When a pull request has been reviewed and approved by at least one person and all checks have passed it's time to merge the pull request.
## Who is expected to merge a pull request?
Maintainers are responsible for merging all pull requests. If a maintainer has opened a pull request the general rule is that the same maintainer merges the pull request. If a non-maintainer has opened a pull request it's suggested that one of the maintainers reviewing the pull request merges the pull request.
## Checklist/summary
The following checklist/summary should give you a quick overview of what to ask/consider before merging a pull request.
- Reviewed and approved?
- All checks passed?
- Proper pull request title?
- Milestone assigned?
- Add to changelog/release notes?
- Needs backporting?
## Before merge
Before actually merging a pull request there's a couple of things to take into consideration.
All commits in a pull request are squashed when merged and the pull request title will be the default subject line of the squashed commit message. It's also used for [changelog/release notes](#include-in-changelog-and-release-notes).
A milestone **should** be added to every pull request. Several things in the Grafana release process requires at least pull requests to be in a milestone, for example [generating changelog/release notes](#include-in-changelog-and-release-notes).
This makes it easier to track what changes go into a certain release. Without this information, release managers have to go through git commits which is not an efficient process.
Always assign the milestone for the version that a PR is merged into. PRs targetting `main` should use the next minor (or major) version and backport PRs should use the same value than the target branch.
At Grafana we generate the [changelog](https://github.com/grafana/grafana/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md) and [release notes](https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/release-notes/) based on merged pull requests. Including changes in the changelog/release notes is very important to provide a somewhat complete picture of what changes a Grafana release actually includes.
There's a GitHub action available in the repository named [Update changelog](https://github.com/grafana/grafana/blob/main/.github/workflows/update-changelog.yml) that can manually be triggered to re-generate the changelog and release notes for any release.
Exactly what changes should be added to the changelog is hard to answer but here's some general guidance:
- Include any bug fix in general.
- Include any change that you think would be interesting for the community as a whole.
- Skip larger features divided in multiple pull requests since they might go into the release blog post/What's New article.
- Use your best judgement and/or ask other maintainers for advice.
- Including a change in error rather than skipping one that should have been there is better.
- Always keep [Format the pull request title](#format-the-pull-request-title) in mind.
An active decision to include change in changelog/release notes needs to be taken for every pull request. There's a pull request check named **Changelog Check** that will enforce this. By adding/removing labels on the pull request or updating the pull request title/description the check will be re-evaluated.
#### Skip changelog
If you don't want to include your change in changelog/release notes you need to add a label named **no-changelog** to the pull request.
#### Include in changelog/release notes
To include a pull request in the changelog/release notes you need to add a label named `add to changelog` to the pull request. Then additional validation rules is checked:
- Title need to be formatted according to [Format the pull request title](#format-the-pull-request-title)
- Description needs to include a breaking change notice if change is labeled to be a breaking change, see Breaking changes below for more information.
Not complying with above rules can make the **Changelog Check** fail with validation errors.
Milestone assigned and labeled with `area/grafana/toolkit`, `area/grafana/ui` or `area/grafana/runtime`.
**Deprecations:**
In case the pull request introduces a deprecation you should document this. Label the pull request with `add to changelog` and use the following template at the end of the pull request description describing the deprecation change.
```md
# Deprecation notice
<Deprecationdescription>
```
**Breaking changes:**
In case the pull request introduces a breaking change you should document this. Label the pull request with `add to changelog` and `breaking change` and use the following template at the end of the pull request description describing the breaking change.
An active decision of backporting needs to be taken for every pull request. There's a pull request check named **Backport Check** that will enforce this. By adding/removing labels on the pull request the check will be re-evaluated.
#### No backport
If you don't want to backport you need to add a label named **no-backport** to the pull request.
If your pull request has changes that need to go into one or several existing release branches you need to backport the changes. Please refer to [Backport PR](/.github/bot.md#backport-pr) for detailed instructions.
- The change needs to be released in the next upcoming patch release, e.g. v8.1.3, so you have to backport it, e.g. into the v8.1.x release branch.
- You have a change to be released in the next major/minor release, e.g. v8.0.0, and there's already a release branch, e.g. v8.0.x, you have to backport it, e.g. into the v8.0.x release branch.
- The change includes documentation changes that needs to be updated for one or multiple older versions, then you have to backport it to each release branch.
To ensure that we don't backport pull requests that don't need to be backported, i.e. implement new features, and only backport pull requests that address bugs, have a product approval, or refer to docs changes, backport labels need to be followed by either:
-`type/bug` label: Pull requests which address bugs,
-`product-approved` label: Urgent fixes which need product approval, in order to get merged,
Time to actually merge the pull request changes. All commits in a pull request are squashed, hence the GitHub `Squash and merge` button is used to initialize the merge.
This will present you with options allowing you to optionally change the commit message before merging. Please remember that developers might use the commit information when reviewing changes of files, doing git blame and resolving merge conflicts etc., trying to quickly figure out what the actual change was. But there's not really any best practices around this, the following is an attempt to bring some guidance.
- Make sure the pull request title is formatted properly before merging, this will automatically give you a good and short summary of the commit/change.
- Add any references to issues that the pull request fixes/closes/references to ease giving quick context to things. Doing this allows cross-reference between the commit and referenced issue(s).
Make sure to close any referenced/related issues. It's recommended to assign the same milestone on the issues that the pull request fixes/closes, but not required.