(Following is a copy of guidlines from MintPy modified for MiaplPy)
This document is inspired by similar instructions from numpy, GMT, ISCE, gdal and jupyterhub.
If you're reading this section, you're probably interested in contributing to MiaplPy. Welcome and thanks for your interest in contributing!
These are several ways to contribute to the MiaplPy project:
- Writing or proofreading documentation (including tutorials and examples in jupyter-notebooks)
- Submitting bug reports or feature requests on GitHub issue
- Suggesting or implementing tests
- Fixing typos or bugs in code
- Writing code for everyone to use
- Giving feedback about the projects (including giving feedback about the contribution process)
If you get stuck at any point you can open an issue on GitHub or comment on any open issue or pull request.
For more information on contributing to open source projects, GitHub's own guide is a great starting point if you are new to version control.
-
Go to https://github.com/insarlab/miaplpy.git and click "fork" button to create your own copy of the project.
-
Clone the project to your local computer and add the upstream repository:
git clone https://github.com/your_user_name/miaplpy.git cd MintPy git remote add upstream https://github.com/geodesymiami/miaplpy.git
-
Now,
git remote -v
will show two remote repositories named:upstream
, which refers to theinsarlab
repositoryorigin
, which refers to your personal fork
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Open an issue first if you plan to introduce a new feature or to change funcationality, we may have easier ways to help you implement it. If there is already an issue that matches your idea, leave a comment there instead to let us know what you plan to do. For bug fixes, documentation updates, etc., this is generally not necessary.
-
Pull the latest changes from upstream:
git checkout main git pull upstream/main
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Create a branch for the feature you want to work on. Since the branch name will appear in the merge message, use a sensible name such as 'seasonal_fitting':
git checkout -b seasonal_fitting
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Work on your idea, run tests and commit locally (
git add
andgit commit
) and/or to your fork on GitHub as you progress (git push
in command line or GitHub Desktop with graphical user interface). Use a clear commit message describing the motivation of a change, the nature of a bug for bug fixes or some details on what an enchancement does. -
Run the overall test locally.
- Go to your fork on GitHub. The new branch will show up with a Pull request button. Click and fill out the pull request template, make sure the title and message are clear, concise, and self-explanatory (these descriptions are how we keep track of the changes made to the project over time). Then click the button to submit it.
We follow the git pull request (PR) workflow to make changes to our codebase. Every change made goes through a PR, even our own, so that our continuous integration services have a change to check that the code is up to standards. GitHub will show the status of the these checks on the PR. Try to get them all passsing (green). If you have any trouble, leave a comment in the PR.
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Reviewers (the other developers and interested community members) will write inline and/or general comments on your PR to help you improve its implementation, documentation and style. We don't want to break the shared codebase, so care must be taken not to introduce bugs. Please don’t let the review discourage you from contributing: its only aim is to improve the quality of project, not to criticize (we are, after all, very grateful for the time you’re donating!).
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To update your PR, make your changes on your local repository, run tests, and only if they succeed commit and push to your fork. As soon as those changes are pushed up (to the same branch as before) the PR will update automatically. If you have no idea how to fix the test failures, you may push your changes anyway and ask for help in a PR comment.
If GitHub indicates that the branch of your Pull Request can no longer be merged automatically,
you have to incorporate changes that have been made since you started into your branch.
Our recommended way to do this is to rebase on main
.
Tute Costa has a great tutorial on how to rewrite history with git rebase/squash/amend.
- Each pull request should consist of a small and logical collection of changes.
- Larger changes should be broken down into smaller components and integrated separately.
- Describe what your PR changes and why this is a good thing. Be as specific as you can.
- Do not commit changes to files that are irrelevant to your feature or bugfix (e.g.:
.gitignore
, IDE project files, etc.). - Write descriptive commit messages. Chris Beams has a guide on writing good commit messages.
- Be aware that the pull request review process is not immediate, and is generally proportional to the size of the pull request.
Some things that will increase the chance that your pull request is accepted quickly:
- Write a good and detailed description of what the PR does.
- Readable code is better than clever code (even with comments).
- Write documentation for your code and leave comments explaining the reason behind non-obvious things.
It's a good idea to test any changes or bugs you have fixed, in the feature branch locally, before issuing/submitting the pull request. We realize that we don't have a complete testing system in place yet (maybe you can contribute this!)
It takes about 10 mins to finish.
(For anyone with push rights to github.com/insarlab/miaplpy) Never modify a commit or the history of anything that has been committed to the main
branch.