👍🎉 First off, thank you for taking the time to contribute! 🎉👍
The following is a set of guidelines for contributing. These are just guidelines, not rules. Use your best judgment, and feel free to propose changes to this document in a pull request. Please read the community contribution guide first for general practices for the InstructLab 🥼 community.
This project adheres to the InstructLab - Code of Conduct and Covenant. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code.
The below workflow is designed to help you begin your first contribution journey. It will guide you through creating and picking up issues, working through them, having your work reviewed, and then merging.
Help on open source projects is always welcome and there is always something that can be improved. For example, documentation (like the text you are reading now) can always use improvement, code can always be clarified, variables or functions can always be renamed or commented on, and there is always a need for more test coverage. If you see something that you think should be fixed, take ownership! Here is how you get started:
When contributing, it's useful to start by looking at issues. After picking up an issue, writing code, or updating a document, make a pull request and your work will be reviewed and merged. If you're adding a new feature or find a bug, it's best to write an issue first to discuss it with maintainers.
To contribute to this repository, you'll use the Fork and Pull model common in many open source repositories. For details on this process, check out The GitHub Workflow Guide from Kubernetes.
When your contribution is ready, you can create a pull request. Pull requests are often referred to as "PR". In general, we follow the standard GitHub pull request process. Follow the template to provide details about your pull request to the maintainers.
Before sending pull requests, make sure your changes pass formatting, linting and unit tests.
Once you've created a pull request, maintainers will review your code and may make suggestions to fix before merging. It will be easier for your pull request to receive reviews if you consider the criteria the reviewers follow while working. Remember to:
- Run tests locally and ensure they pass
- Follow the project coding conventions
- Write detailed commit messages
- Break large changes into a logical series of smaller patches, which are easy to understand individually and combine to solve a broader issue
This section guides you through submitting a bug report. Following these guidelines helps maintainers and the community understand your report ✏️, reproduce the behavior 💻, and find related reports 🔎.
Bugs are tracked as GitHub issues using the Bug Report template. Create an issue on that and provide the information suggested in the bug report issue template.
This section guides you through submitting an enhancement suggestion, including completely new features, tools, and minor improvements to existing functionality. Following these guidelines helps maintainers and the community understand your suggestion ✏️ and find related suggestions 🔎
Enhancement suggestions are tracked as GitHub issues using the Feature Request template. Create an issue and provide the information suggested in the feature requests or user story issue template.
Improvements to existing functionality are tracked as GitHub issues using the User Story template. Create an issue and provide the information suggested in the feature requests or user story issue template.
The following tools are required:
git
python
(v3.10 or v3.11)pip
(v23.0+)expect
(for functional tests)coreutils
(for functional tests)bash
(v5+, for functional tests)
You can setup your dev environment using tox
, an environment orchestrator which allows for setting up environments for and invoking builds, unit tests, formatting, linting, etc. Install tox with:
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Install project requirements with:
pip install -r requirements.txt
If you want to test the ilab
binary, you can install ilab
and all dependencies with:
pip install .
Before pushing changes to GitHub, you need to run the tests as shown below. They can be run individually as shown in each sub-section or can be run with the one command:
tox
Unit tests are enforced by the CI system using pytest
. When making changes, run these tests before pushing the changes to avoid CI issues.
Running unit tests can be done with:
tox -e py3-unit
By default, all tests found within the tests
directory are run. However, specific unit tests can run by passing filenames, classes and/or methods to pytest
using tox positional arguments. The following example invokes a single test method test_diff_invalid_base
within the TestLabDiff
class that is declared in the tests/test_lab_diff.py
file:
tox -e py3-unit -- tests/test_lab_diff.py::TestLabDiff::test_diff_invalid_base
Functional tests are enforced by the CI system. When making changes, run the tests before pushing the changes to avoid CI issues.
Running functional tests can be done with:
tox -e py3-functional
Cli follows the python pep8
coding style. The coding style is enforced by the CI system, and your PR will fail until the style has been applied correctly.
We use pre-commit to enforce coding style using black
, and isort
.
You can invoke formatting with:
tox -e fmt
In addition, we use pylint
to perform static code analysis of the code.
You can invoke the linting with the following command
tox -e lint
Unsure where to begin contributing? You can start by looking through these issues:
- Issues with the
good first issue
label - these should only require a few lines of code and are good targets if you're just starting contributing. - Issues with the
help wanted
label - these range from simple to more complex, but are generally things we want but can't get to in a short time frame.