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How to contribute

Contribution Guide

This document outlines some conventions about development workflow, commit message formatting, contact points and other resources to make it easier to get your contribution accepted.

Before you get started

Setting up your development environment

Before you start, you need Set up your GO development environment.

  1. Install Go version 1.14 or above. Refer to How to Write Go Code for more information.

  2. Define GOPATH environment variable and modify PATH to access your Go binaries. A common setup is as follows. You could always specify it based on your own flavor.

    export GOPATH=$HOME/go
    export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin

Note: TiDB uses Go Modules to manage dependencies.

Now you should be able to use the make build command to build TiDB.

Contribution Workflow

To contribute to the goInception code base, please follow the workflow as defined in this section.

  1. Create a topic branch from where you want to base your work. This is usually master.
  2. Make commits of logical units and add test case if the change fixes a bug or adds new functionality.
  3. Run tests and make sure all the tests are passed.
  4. Make sure your commit messages are in the proper format (see below).
  5. Push your changes to a topic branch in your fork of the repository.
  6. Submit a pull request.

Thanks for your contributions!

Step 1: Fork in the cloud

  1. Visit https://github.com/hanchuanchuan/goInception
  2. On the top right of the page, click the Fork button (top right) to create a cloud-based fork of the repository.

Step 2: Clone fork to local storage

Per Go's workspace instructions, place TiDB's code on your GOPATH using the following cloning procedure.

Define a local working directory:

# Set `user` to match your github profile name:
export user={your github profile name}
export working_dir=$GOPATH/src/github.com/${user}

Both $working_dir and $user are mentioned in the figure above.

Create your clone:

mkdir -p $working_dir
cd $working_dir

git clone https://github.com/${user}/goInception.git
# or: git clone git@github.com/${user}/goInception.git

cd $working_dir/goInception
git remote add upstream https://github.com/hanchuanchuan/goInception.git
# or: git remote add upstream git@github.com/hanchuanchuan/goInception.git

# Never push to the upstream master.
git remote set-url --push upstream no_push

# Confirm that your remotes make sense:
# It should look like:
# origin    git@github.com:$(user)/goInception.git (fetch)
# origin    git@github.com:$(user)/goInception.git (push)
# upstream  https://github.com/hanchuanchuan/goInception (fetch)
# upstream  no_push (push)
git remote -v

Set the pre-commit hook. This hook checks your commits for formatting, building, doc generation, etc:

cd $working_dir/goInception/
ln -s `pwd`/hooks/pre-commit .git/hooks/
chmod +x $working_dir/goInception/.git/hooks/pre-commit

Step 3: Branch

Get your local master up to date:

cd $working_dir/goInception
git fetch upstream
git checkout master
git rebase upstream/master

Branch from master:

git checkout -b feature-test

Step 4: Develop

Edit the code

You can now edit the code on the feature-test branch.

Prepare the test environment

A mysql instance is required to run local tests to test audit, execution, and backup functions.

  • mysql recommended version: 5.7
  • mysql startup parameters(or set my.cnf) mysqld --log-bin=on --server_id=111 --character-set-server=utf8mb4
  • Create a test database mysql -e "create database if not exists test DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8;create database if not exists test_inc DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8;"
  • Create a test user mysql -e "grant all on *.* to test@'127.0.0.1' identified by 'test';FLUSH PRIVILEGES;"

Test

Build and run all tests:

# build and run the unit test to make sure all tests are passed.
make dev

# Check the checklist before you move on.
make checklist

You can also run a single unit test in a file. For example, to run test TestToInt64 in file types/datum.go:

GO111MODULE=on go test session/session_inception_*.go
# or:
GO111MODULE=on go test session/session_inception_test.go

Step 5: Keep your branch in sync

The branch needs to be merged with the latest version of goInception before submitting, so as not to be unable to merge PR

# While on your feature-test branch.
git fetch upstream
git rebase upstream/master

Please don't use git pull instead of the above fetch/rebase. git pull does a merge, which leaves merge commits. These make the commit history messy and violate the principle that commits ought to be individually understandable and useful (see below). You can also consider changing your .git/config file via git config branch.autoSetupRebase always to change the behavior of git pull.

Step 6: Commit

Commit your changes.

git commit

Likely you'll go back and edit/build/test further, and then commit --amend in a few cycles.

Step 7: Push

When the changes are ready to review (or you just to create an offsite backup or your work), push your branch to your fork on github.com:

git push --set-upstream ${your_remote_name} feature-test

Step 8: Create a pull request

  1. Visit your fork at https://github.com/$user/goInception.
  2. Click the Compare & Pull Request button next to your feature-test branch.
  3. Fill in the required information in the PR template.

Step 9: Get a code review

After PR submission, travisci test and circleci test will be automatically performed, During the review, any changes can be directly modified and submitted on the branch, the PR will use the latest commit, and there is no need to submit the PR again. If a PR involves multiple functions or fixes, it is recommended to split into multiple branches to facilitate review and merging.

Code style

You can refer to the coding style suggested by the Golang community style doc