diff options
author | Rex Lee <limingjiang@huawei.com> | 2018-10-30 09:04:45 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Gerrit Code Review <gerrit@opnfv.org> | 2018-10-30 09:04:45 +0000 |
commit | a74d79472dedf193e00905840d53cdee48e74f82 (patch) | |
tree | f93222d37a7dd24eae5fdc663169161bca70a4a3 | |
parent | f64419cc7d16a679ed130dfe7592533b3cf9fdc1 (diff) | |
parent | e672bd4fbc83655b9bcbef1c50f96f3dff3ee713 (diff) |
Merge "[docs] Add developer guidelines for contribution"
-rwxr-xr-x | docs/testing/developer/devguide/devguide.rst | 89 |
1 files changed, 89 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/testing/developer/devguide/devguide.rst b/docs/testing/developer/devguide/devguide.rst index 447ec445c..4fe01c12b 100755 --- a/docs/testing/developer/devguide/devguide.rst +++ b/docs/testing/developer/devguide/devguide.rst @@ -449,6 +449,10 @@ Verify your patch:: It is used in CI but also by the CLI. +For more details on ``tox`` and tests, please refer to the `Running tests`_ +and `working with tox`_ sections below, which describe the different available +environments. + Submit the code with Git ++++++++++++++++++++++++ @@ -566,6 +570,91 @@ The process for backporting is as follows: A backported change needs a ``+1`` and a ``+2`` from a committer who didn’t propose the change (i.e. minimum 3 people involved). +Development guidelines +---------------------- +This section provides guidelines and best practices for feature development +and bug fixing in Yardstick. + +In general, bug fixes should be submitted as a single patch. + +When developing larger features, all commits on the local topic branch can be +submitted together, by running ``git review`` on the tip of the branch. This +creates a chain of related patches in gerrit. + +Each commit should contain one logical change and the author should aim for no +more than 300 lines of code per commit. This helps to make the changes easier +to review. + +Each feature should have the following: + +* Feature/bug fix code +* Unit tests (both positive and negative) +* Functional tests (optional) +* Sample testcases (if applicable) +* Documentation +* Update to release notes + +Coding style +~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.. _`OpenStack Style Guidelines`: https://docs.openstack.org/hacking/latest/user/hacking.html +.. _`OPNFV coding guidelines`: https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/DEV/Contribution+Guidelines + +Please follow the `OpenStack Style Guidelines`_ for code contributions (the +section on Internationalization (i18n) Strings is not applicable). + +When writing commit message, the `OPNFV coding guidelines`_ on git commit +message style should also be used. + +Running tests +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Once your patch has been submitted, a number of tests will be run by Jenkins +CI to verify the patch. Before submitting your patch, you should run these +tests locally. You can do this using ``tox``, which has a number of different +test environments defined in ``tox.ini``. +Calling ``tox`` without any additional arguments runs the default set of +tests (unit tests, functional tests, coverage and pylint). + +If some tests are failing, you can save time and select test environments +individually, by passing one or more of the following command-line options to +``tox``: + +* ``-e py27``: Unit tests using Python 2.7 +* ``-e py3``: Unit tests using Python 3 +* ``-e pep8``: Linter and style checks on updated files +* ``-e functional``: Functional tests using Python 2.7 +* ``-e functional-py3``: Functional tests using Python 3 +* ``-e coverage``: Code coverage checks + +.. note:: You need to stage your changes prior to running coverage for those + changes to be checked. + +In addition to the tests run by Jenkins (listed above), there are a number of +other test environments defined. + +* ``-e pep8-full``: Linter and style checks are run on the whole repo (not + just on updated files) +* ``-e os-requirements``: Check that the requirements are compatible with + OpenStack requirements. + +Working with tox +++++++++++++++++ +.. _virtualenv: https://virtualenv.pypa.io/en/stable/ + +``tox`` uses `virtualenv`_ to create isolated Python environments to run the +tests in. The test environments are located at +``.tox/<environment_name>`` e.g. ``.tox/py27``. + +If requirements are changed, you will need to recreate the tox test +environment to make sure the new requirements are installed. This is done by +passing the additional ``-r`` command-line option to ``tox``:: + + tox -r -e ... + +This can also be achieved by deleting the test environments manually before +running ``tox``:: + + rm -rf .tox/<environment_name> + rm -rf .tox/py27 Writing unit tests ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |