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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Asking Questions

If you have questions regarding how to use the software, please ask them on IRC.

The channel #cu can be found on irc.rizon.net.

Contributing Patches

Code Style

The coding style is based on the Pocoo Style Guide with a 79 character limit.

Imports and symbol definitions (such as functions, or class methods) should be listed in alphabetical order.

Currently, cu2 supports Python versions >= 3.3. Please do not break backwards compatibility with older Python versions unless you have a good reason to.

Tests

Before submitting a pull request, please run the unit tests to confirm that you didn't break anything by accident. The following environment variables are read by the unit tests for login data:

MADOKAMI_USERNAME
MADOKAMI_PASSWORD
BATOTO_USERNAME
BATOTO_PASSWORD

If you are lazy and have jq installed, source this script before running tests to have the environment variables set to what you use in your cu2 config.

When adding new code paths, please also add tests to cover them.

Code Reviews

Your submitted patches are most likely going to undergo a review. This is to ensure that trend in code quality is one that goes upwards, rather than the opposite.

Please address concerns raised by the reviewer, and try to answer questions regarding design decisions to the best of your ability.

Don't worry, the reviewer likely doesn't hate you as a person, they just hate your code! Please do not engage in personally motivated arguments over design decisions; keep the discussion as technical as possible.

Commit Messages

The first line in a commit message should be a summary of the changes, in 65 characters or less. The summary line should be written in imperative mode, as in "Fix" instead of "Fixed".

This should be followed by a blank line, and then a 72 character wrapped explanation of the changes a commit makes.

If you submit a pull request, please make your changes in a new branch, and not the master branch. This makes it easier to re-base your changes and allows you to work on several improvements at once all based on a "clean" master.

Upon submitting a pull-request, you may be asked to make additional fixes before the pull-request is merged. In this case, please squash simple commits together; re-writing the commit history of your remote branch is a necessary evil when it comes to keeping a clean commit history. To squash your commits, do the following steps:

  1. Execute git rebase -i HEAD~$NUMBER_OF_COMMITS, e.g. git rebase -i HEAD~2.

  2. An editor should open. Replace pick with squash or s on the commits that you want to have squashed.

  3. Proceed and adjust your commit messages as needed.

  4. Do a force-push to your remote branch with git push -f yourremote yourbranch.

Independent changes should be submitted as independent commits, and if necessary, independent pull requests.