Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
60 lines (44 loc) · 4.86 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

60 lines (44 loc) · 4.86 KB

Contributing

In order to work on this project you will need Xcode 10.2 and Swift 5.0 or later.

Please refer to the issue #1 for the list of operators that remain unimplemented, as well as the RemainingCombineInterface.swift file. The latter contains the generated interface of Apple's Combine from the latest Xcode version. When the functionality is implemented in OpenCombine, it should be removed from the RemainingCombineInterface.swift file.

You can refer to this repo to observe Apple's Combine API and documentation changes between different Xcode (beta) versions.

You can run compatibility tests against Apple's Combine. In order to do that you will need either macOS 10.14 with iOS 13 simulator installed (since the only way we can get Apple's Combine on macOS 10.14 is using the simulator), or macOS 10.15 (Apple's Combine is bundled with the OS). Execute the following command from the root of the package:

$ make test-compatibility

Or enable the -DOPENCOMBINE_COMPATIBILITY_TEST compiler flag in Xcode's build settings. Note that on iOS only the latter will work.

NOTE: Before starting to work on some feature, please consult the GitHub project to make sure that nobody's already making progress on the same feature! If not, then please create a draft PR to indicate that you're beginning your work.

Releasing a new version

  1. Create a new branch from master and call it release/<major>.<minor>.<patch>.

  2. Replace the usages of the old version in README.md with the new version (make sure to check the Swift Package Manager and CocoaPods sections).

  3. Bump the version in OpenCombine.podspec, OpenCombineDispatch.podspec and OpenCombineFoundation.podspec. In the latter two you will also need to set the spec.dependency "OpenCombine" property to the previous version. Why? Because otherwise the pod lib lint command that we run on our regular CI will fail when validating the OpenCombineDispatch and OpenCombineFoundation podspecs, since the dependencies are not yet in the trunk. If we set the dependencies to the previous version (which is already in the trunk), everything will be fine. This is purely to make the CI work. The clients will not experience any issues, since the version is specified as >=.

  4. Create a pull request to master for the release branch and make sure the CI passes.

  5. Merge the pull request.

  6. In the GitHub web interface on the releases page, click the Draft a new release button.

  7. The Tag version and Release title fields should be filled with the version number.

  8. The description of the release should be consistent with the previous releases. It is a good practice to divide the description into several sections: additions, bugfixes, known issues etc. Also, be sure to mention the nicknames of the contributors of the new release.

  9. Publish the release.

  10. Switch to the master branch and pull the changes.

  11. Push the release to CocoaPods trunk. For that, execute the following commands:

    pod trunk push OpenCombine.podspec --verbose --allow-warnings
    pod trunk push OpenCombineDispatch.podspec --verbose --allow-warnings
    pod trunk push OpenCombineFoundation.podspec --verbose --allow-warnings
    

    Note that you need to be one of the owners of the pod for that.

GYB

Some publishers in OpenCombine (like Publishers.MapKeyPath, Publishers.Merge) exist in several different flavors in order to support several arities. For example, there are also Publishers.MapKeyPath2 and Publishers.MapKeyPath3, which are very similar but different enough that Swift's type system can't help us here (because there's no support for variadic generics). Maintaining multiple instances of those generic types is tedious and error-prone (they can get out of sync), so we use the GYB tool for generating those instances from a template.

GYB is a Python script that evaluates Python code written inside a template file, so it's very flexible — templates can be arbitrarily complex. There is a good article about GYB on NSHipster.

GYB is part of the Swift Open Source Project and can be distributed under the same license as Swift itself.

GYB template files have the .gyb extension. Run make gyb to generate Swift code from those templates. The generated files are prefixed with GENERATED- and are checked into source control. Those files should never be edited directly. Instead, the .gyb template should be edited, and after that the files should be regenerated using make gyb.