This page is meant to help both CL authors and reviewers have a more productive, efficient, and mutually beneficial code review. None of these tips represent formal policy, but following this guidance should help you get your changes reviewed and landed faster.
Please also read Respectful Changes and Respectful Code Reviews.
Large changes take longer to review than smaller changes. Reviewers generally need to familiarize themselves with the content of a CL after each round of review, so the larger a CL is, the longer that process takes. Large CLs can also fatigue a reviewer who goes line-by-line through a CL. Try to keep changes below 500 lines of code – including tests. There is a balance here, though: 200 lines of code (LoC) of production code with 600 LoC of tests might be fine, especially if the test code follows a regular pattern. Conversely, 400 LoC of production code with 200 LoC of test code may not provide enough coverage.
If your CL is larger than that, seriously consider splitting it into smaller, reviewable units. When splitting CLs, you should tag each CL with the same tracking bug, so that the association is clear. You can also use the relation chain of dependent CLs to allow the reviewer to see the progression before it is landed.
Providing context for the review is important for understanding the motivation behind a change. The amount of context to share depends on the scale of the change: a thorough CL description can be sufficient for a single, independent patch. But sometimes it may be better to provide the context on a linked bug, that e.g. documents the investigation that led to the proposed fix. If your change is large, it is helpful to provide reviewers context for the series of small-to-medium-sized CLs via a design doc. Highlight the problem that needs solving, an overall description of the proposed solution, and any alternatives you considered.
Your CL description should always document what you are changing and why. CL descriptions are stored in the repository history, so they should be written to stand the test of time. Ask yourself, "if another engineer, five years from now, needed to understand why this CL landed based on the description, would they be able to?"
While the CL description goes on record, you can also leave comments on the CL as well: If your CL contains one major change and a lot of fallout from that change, you can point out where to start the review process. If you made a design decision or trade-off that does not justify a comment in the source code, you may still proactively leave a comment on the CL to inform the reviewer.
CLs should only effect one type of change. If you need to both refactor something and change its behavior, it is best to do so over two separate CLs. Refactoring generally should not change behavior. This benefits the reviewer, who can more quickly evaluate a refactoring as a move-code-only change that does not change behavior, and the author, who potentially avoids unnecessary reverts and re-lands due to regressions caused by the behavior change.
One way to keep changes small is to build up composable units (functions, classes, interfaces) that can be independently tested and reviewed. This helps manage the overall change size, and it creates a natural progression for reviewers to follow. However, do not over-design abstractions for an unknown future. Allowing for extensibility when it’s not necessary, creating abstractions where something concrete would suffice, or reaching for a design pattern when something simpler would work equally well adds unnecessary complexity to the codebase. The codebase is inherently mutable and additional abstractions can be added if and when they are needed.
The Chromium project has contributors from around the world, and it is very likely that you will not be in the same timezone as a reviewer. You should expect a reviewer to be responsive, per the code review policy, but keep in mind that there may be a significant timezone gap. Also see the advice about minimizing lag across timezones.
If your CL requires the approval from 3+ OWNERs, get a small number of main reviewers (most commonly 1) to review the entire CL so that OWNERs don’t need to deal with issues that anybody can detect. This is particularly useful if OWNERs are in a different timezone.
Wherever possible, choose reviewers from the deepest OWNERS files adjacent to the most significant aspects of your change. Once their review is complete, add OWNERS from parent/less-specific directories for getting approvals for any API change propagations. The parent-directory reviewers can typically defer to the more-specific reviewers’ LGTM and simply stamp-approve the CL.
Avoid adding multiple reviewers from the same OWNERS file to review a single change. This makes it unclear what the responsibilities of each reviewer are. Only one OWNERS LGTM is needed, so you only need to select one. You can use the file revision history to see if one reviewer has been more recently active in the area.