0434f4ba00
Change-Id: I1afd93c0159a4a3476ce7787acb99fb5a4c7afe4
111 lines
4.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
111 lines
4.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
Bifrost is a part of Ironic, which is an OpenStack project and
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thus follows OpenStack development procedures.
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For a full (and official) description of the development workflow, see:
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https://docs.openstack.org/infra/manual/developers.html#development-workflow
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For a highly abridged version, read on.
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-------------
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Communicating
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-------------
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Before you file a bug or new review set, it's often helpful to chat with other
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developers. The #openstack-ironic channel is a good place to start, and if
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you don't have IRC (or would prefer email),
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openstack-discuss@lists.openstack.org is the mailing list for all OpenStack
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projects. As the name implies, that mailing list is for all OpenStack
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development, so it's often harder to get attention on your particular issue.
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-----------
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Filing Bugs
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-----------
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Bugs should be filed in StoryBoard, not GitHub:
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https://storyboard.openstack.org/#!/project/941
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-----------------
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Contributing Code
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-----------------
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Bifrost requires a valid OpenStack contributor agreement to be signed before
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code can be accepted. Details can be found in the development workflow link
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above.
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Code isn't committed directly (so pull requests won't work); instead, the
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code is submitted for review through Gerrit via git review, and once its
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been sufficiently reviewed it will be merged from there.
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Once that's done, the development workflow is, roughly::
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$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/bifrost
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$ cd bifrost
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$ git checkout -b some-branch-name
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... hack hack hack ...
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$ git commit
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$ git review
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... The configuration details for this are in .gitreview.
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... When the command runs, it will add a ChangeId to your commit
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... message and print out a link for your reference
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...
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... If you need to fix something in that commit, you can do:
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$ git commit --amend
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$ git review
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From that point on, the link the git review command generated is
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the place to do final tweaks. When its approved, the code
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will be merged in automatically.
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If you propose a new feature and are unable to complete it, please
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let the community know by commenting in the review set indicating
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that someone else is free to carry on your change. If the core
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reviewers observe reviews that are not being actively worked on,
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we are likely to inquire with you. If a review is untouched and the
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owner of the review is unreachable for a lengthy period of time,
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such as three to six months, the core reviewers may abandon the
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change as we do not utilize auto-abandon.
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----------
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Code Style
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----------
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Bifrost is a mix of Python, YaML, and bash thrown in for good measure.
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The overall intent is to keep features, and changes simple to permit a user
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to easily understand and extend bifrost to meet their operational needs as
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we recognize needs may vary.
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With this, we have a list of things that we would like people to keep in mind
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when contributing code.
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1. Try to limit YaML to 79 characters per row, we understand this is not
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always possible, but please make an effort.
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2. Try to keep change sets as short and to the point as possible.
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3. Rather than pass key-value pair strings to Ansible modules, try to utilize
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key-value pair lists on a module command line. Example::
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- name: "Stat file for x reason"
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stat:
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file: '/path/to/file'
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get_md5: no
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4. Playbook conditionals utilizing variables intended as booleans,
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should make use of the ``| bool`` casting feature. This is due
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to command line overrides are typically interpreted as strings
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instead of booleans. Example::
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- name: "Something something something"
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module:
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parameter: "value"
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when: boolean_value | bool == true
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5. Be clear and explicit with actions in playbooks and comments.
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6. Simplicity is favored over magic.
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7. Documentation should generally be paired with code changes as we feel
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that it is important for us to be able to release the master branch
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at any time.
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8. Documentation should always be limited to 79 characters per row.
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9. If you have any questions, please ask in #openstack-ironic.
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