d183b41c9b
See http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-discuss/2021-May/022718.html and http://lists.opendev.org/pipermail/service-discuss/2021-May/000249.html for more information. Change-Id: I6ac37c23153c5c9d42d96e448e0656dbf8257991
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Contributing to OpenStack Swift
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===============================
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Who is a Contributor?
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---------------------
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Put simply, if you improve Swift, you're a contributor. The easiest way to
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improve the project is to tell us where there's a bug. In other words, filing
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a bug is a valuable and helpful way to contribute to the project.
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Once a bug has been filed, someone will work on writing a patch to fix the
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bug. Perhaps you'd like to fix a bug. Writing code to fix a bug or add new
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functionality is tremendously important.
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Once code has been written, it is submitted upstream for review. All code,
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even that written by the most senior members of the community, must pass code
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review and all tests before it can be included in the project. Reviewing
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proposed patches is a very helpful way to be a contributor.
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Swift is nothing without the community behind it. We'd love to welcome you to
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our community. Come find us in #openstack-swift on OFTC IRC or on the
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OpenStack dev mailing list.
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For general information on contributing to OpenStack, please check out the
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`contributor guide <https://docs.openstack.org/contributors/>`_ to get started.
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It covers all the basics that are common to all OpenStack projects: the accounts
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you need, the basics of interacting with our Gerrit review system, how we
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communicate as a community, etc.
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If you want more Swift related project documentation make sure you checkout
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the Swift developer (contributor) documentation at
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https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/
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Filing a Bug
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Filing a bug is the easiest way to contribute. We use Launchpad as a bug
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tracker; you can find currently-tracked bugs at
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/swift.
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Use the `Report a bug <https://bugs.launchpad.net/swift/+filebug>`__ link to
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file a new bug.
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If you find something in Swift that doesn't match the documentation or doesn't
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meet your expectations with how it should work, please let us know. Of course,
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if you ever get an error (like a Traceback message in the logs), we definitely
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want to know about that. We'll do our best to diagnose any problem and patch
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it as soon as possible.
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A bug report, at minimum, should describe what you were doing that caused the
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bug. "Swift broke, pls fix" is not helpful. Instead, something like "When I
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restarted syslog, Swift started logging traceback messages" is very helpful.
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The goal is that we can reproduce the bug and isolate the issue in order to
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apply a fix. If you don't have full details, that's ok. Anything you can
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provide is helpful.
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You may have noticed that there are many tracked bugs, but not all of them
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have been confirmed. If you take a look at an old bug report and you can
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reproduce the issue described, please leave a comment on the bug about that.
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It lets us all know that the bug is very likely to be valid.
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Reviewing Someone Else's Code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All code reviews in OpenStack projects are done on
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https://review.opendev.org/. Reviewing patches is one of the most effective
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ways you can contribute to the community.
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We've written REVIEW_GUIDELINES.rst (found in this source tree) to help you
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give good reviews.
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https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Swift/PriorityReviews is a starting point to
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find what reviews are priority in the community.
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What do I work on?
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------------------
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If you're looking for a way to write and contribute code, but you're not sure
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what to work on, check out the "wishlist" bugs in the bug tracker. These are
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normally smaller items that someone took the time to write down but didn't
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have time to implement.
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And please join #openstack-swift on OFTC IRC to tell us what you're working on.
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Getting Started
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---------------
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https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/first_contribution_swift.html
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Once those steps have been completed, changes to OpenStack
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should be submitted for review via the Gerrit tool, following
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the workflow documented at
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http://docs.openstack.org/infra/manual/developers.html#development-workflow.
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Gerrit is the review system used in the OpenStack projects. We're sorry, but
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we won't be able to respond to pull requests submitted through GitHub.
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Bugs should be filed `on Launchpad <https://bugs.launchpad.net/swift>`__,
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not in GitHub's issue tracker.
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Swift Design Principles
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=======================
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- `The Zen of Python <http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0020/>`__
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- Simple Scales
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- Minimal dependencies
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- Re-use existing tools and libraries when reasonable
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- Leverage the economies of scale
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- Small, loosely coupled RESTful services
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- No single points of failure
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- Start with the use case
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- ... then design from the cluster operator up
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- If you haven't argued about it, you don't have the right answer yet
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:)
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- If it is your first implementation, you probably aren't done yet :)
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Please don't feel offended by difference of opinion. Be prepared to
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advocate for your change and iterate on it based on feedback. Reach out
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to other people working on the project on
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`IRC <http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/irclogs/%23openstack-swift/>`__ or
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the `mailing
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list <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-discuss/>`__ - we want
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to help.
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Recommended workflow
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====================
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- Set up a `Swift All-In-One
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VM <https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/development_saio.html>`__\ (SAIO).
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- Make your changes. Docs and tests for your patch must land before or
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with your patch.
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- Run unit tests, functional tests, probe tests ``./.unittests``
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``./.functests`` ``./.probetests``
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- Run ``tox`` (no command-line args needed)
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- ``git review``
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Notes on Testing
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================
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Running the tests above against Swift in your development environment
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(ie your SAIO) will catch most issues. Any patch you propose is expected
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to be both tested and documented and all tests should pass.
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If you want to run just a subset of the tests while you are developing,
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you can use nosetests:
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.. code-block:: console
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cd test/unit/common/middleware/ && nosetests test_healthcheck.py
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To check which parts of your code are being exercised by a test, you can
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run tox and then point your browser to swift/cover/index.html:
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.. code-block:: console
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tox -e py27 -- test.unit.common.middleware.test_healthcheck:TestHealthCheck.test_healthcheck
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Swift's unit tests are designed to test small parts of the code in
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isolation. The functional tests validate that the entire system is
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working from an external perspective (they are "black-box" tests). You
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can even run functional tests against public Swift endpoints. The
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probetests are designed to test much of Swift's internal processes. For
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example, a test may write data, intentionally corrupt it, and then
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ensure that the correct processes detect and repair it.
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When your patch is submitted for code review, it will automatically be
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tested on the OpenStack CI infrastructure. In addition to many of the
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tests above, it will also be tested by several other OpenStack test
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jobs.
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Once your patch has been reviewed and approved by core reviewers and
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has passed all automated tests, it will be merged into the Swift source
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tree.
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Ideas
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=====
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https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Swift/ideas
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If you're working on something, it's a very good idea to write down
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what you're thinking about. This lets others get up to speed, helps
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you collaborate, and serves as a great record for future reference.
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Write down your thoughts somewhere and put a link to it here. It
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doesn't matter what form your thoughts are in; use whatever is best
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for you. Your document should include why your idea is needed and your
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thoughts on particular design choices and tradeoffs. Please include
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some contact information (ideally, your IRC nick) so that people can
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collaborate with you.
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