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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Development Model

Development generally follows the following ideas:

  • New features are merged into to the development branch using Pull Requests (PRs).

    Nightly regression testing is used to ensure that no answers change (or if they do, that the changes were expected).

  • Bug fixes, questions and contributions of new features are welcome!

    • Bugs should be reported through GitHub Issues.

    • We suggest asking questions through GitHub Discussions.

    • All contributions should be done via pull requests. A pull request should be generated from your fork of ERF and target the development branch. See below for details on how this process works.

      In general we squash commits upon merge to have a clean history. Please ensure that your PR title and description are descriptive, since these will be used for a squashed commit message.

      Please note the following: If you choose to make contributions to the code then you hereby grant a non-exclusive, royalty-free perpetual license to install, use, modify, prepare derivative works, incorporate into other computer software, distribute, and sublicense such enhancements or derivative works thereof, in binary and source code form.

  • On the first workday of each month, we make a tagged release. The merge window into development is closed a few days before the release day. While the merge window is closed, only bug fixes should be merged into development. Once the release is done, the merge window reopens.

Git workflow

ERF uses git for version control. If you are new to git, you can follow one of these tutorials:

Make your own fork and create a branch on it

The basic workflow is:

  • Fork the main repo (or update it if you already created it).
  • Implement your changes and push them on a new branch <branch_name> on your fork.
  • Create a Pull Request from branch <branch_name> on your fork to branch development on the main ERF repository.

First, let us setup your local git repo. To make your own fork of the main repository, press the fork button on the ERF Github page.

Then, clone ERF on your local computer. If you plan on doing a lot of ERF development, we recommend configuring your clone to use ssh access so you won't have to enter your Github password every time, which you can do using these commands:

git clone git@github.com:erf-model/ERF.git
cd ERF

# Add your own fork.
# Here <Jane> is the name you give to your fork. It does not need to be your github name.
# <myGithubUsername> is your GitHub name.
git remote add <Jane> git@github.com:<myGithubUsername>/ERF.git
git fetch <Jane>

# Don't push to the main repo. Instead pushes go to your fork.
git remote set-url --push origin git@github.com:<myGithubUsername>/ERF.git

For instructions on setting up SSH access to your Github account on a new machine, see here.

If you instead prefer to use HTTPS authentication, configure your local clone as follows:

git clone https://github.com/erf-model/ERF.git
cd ERF

# Add your own fork.
# Here <Jane> is the name you give to your fork. It does not need to be your github name.
# <myGithubUsername> is your GitHub name.
git remote add <Jane> https://github.com/<myGithubUsername>/ERF.git
git fetch <Jane>

# Don't push to the main repo. Instead pushes go to your fork.
git remote set-url --push origin https://github.com/<myGithubUsername>/ERF.git

Now you are free to play with your fork (for additional information, you can visit the Github fork help page).

Note: you do not have to re-do the setup above every time.

Make sure you are on the development branch with

git checkout development
git pull

in the ERF directory.

Create a branch <branch_name> (the branch name should reflect the piece of code you want to add, like high_order_interpolation) with

git checkout -b <branch_name>

and do the coding you want. Add the files you work on to the git staging area with

git add <file_I_created> <and_file_I_modified>

Commit & push your changes

Periodically commit your changes with

git commit -m "This is a 50-char description to explain my work"

The commit message (between quotation marks) is super important in order to follow the developments and identify bugs.

For the moment, commits are on your local repo only. You can push them to your fork with

git push -u <Jane> <branch_name>

If you want to synchronize your branch with the development branch (this is useful when development is being modified while you are working on <branch_name>), you can use

# merge ERF main repo's development into current branch
git pull origin development

and fix any conflicts that may occur.

Do not merge your branch for PR into your local development branch, because it will make your local development branch diverge from the matching branch in the main repository after your PR is merged.

Submit a Pull Request

A Pull Request is the way to efficiently visualize the changes you made and to propose your new feature/improvement/fix to the ERF project. Right after you push changes, a banner should appear on the Github page of your fork, with your <branch_name>.

  • Click on the compare & pull request button to prepare your PR.
  • It is time to communicate your changes: write a title and a description for your PR. People who review your PR are happy to know
    • what feature/fix you propose, and why
    • how you made it (created a new class than inherits from...)
    • and anything relevant to your PR (performance tests, images, etc.)
  • Press Create pull request. Now you can navigate through your PR, which highlights the changes you made.

Please DO NOT write large Pull Requests, as they are very difficult and time-consuming to review. As much as possible, split them into small, targeted PRs. For example, if find typos in the documentation open a pull request that only fixes typos. If you want to fix a bug, make a small pull request that only fixes a bug. If you want to implement a large feature, write helper functionality first, test it and submit those as a first pull request. If you want to implement a feature and are not too sure how to split it, just open a discussion about your plans and ping other ERF developers on it to chime in.

Even before your work is ready to merge, it can be convenient to create a PR (so you can use Github tools to visualize your changes). In this case, please make a "draft" PR using the drop-down menu next to the "Create pull request" button.

Once your pull request is made, we will review and potentially merge it. We recommend always creating a new branch for each pull request, as per the above instructions. Once your pull request is merged, you can delete your local PR branch with

git branch -D <branch_name>

and you can delete the remote one on your fork with

git push <Jane> --delete <branch_name>

Generally speaking, you want to follow the following rules.

  • Do not merge your branch for PR into your local development branch that tracks ERF development branch. Otherwise your local development branch will diverge from ERF development branch.

  • Do not commit in your development branch that tracks ERF development branch.

  • Always create a new branch based off the latest development branch for each pull request, unless you are going to use git to fix it later.

If you have accidentally committed in development branch, you can fix it as follows,

git checkout -b new_branch # save your changes in a branch
git checkout development
git fetch origin
git reset --hard origin/development

After this, the local development should be in sync with ERF development and your recent commits have been saved in new_branch branch.

ERF Coding Style Guide

Code Guidelines

ERF developers should adhere to the following coding guidelines:

  • Indentations should use 4 spaces, not tabs.
  • Use curly braces for single statement blocks. For example:
       for (int n=0; n<10; ++n) {
           Print() << "Like this!";
       }

or

       for (int n=0; n<10; ++n) { Print() << "Like this!"; }

but not

       for (int n=0; n<10; ++n) Print() << "Not like this.";

or

       for (int n=0; n<10; ++n)
          Print() << "Not like this.";
  • When declaring and defining a function, add a space after the function name and before the parenthesis of the parameter list (but not when simply calling the function). For example:
        void CorrectFunctionDec (int input)

Not

        void IncorrectFunctionDec(int input)

This makes it easy to find where functions are defined with grep.

  • Member variables should be prefixed with m_. For example:
       amrex::Real m_variable;

These guidelines should be adhered to in new contributions to ERF, but please refrain from making stylistic changes to unrelated sections of code in your PRs.