Thank you for considering making contributions to Cosmos-SDK and related repositories! Start by taking a look at this coding repo for overall information on repository workflow and standards.
Please follow standard github best practices: fork the repo, branch from the tip of develop, make some commits, and submit a pull request to develop. See the open issues for things we need help with!
Please make sure to use gofmt
before every commit - the easiest way to do this is have your editor run it for you upon saving a file. Additionally please ensure that your code is lint compliant by running make lint
Looking for a good place to start contributing? How about checking out some good first issues
To accommodate review process we suggest that PRs are catagorically broken up. Ideally each PR addresses only a single issue. Additionally, as much as possible code refactoring and cleanup should be submitted as a seperate PRs from bugfixes/feature-additions.
Please note that Go requires code to live under absolute paths, which complicates forking.
While my fork lives at https://github.com/rigeyrigerige/cosmos-sdk
,
the code should never exist at $GOPATH/src/github.com/rigeyrigerige/cosmos-sdk
.
Instead, we use git remote
to add the fork as a new remote for the original repo,
$GOPATH/src/github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk
, and do all the work there.
For instance, to create a fork and work on a branch of it, I would:
- Create the fork on github, using the fork button.
- Go to the original repo checked out locally (i.e.
$GOPATH/src/github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk
) git remote rename origin upstream
git remote add origin [email protected]:ebuchman/basecoin.git
Now origin
refers to my fork and upstream
refers to the Cosmos-SDK version.
So I can git push -u origin master
to update my fork, and make pull requests to Cosmos-SDK from there.
Of course, replace ebuchman
with your git handle.
To pull in updates from the origin repo, run
* `git fetch upstream`
* `git rebase upstream/master` (or whatever branch you want)
Please don't make Pull Requests to master
.
We use dep to manage dependencies.
That said, the master branch of every Cosmos repository should just build
with go get
, which means they should be kept up-to-date with their
dependencies so we can get away with telling people they can just go get
our
software.
Since some dependencies are not under our control, a third party may break our
build, in which case we can fall back on dep ensure
(or make get_vendor_deps
). Even for dependencies under our control, dep helps us to
keep multiple repos in sync as they evolve. Anything with an executable, such
as apps, tools, and the core, should use dep.
Run dep status
to get a list of vendor dependencies that may not be
up-to-date.
All repos should be hooked up to CircleCI.
If they have .go
files in the root directory, they will be automatically
tested by circle using go test -v -race ./...
. If not, they will need a
circle.yml
. Ideally, every repo has a Makefile
that defines make test
and
includes its continuous integration status using a badge in the README.md
.
User-facing repos should adhere to the branching model: http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/. That is, these repos should be well versioned, and any merge to master requires a version bump and tagged release.
Libraries need not follow the model strictly, but would be wise to.
The SDK utilizes semantic versioning.
- the latest state of development is on
develop
develop
must never failmake test
ormake test_cli
develop
should not failmake test_lint
- no --force onto
develop
(except when reverting a broken commit, which should seldom happen) - create a development branch either on github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk, or your fork (using
git remote add origin
) - before submitting a pull request, begin
git rebase
on top ofdevelop
- ensure pull branch is rebased on develop
- run
make test
andmake test_cli
to ensure that all tests pass - merge pull request
- push master may request that pull requests be rebased on top of
unstable
- start on
develop
- prepare changelog/release issue
- bump versions
- push to release-vX.X.X to run CI
- merge to master
- merge master back to develop
- start on
master
- checkout a new branch named hotfix-vX.X.X
- make the required changes
- these changes should be small and an absolute necessity
- add a note to CHANGELOG.md
- bump versions
- push to hotfix-vX.X.X to run the extended integration tests on the CI
- merge hotfix-vX.X.X to master
- merge hotfix-vX.X.X to develop
- delete the hotfix-vX.X.X branch