This documentation may be out of date!

This documentation site is for the versions of Synapse maintained by the Matrix.org Foundation (github.com/matrix-org/synapse), available under the Apache 2.0 licence.

Since version 1.99, Synapse is now maintained by Element under a new licence (github.com/element-hq/synapse).

If you are interested in the documentation for a later version of Synapse, please click here to navigate to this same page on the latest Element Synapse documentation site, if it's available.

Some notes on how we do reviews

The Synapse team works off a shared review queue -- any new pull requests for Synapse (or related projects) has a review requested from the entire team. Team members should process this queue using the following rules:

  • Any high urgency pull requests (e.g. fixes for broken continuous integration or fixes for release blockers);
  • Follow-up reviews for pull requests which have previously received reviews;
  • Any remaining pull requests.

For the latter two categories above, older pull requests should be prioritised.

It is explicit that there is no priority given to pull requests from the team (vs from the community). If a pull request requires a quick turn around, please explicitly communicate this via #synapse-dev:matrix.org or as a comment on the pull request.

Once an initial review has been completed and the author has made additional changes, follow-up reviews should go back to the same reviewer. This helps build a shared context and conversation between author and reviewer.

As a team we aim to keep the number of inflight pull requests to a minimum to ensure that ongoing work is finished before starting new work.

Performing a review

To communicate to the rest of the team the status of each pull request, team members should do the following:

  • Assign themselves to the pull request (they should be left assigned to the pull request until it is merged, closed, or are no longer the reviewer);
  • Review the pull request by leaving comments, questions, and suggestions;
  • Mark the pull request appropriately (as needing changes or accepted).

If you are unsure about a particular part of the pull request (or are not confident in your understanding of part of the code) then ask questions or request review from the team again. When requesting review from the team be sure to leave a comment with the rationale on why you're putting it back in the queue.