mirror of
https://github.com/janet-lang/janet
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93 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
93 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
# Guidelines for contributing to Janet
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Thanks for taking time to contribute to Janet!
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Please read this document before making contributions.
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## Reporting bugs
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* Check past and current issues to see if your problem has been run into before.
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* If you can't find a past issue for your problem, or if the issues has been closed
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you should open a new issue. If there is a closed issue that is relevant, make
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sure to reference it.
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* As with any project, include a comprehensive description of the problem and instructions
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on how to reproduce it. If it is a compiler or language bug, please try to include a minimal
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example. This means don't post all 200 lines of code from your project, but spend some time
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distilling the problem to just the relevant code.
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## Contributing Changes
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If you want to contribute some code to the project, please submit a pull request and
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follow the below guidelines. Not all changes will be merged, and some pull requests
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may require changes before being merged.
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* Include a description of the changes.
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* If there are changes to the compiler or the language, please include tests in the test folder.
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The test suites are not organized in any particular way now, so simply add your tests
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to one of the test suite files (test/suite0.janet, test/suite1.janet, etc.). You can
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run tests with `make test`. If you want to add a new test suite, simply add a file to
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the test folder and make sure it is run when`make test` is invoked.
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* Be consistent with the style. For C this means follow the indentation and style in
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other files (files have MIT license at top, 4 spaces indentation, no trailing
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whitespace, cuddled brackets, etc.) Use `make format` to automatically format your C code with
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[astyle](http://astyle.sourceforge.net/astyle.html). You will probably need
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to install this, but it can be installed with most package managers.
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For janet code, use lisp indentation with 2 spaces. One can use janet.vim to
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do this indentation, or approximate as close as possible. There is a janet formatter
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in [spork](https://github.com/janet-lang/spork.git) that can be used to format code as well.
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## C style
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For changes to the VM and Core code, you will probably need to know C. Janet is programmed with
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a subset of C99 that works with Microsoft Visual C++. This means most of C99 but with the following
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omissions.
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* No `restrict`
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* Certain functions in the standard library are not always available
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In practice, this means programming for both MSVC on one hand and everything else on the other.
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The code must also build with emscripten, even if some features are not available, although
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this is not a priority.
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Code should compile warning free and run valgrind clean. I find that these two criteria are some
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of the easiest ways to protect against a large number of bugs in an unsafe language like C. To check for
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valgrind errors, run `make valtest` and check the output for undefined or flagged behavior.
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### Formatting
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Use [astyle](http://astyle.sourceforge.net/astyle.html) via `make format` to
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ensure a consistent code style for C.
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## Janet style
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All janet code in the project should be formatted similar to the code in core.janet.
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The auto formatting from janet.vim will work well.
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## Typo Fixing and One-Line changes
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Typo fixes are welcome, as are simple one line fixes. Do not open many separate pull requests for each
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individual typo fix. This is incredibly annoying to deal with as someone needs to review each PR, run
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CI, and merge. Instead, accumulate batches of typo fixes into a single PR. If there are objections to
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specific changes, these can be addressed in the review process before the final merge, if the changes
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are accepted.
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Similarly, low effort and bad faith changes are annoying to developers and such issues may be closed
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immediately without response.
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## Contributions from Automated Tools
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People making changes found or generated by automated tools MUST note this when opening an issue
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or creating a pull request. This can help give context to developers if the change/issue is
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confusing or nonsensical.
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## Suggesting Changes
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To suggest changes, open an issue on GitHub. Check GitHub for other issues
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that may be related to your issue before opening a new suggestion. Suggestions
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put forth without code will be considered, but not necessarily implemented in any
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timely manner. In short, if you want extra functionality now, then build it.
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* Include a good description of the problem that is being solved
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* Include descriptions of potential solutions if you have some in mind.
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