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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to Vaadin Framework

There are many ways to participate in the Vaadin project. You can ask questions and participate in discussion in the forum, fill bug reports and enhancement suggestion, create add-ons and contribute code. These instructions are for contributing code to the core framework.

Summary

We like quality patches that solve problems. A quality patch follows good coding practices - it’s easy to read and understand. For more complicated fixes or features, the change should be broken down into several smaller easy to understand patches. Most of this is really just what we consider to be common sense and best development practices.

In other words:

  • Describe your changes: what did you change, why did you change it, how did you change it?
  • Separate your changes: one change per commit, many small changes are easier to review.
  • Include a test to prove your patch works, or a benchmark if it’s a performance improvement.
  • Style-check your changes: it’s okay to have a separate commit to fix style issues.
  • Ensure you have Contributor Agreement signed up. This can be signed digitally in the code review system.
  • Create a pull request; it will then be reviewed by the Framework team, who will provide actionable feedback in a timely fashion if necessary. Remember to check the "Allow edits from maintainers" so we can rebase the PR or make small changes if necessary
  • Respond to review comments: review comments are meant to improve the quality of the code by pointing out defects or readability issues.
  • Don't get discouraged - or impatient: Reviewers are people too and will sometimes forget. Give them a friendly poke if you feel the PR has been forgotten about.
  • Most PRs take a few iterations of review before they are merged.

We encourage you to get in touch

Getting in touch with us on the Vaadin forum or on the Vaadin IRC channel (#vaadin on irc.freenode.net) is not a bad place to start. We’re more than happy to help you get started, and we’re happy to engage in conversation about feature suggestions and bug fixes. We welcome contributors and contributions and we’re here to help.

Getting in touch with us early will also help us coordinate efforts so that not everyone ends up working on the same bug or feature at the same time.

Obtain a current source tree

The Vaadin repository can be cloned using git clone https://github.com/vaadin/framework.git or using your favorite Git tool.

Remember to do git checkout master and git pull to make sure you are creating your commits on top of a recent enough version.

https://robots.thoughtbot.com/keeping-a-github-fork-updated has instructions on how to keep your local fork up to date.

Set up your development environment

To set up the project to your IDE, follow the instructions in the README.md.

Describe your changes

Describe your problem

Whether your patch is a one-line bug fix or 5000 lines of a new feature, there must be an underlying problem that motivated you to do this work. Convince the reviewer that there is a problem worth fixing and that it makes sense for them to read past the first paragraph. This is often already described in bug/enhancement issue, but also summarise it in your commit message.

Describe user-visible impact

Straight up crashes and lockups are pretty convincing, but not all bugs are that blatant. Even if the problem was spotted during code review, describe the impact you think it can have on users.

Describe the solution

Once the problem is established, describe what you are actually doing about it in technical detail. It's important to describe the change in plain English for the reviewer to verify that the code is behaving as you intend it to.

Solve only one problem per patch

If your description starts to get long, that's a sign that you probably need to split up your patch. See “Only one logical change per patch”.

Describe your changes in imperative mood, e.g. "make xyzzy do frotz". If the patch fixes a logged bug entry, refer to that bug entry by number or URL.

However, try to make your explanation understandable without external resources. In addition to giving a URL to a ticket or bug description, summarise the relevant points of the discussion that led to the patch as submitted.

Separate your changes

Separate each logical change into a separate patch.

For example, if your changes include both bug fixes and performance enhancements, separate those changes into two or more patches. If your changes include an API update and a new component which uses that new API, separate those into two patches.

On the other hand, if you make a single change to numerous files, group those changes into a single patch. Thus a single logical change is contained within a single patch.

The point to remember is that each patch should make an easily understood change that can be verified by reviewers. Each patch should be justifiable on its own merits.

If one patch depends on another patch in order for a change to be complete, that is OK. Simply note "this patch depends on patch X" in your patch description.

When dividing your change into a series of patches, take special care to ensure that the project builds and runs properly after each patch in the series. Developers using "git bisect" to track down a problem can end up splitting your patch series at any point; they will not thank you if you introduce bugs in the middle. Compilation failures are especially annoying to deal with.

Style-check your changes

Check your patch for basic style violations. If you use eclipse, use the formatting rules preconfigured in the project to make life easier for all involved, and configure save actions as described in README.md.

Patches causing unnecessary style/whitespace changes are messy and will likely be bounced back.

If you are touching old files and want to update them to current style conventions, please do so in a separate commit. It is usually best to have this commit be the first in the series.

Example of a good commit message

Create a Valo icon font for icons used in Valo (#18472)

Valo uses only a handful of icons from Font Awesome. This change introduces a separate icon font for valo (9KB instead of 80KB) and decouples Valo from Font Awesome to enable updating Font Awesome without taking Valo into account.

This change also makes it easy to not load Font Awesome when using Valo by setting $v-font-awesome:false

For backwards compatibility, Font Awesome is loaded by default

Example breakdown

Start with a good Commit message in imperative form. Reference a ticket number if applicable:

Create a Valo icon font for icons used in Valo (#18472)

Describe the problem:

Valo uses only a handful of icons from Font Awesome.

Describe the user impact & describe what was done to solve the problem:

This change introduces a separate icon font for valo (9KB instead of 80KB) and decouples Valo from Font Awesome to enable updating Font Awesome without taking Valo into account.

This change also makes it easy to not load Font Awesome when using Valo by setting $v-font-awesome:false

For backwards compatibility, Font Awesome is loaded by default

Include a test

Ideally, we would like all patches to include automated tests. Unit tests are preferred. If there’s a change to UI Code, we would prefer a TestBench test. If that’s not possible (you as a contributor lack a TestBench license), we can make do with a Test UI class that contains a test case as well a clear instructions for how to perform the test. This also goes for features that are hard to test automatically.

Test cases should succeed with the patch and fail without the patch. That way, it’s clear to everyone that the test does in fact test what it is supposed to test.

If the patch is a performance improvement, please include some benchmark data that tells us how much the performance is improved. You should also include the test code or UI class you used to benchmark.

If you can clearly prove that the patch works, it dramatically increases the odds of it being included in a quick and timely fashion.

Respond to review comments

Your pull request will almost certainly get comments from reviewers on ways in which the patch can be improved. You must respond to those comments; ignoring reviewers is a good way to get ignored in return. Review comments or questions that do not lead to a code change should almost certainly bring about a comment or changelog entry so that the next reviewer better understands what is going on.

Be sure to tell the reviewers what changes you are making. Respond politely to comments and address the problems they have pointed out.

If there is feedback that is blocking merging of the pull request, and there is no response from the author in a reasonable time, we may reject it. You are then, of course, free to resubmit the pull request. The rejection is done not out of spite, but to keep the queue of incoming pull requests manageable and to prevent the queue from spiraling out of control.

Don't get discouraged - or impatient.

After you have submitted your change, be patient and wait. Reviewers are busy people and may not get to your patch right away. Ideally, we try to get a response within one business day.

You should receive comments within a week or so; if that does not happen, make sure that you have sent your patches to the right place. Wait for a minimum of one week before resubmitting or pinging reviewers - possibly longer during busy times like merge windows for minor or major release versions.

Submitting the patches

Creating a pull request in GitHub

All our projects accept contributions as GitHub pull requests. The first time you create a pull request, you will be asked to electronically sign a contribution agreement.

https://yangsu.github.io/pull-request-tutorial/ has instructions on how to create a pull request.

Remember to check the "Allow edits from maintainers" so we can rebase the PR or make small changes if necessary.