- Ensure it is not a library that can be installed with [gem](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RubyGems), [cpan](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cpan) or [pip](https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/).
- Ensure that any dependencies are accurate and minimal. We don't need to support every possible optional feature for the software.
- When bottles aren't required or affected, use the GitHub squash & merge workflow for a single-formula PR or rebase & merge workflow for a multiple-formulae PR. See the ["How to merge without bottles" section below](#how-to-merge-without-bottles) for more details.
For most PRs that make formula modifications, you can simply approve the PR and an automatic merge (with bottles) will be performed by [@BrewTestBot](https://github.com/BrewTestBot). See [Brew Test Bot For Core Contributors](Brew-Test-Bot-For-Core-Contributors.md) for more information.
Certain PRs may not be merged automatically by [@BrewTestBot](https://github.com/BrewTestBot), even after they've been approved. This includes PRs with the `new formula`, `automerge-skip`, and `linux-only` labels. To trigger a merge for these PRs, run `brew pr-publish`.
PRs modifying formulae that don't need bottles or making changes that don't require new bottles to be pulled should use GitHub's squash & merge or rebase & merge workflows. See the [table below](#how-to-merge-without-bottles) for more details.
Don’t `merge` unclean branches. So if someone is still learning `git` and their branch is filled with nonsensical merges, then `rebase` and squash the commits. Our main branch history should be useful to other people, not confusing.
Only one maintainer is necessary to approve and merge the addition of a new or updated formula which passes CI. However, if the formula addition or update proves controversial the maintainer who adds it will be expected to answer requests and fix problems that arise with it in future.
Choose a name that’s the most common name for the project. For example, we initially chose `objective-caml` but we should have chosen `ocaml`. Choose what people say to each other when talking about the project.
Formulae that are also packaged by other package managers (e.g. Debian, Ubuntu) should be named consistently (subject to minor differences due to Homebrew formula naming conventions).
Add other names as aliases as symlinks in `Aliases` in the tap root. Ensure the name referenced on the homepage is one of these, as it may be different and have underscores and hyphens and so on.
Verify the formula works if possible. If you can’t tell (e.g. if it’s a library) trust the original contributor, it worked for them, so chances are it is fine. If you aren’t an expert in the tool in question, you can’t really gauge if the formula installed the program correctly. At some point an expert will come along, cry blue murder that it doesn’t work, and fix it. This is how open source works. Ideally, request a `test do` block to test that functionality is consistently available.
If the formula uses a repository, then the `url` parameter should have a tag or revision. `url`s have versions and are stable (not yet implemented!).
Don't merge any formula updates with failing `brew test`s. If a `test do` block is failing it needs to be fixed. This may involve replacing more involved tests with those that are more reliable. This is fine: false positives are better than false negatives as we don't want to teach maintainers to merge red PRs. If the test failure is believed to be due to a bug in `Homebrew/brew` or the CI system, that bug must be fixed, or worked around in the formula to yield a passing test, before the PR can be merged.
We now accept stuff that comes with macOS as long as it uses `keg_only :provided_by_macos` to be keg-only by default.
## Removing formulae
Formulae that:
- work on at least 2/3 of our supported macOS versions in the default Homebrew prefix
- do not require patches rejected by upstream to work
- do not have known security vulnerabilities or CVEs for the version we package
- are shown to be still installed by users in our analytics with a `BuildError` rate of <25%
should not be removed from Homebrew. The exception to this rule are [versioned formulae](Versions.md) for which there are higher standards of usage and a maximum number of versions for a given formula.
For more information about deprecating, disabling and removing formulae, see the [Deprecating, Disabling, and Removing Formulae page](Deprecating-Disabling-and-Removing-Formulae.md).
The following checklist is intended to help maintainers decide on whether to merge, request changes or close a PR. It also brings more transparency for contributors in addition to the [Acceptable Formulae](Acceptable-Formulae.md) requirements.
- previously opened active PRs, as we would like to be fair to contributors who came first
- patches/`inreplace` that have been applied to upstream and can be removed
- comments in formula around `url`, as we do skip some versions (for example [vim](https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/359dbb190bb3776c4d6a1f603a271dd8f186f077/Formula/vim.rb#L4) or [v8](https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/359dbb190bb3776c4d6a1f603a271dd8f186f077/Formula/v8.rb#L4))
- vendored resources that need updates (for example [emscripten](https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/commit/57126ac765c3ac5201ce53bcdebf7a0e19071eba))
- other teams drop new version with minor release 0 but promote it to stable only after a few minor releases
- if the software uses only hosted version control (such as GitHub, GitLab or Bitbucket), the release should be tagged and if upstream marks latest/pre-releases, PR must use latest
- does changelog mention addition/removal of dependency and is it addressed in the PR
- the commits are correct, don't need changes, and BrewTestBot can merge it (doesn't have the label `automerge-skip`): approve the PR to trigger an automatic merge (use `brew pr-publish $PR_ID` to trigger manually in case of a new formula)
- the commits are correct and don't need changes, but BrewTestBot can't merge it (has the label `automerge-skip`), use `brew pr-publish $PR_ID`