Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
94 lines (64 loc) · 4.4 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

94 lines (64 loc) · 4.4 KB

Contributing to this repo

First, thank you for your interest in contributing to this project! Before you pick up your first issue and start changing code, please:

  1. Review all documentation for the module you're interested in.
  2. Look through the issues for this repo for relevant discussions.
  3. If you have questions about an issue, post a comment in the issue.
  4. If you want to submit changes that aren't covered by an issue, file a new one with your proposal, outlining what problem you found/feature you want to implement, and how you intend to implement a solution.

For best results, before submitting a PR, make sure:

  1. It has met all acceptance criteria for the issue.
  2. It addresses only the one issue and does not make other, irrelevant changes.
  3. Your code conforms to our coding style guide.
  4. You have adequate test coverage (this should be indicated by CI results anyway).
  5. If you like, check out current PRs to see how others do it.

Special Note: If editing README.md, please conform to the standard readme specification.

PR Process

Active development of go-graphsync occurs on the master branch. All PRs should be made to the master branch, which is the default branch on Github.

Before a PR can be merged to master, it must:

  1. Pass continuous integration.
  2. Be rebased and up to date with the master branch
  3. Be approved by at least one maintainer

When merging normal PRs to master, always use squash and merge to maintain a linear commit history.

Release Process

When creating a new full release, branch off master with a branch named release/version-number, where version-number is the ultimate tag you intend to create.

Continue to develop on master and merge commits to your release branch as neccesary till the release is ready.

When the release is ready, tag it, then merge the branch back into master so that it is part of the version history of master. Delete the release branch.

Hotfix Process

Hot-fixes operate just like release branches, except they are branched off an existing tag and should be named hotfix/version-number. When ready, they receive their own tag and then are merged back to master, then deleted.

For external reference, his git flow and release process is essentially the OneFlow git workflow

Following the release of Filecoin Mainnet, this library will following a semantic versioning scheme for tagged releases.

Testing

  • All new code should be accompanied by unit tests. Prefer focused unit tests to integration tests for thorough validation of behaviour. Existing code is not necessarily a good model, here.

Conventions and Style

Imports

We use the following import ordering.

import (
        [stdlib packages, alpha-sorted]
        <single, empty line>
        [external packages]
        <single, empty line>
        [go-graphsync packages]
)

Where a package name does not match its directory name, an explicit alias is expected (goimports will add this for you).

Example:

import (
	"context"
	"testing"

	cmds "github.com/ipfs/go-ipfs-cmds"
	cid "github.com/ipfs/go-cid"
	ipld "github.com/ipfs/go-ipld-format"
	"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"

	datatransfer "github.com/filecoin-project/go-data-transfer"
	
	"github.com/filecoin-project/go-fil-markets/filestore/file"
)

You can run script/fiximports to put all your code in the desired format

Comments

Comments are a communication to other developers (including your future self) to help them understand and maintain code. Good comments describe the intent of the code, without repeating the procedures directly.

  • A TODO: comment describes a change that is desired but could not be immediately implemented. It must include a reference to a GitHub issue outlining whatever prevents the thing being done now (which could just be a matter of priority).
  • A NOTE: comment indicates an aside, some background info, or ideas for future improvement, rather than the intent of the current code. It's often fine to document such ideas alongside the code rather than an issue (at the loss of a space for discussion).
  • FIXME, HACK, XXX and similar tags indicating that some code is to be avoided in favour of TODO, NOTE or some straight prose.