- A working C++ compiler (on mac os x something like
xcode-select --install
will get you started). The compiler must support C++11 (GCC 4.9+ and clang 3.6+ are known to work). - Go environment. Currently a 64-bit version of go is required.
- Git and Mercurial (for retrieving dependencies).
If you're on Mac OS X, homebrew can be very helpful to fulfill these dependencies.
You can go get -d github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach
or, alternatively,
mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/cockroachdb/
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/cockroachdb/
git clone git@github.com:cockroachdb/cockroach.git
cd cockroach
Now you should be all set for make build
, make test
and everything else our Makefile has to
offer. Note that the first time you run make
various dependent libraries and tools will be
downloaded and installed which can be somewhat time consuming. Be patient.
Note that if you edit a .proto
or .ts
file, you will need to manually regenerate the associated .pb.{go,cc,h}
or .js
files using go generate ./...
.
go generate
requires the typescript transpiler tsc
, which you can get from typescript or using npm
with:
npm install -g typescript
If you don't have npm, it comes with node. To get it via homebrew:
brew install node
To add or update a dependency:
go get -u
to update the dependencies orgo get {package}
to add a dependencyglock save github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach
to update the GLOCKFILEmake listdeps
and take the output of that and replace the dependancy list in build/devbase/godeps.sh- create a PR with all the changes
We're following the Google Go Code Review fairly closely. In particular, you want to watch out for proper punctuation and capitalization and make sure that your lines stay well below 80 characters.
-
All contributors need to sign the Contributor License Agreement.
-
Create a local feature branch to do work on, ideally on one thing at a time. If you are working on your own fork, see this tip on forking in Go, which ensures that Go import paths will be correct.
git checkout -b $USER/update-readme
- Hack away and commit your changes locally using
git add
andgit commit
.
git commit -a -m 'update CONTRIBUTING.md'
-
Run tests. It's usually enough to run
make test testrace
. You can also runmake acceptance
to have better test coverage. Running acceptance tests requires the Docker setup. -
When you’re ready for review, create a remote branch from your local branch. You may want to
git fetch origin
and rungit rebase origin/master
on your local feature branch before.
git push -u origin $USER/update-readme
-
Address feedback in new commits. Wait (or ask) for new feedback on those commits if they are not straightforward.
-
Once ready to land your change, squash your commits. Where n is the number of commits in your branch, run
git rebase -i HEAD~n
and subsequently update your remote (you will have to force the push, git push -f $USER mybranch
). The pull request will update.
- If you do not have write access to the repository and your pull request requires a manual merge, you may be asked to rebase again,
git fetch origin; git rebase -i origin/master
and update the PR again. Otherwise, you are free to merge your branch into origin/master directly or rebase first as you deem appropriate.