cjsonsrc/klib/
: Klibsrc/vterm/
: libvterm,
mirrorruntime/lua/vim/inspect.lua
: inspect.luasrc/nvim/tui/terminfo_defs.h
: terminfo definitions
scripts/update_terminfo.sh
to update these definitions.runtime/lua/vim/lsp/_meta/protocol.lua
: LSP specification
scripts/gen_lsp.lua
to update.runtime/lua/vim/_meta/lpeg.lua
: LPeg definitions.
LuaCATS/lpeg
for updates.runtime/lua/vim/re.lua
: LPeg regex module.
runtime/lua/vim/_meta/re.lua
: docs for LPeg regex module.
src/bit.c
: only for PUC lua: port of require'bit'
from luajit https://bitop.luajit.org/runtime/lua/coxpcall.lua
: coxpcall (only needed for PUC lua, builtin to luajit)CODECOV_TOKEN
BACKPORT_KEY
BACKPORT_APP
Refactoring Vim structurally and aesthetically is an important goal of Neovim. But there are some modules that should not be changed significantly, because they are maintained by Vim, at present. Until someone takes "ownership" of these modules, the cost of any significant changes (including style or structural changes that re-arrange the code) to these modules outweighs the benefit. The modules are:
regexp.c
indent_c.c
Discussions from issues and PRs are backed up here: https://github.com/neovim/neovim-backup
-latest
tags so we don't need to manually bump the versions. An
example of a special-purpose workflow is labeler_pr.yml
.test.yml
, prefer to use the latest version
explicitly. Avoid using the -latest
tags here as it makes it difficult
to determine from an unrelated PR if a failure is due to the PR itself or
due to GitHub bumping the -latest
tag without our knowledge. There's
also a high risk that automatically bumping the CI versions will fail due
to manual work being required from experience.release.yml
, prefer to use the oldest
stable (i.e. non-deprecated) versions available. The reason is that we're
trying to produce images that work in the broadest number of environments,
and therefore want to use older releases.Some github labels are used to trigger certain jobs:
ci:backport release-x.y
- backport to branch release-x.y
ci:s390x
- enable s390x CIci:skip-news
- skip news.yml workflowsci:windows-asan
- test windows with ASAN enabledneeds:response
- close PR after a certain amount of time if author doesn't
respond