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diff --git a/docs/contributing.md b/docs/contributing.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..254e856 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/contributing.md @@ -0,0 +1,184 @@ +# Contributing + +We'd love for you to contribute to gitlint. Thanks for your interest! +The [source-code and issue tracker](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint) are hosted on Github. + +Often it takes a while for us (well, actually just [me](https://github.com/jorisroovers)) to get back to you +(sometimes up to a few months, this is a hobby project), but rest assured that we read your message and appreciate +your interest! +We maintain a [loose project plan on github projects](https://github.com/users/jorisroovers/projects/1/), but +that's open to a lot of change and input. + +## Guidelines + +When contributing code, please consider all the parts that are typically required: + +- [Unit tests](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/tree/main/gitlint-core/gitlint/tests) (automatically + [enforced by CI](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/actions)). Please consider writing + new ones for your functionality, not only updating existing ones to make the build pass. +- [Integration tests](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/tree/main/qa) (also automatically + [enforced by CI](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/actions)). Again, please consider writing new ones + for your functionality, not only updating existing ones to make the build pass. +- [Documentation](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/tree/main/docs). + +Since we want to maintain a high standard of quality, all of these things will have to be done regardless before code +can make it as part of a release. **Gitlint commits and pull requests are gated on all of our tests and checks as well as +code-review**. If you can already include them as part of your PR, it's a huge timesaver for us +and it's likely that your PR will be merged and released a lot sooner. + +It's also a good idea to open an issue before submitting a PR for non-trivial changes, so we can discuss what you have +in mind before you spend the effort. Thanks! + +!!! Important + **On the topic of releases**: Gitlint releases typically go out when there's either enough new features and fixes + to make it worthwhile or when there's a critical fix for a bug that fundamentally breaks gitlint. While the amount + of overhead of doing a release isn't huge, it's also not zero. In practice this means that it might take weeks + or months before merged code actually gets released - we know that can be frustrating but please understand it's + a well-considered trade-off based on available time. + +## Local setup + +To install gitlint for local development: + +```sh +python -m venv .venv +. .venv/bin/activate +pip install -r requirements.txt -r test-requirements.txt -r doc-requirements.txt +python setup.py develop +``` + +## Github Devcontainer + +We provide a devcontainer on github to make it easier to get started with gitlint development using VSCode. + +To start one, click the plus button under the *Code* dropdown on +[the gitlint repo on github](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint). + +**It can take ~15min for all post installation steps to finish.** + +![Gitlint Dev Container Instructions](images/dev-container.png) + + +After setup has finished, you should be able to just activate the virtualenv in the home dir and run the tests: +```sh +. ~/.venv/bin/activate +./run_tests.sh +``` + +By default we have python 3.11 installed in the dev container, but you can also use [asdf](https://asdf-vm.com/) +(preinstalled) to install additional python versions: + +```sh +# Ensure ASDF overrides system python in PATH +# You can also append this line to your ~/.bash_profile in the devcontainer to have this happen automatically on login +source "$(brew --prefix asdf)/libexec/asdf.sh" + +# Install python 3.9.15 +asdf install python 3.9.15 +# List all available python versions +asdf list all python +# List installed python versions +asdf list python +``` + +## Running tests +```sh +./run_tests.sh # run unit tests and print test coverage +./run_tests.sh gitlint-core/gitlint/tests/rules/test_body_rules.py::BodyRuleTests::test_body_missing # run a single test +pytest -k test_body_missing # Alternative way to run a specific test by invoking pytest directly with a keyword expression +./run_tests.sh --no-coverage # run unit tests without test coverage +./run_tests.sh --collect-only --no-coverage # Only collect, don't run unit tests +./run_tests.sh --integration # Run integration tests (requires that you have gitlint installed) +./run_tests.sh --build # Run build tests (=build python package) +./run_tests.sh --format # format checks (black) +./run_tests.sh --stats # print some code stats +./run_tests.sh --git # inception: run gitlint against itself +./run_tests.sh --lint # run pylint checks +./run_tests.sh --all # Run unit, integration, format and gitlint checks +``` +## Formatting + +We use [black](https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/) for code formatting. +To use it, just run black against the code you modified: + +```sh +black . # format all python code +black gitlint-core/gitlint/lint.py # format a specific file +``` + +## Documentation +We use [mkdocs](https://www.mkdocs.org/) for generating our documentation from markdown. + +To use it: +```sh +pip install -r doc-requirements.txt # install doc requirements +mkdocs serve +``` + +Then access the documentation website on [http://localhost:8000](). + +## Packaging + +Gitlint consists of 2 python packages: [gitlint](https://pypi.org/project/gitlint/) +and [gitlint-core](https://pypi.org/project/gitlint-core/). + +The `gitlint` package is just a wrapper package around `gitlint-core[trusted-deps]` which strictly pins gitlint +dependencies to known working versions. + +There are scenarios where users (or OS package managers) may want looser dependency requirements. +In these cases, users can just install `gitlint-core` directly (`pip install gitlint-core`). + +[Issue 162](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/issues/162) has all the background of how we got to the decision +to split gitlint in 2 packages. + +![Gitlint package structure](images/gitlint-packages.png) + +### Packaging description + +To see the package description in HTML format +```sh +pip install docutils +export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 +export LANG=en_US.UTF-8 +python setup.py --long-description | rst2html.py > output.html +``` + + +## Tools +We keep a small set of scripts in the `tools/` directory: + +```sh +tools/create-test-repo.sh # Create a test git repo in your /tmp directory +tools/windows/create-test-repo.bat # Windows: create git test repo +tools/windows/run_tests.bat # Windows run unit tests +``` + +## Contrib rules +Since gitlint 0.12.0, we support [Contrib rules](contrib_rules.md): community contributed rules that are part of gitlint +itself. Thanks for considering to add a new one to gitlint! + +Before starting, please read all the other documentation on this page about contributing first. +Then, we suggest taking the following approach to add a Contrib rule: + +1. **Write your rule as a [user-defined rule](user_defined_rules.md)**. In terms of code, Contrib rules are identical to + user-defined rules, they just happen to have their code sit within the gitlint codebase itself. +2. **Add your user-defined rule to gitlint**. You should put your file(s) in the [gitlint/contrib/rules](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/tree/main/gitlint-core/gitlint/contrib/rules) directory. +3. **Write unit tests**. The gitlint codebase contains [Contrib rule test files you can copy and modify](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/tree/main/gitlint-core/gitlint/tests/contrib/rules). +4. **Write documentation**. In particular, you should update the [gitlint/docs/contrib_rules.md](https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/blob/main/docs/contrib_rules.md) file with details on your Contrib rule. +5. **Create a Pull Request**: code review typically requires a bit of back and forth. Thanks for your contribution! + + +### Contrib rule requirements +If you follow the steps above and follow the existing gitlint conventions wrt naming things, you should already be fairly close to done. + +In case you're looking for a slightly more formal spec, here's what gitlint requires of Contrib rules. + +- Since Contrib rules are really just user-defined rules that live within the gitlint code-base, all the [user-rule requirements](user_defined_rules.md#rule-requirements) also apply to Contrib rules. +- All contrib rules **must** have associated unit tests. We *sort of* enforce this by a unit test that verifies that there's a + test file for each contrib file. +- All contrib rules **must** have names that start with `contrib-`. This is to easily distinguish them from default gitlint rules. +- All contrib rule ids **must** start with `CT` (for LineRules targeting the title), `CB` (for LineRules targeting the body) or `CC` (for CommitRules). Again, this is to easily distinguish them from default gitlint rules. +- All contrib rules **must** have unique names and ids. +- You **can** add multiple rule classes to the same file, but classes **should** be logically grouped together in a single file that implements related rules. +- Contrib rules **should** be meaningfully different from one another. If a behavior change or tweak can be added to an existing rule by adding options, that should be considered first. However, large [god classes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_object) that implement multiple rules in a single class should obviously also be avoided. +- Contrib rules **should** use [options](user_defined_rules.md#options) to make rules configurable. |