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							- .. include:: global.rst.inc
 
- .. highlight:: bash
 
- .. _development:
 
- Development
 
- ===========
 
- This chapter will get you started with Borg development.
 
- Borg is written in Python (with a little bit of Cython and C for
 
- the performance critical parts).
 
- Contributions
 
- -------------
 
- ... are welcome!
 
- Some guidance for contributors:
 
- - Discuss changes on the GitHub issue tracker, on IRC or on the mailing list.
 
- - Make your PRs on the ``master`` branch (see `Branching Model`_ for details and exceptions).
 
- - Do clean changesets:
 
-   - Focus on some topic, resist changing anything else.
 
-   - Do not do style changes mixed with functional changes.
 
-   - Try to avoid refactorings mixed with functional changes.
 
-   - If you need to fix something after commit/push:
 
-     - If there are ongoing reviews: do a fixup commit you can
 
-       squash into the bad commit later.
 
-     - If there are no ongoing reviews or you did not push the
 
-       bad commit yet: amend the commit to include your fix or
 
-       merge the fixup commit before pushing.
 
-   - Have a nice, clear, typo-free commit comment.
 
-   - If you fixed an issue, refer to it in your commit comment.
 
-   - Follow the style guide (see below).
 
- - If you write new code, please add tests and docs for it.
 
- - Run the tests, fix any issues that come up.
 
- - Make a pull request on GitHub.
 
- - Wait for review by other developers.
 
- Branching model
 
- ---------------
 
- Borg development happens on the ``master`` branch and uses GitHub pull
 
- requests (if you don't have GitHub or don't want to use it you can
 
- send smaller patches via the borgbackup mailing list to the maintainers).
 
- Stable releases are maintained on maintenance branches named ``x.y-maint``, eg.
 
- the maintenance branch of the 1.4.x series is ``1.4-maint``.
 
- Most PRs should be filed against the ``master`` branch. Only if an
 
- issue affects **only** a particular maintenance branch a PR should be
 
- filed against it directly.
 
- While discussing / reviewing a PR it will be decided whether the
 
- change should be applied to maintenance branches. Each maintenance
 
- branch has a corresponding *backport/x.y-maint* label, which will then
 
- be applied.
 
- Changes that are typically considered for backporting:
 
- - Data loss, corruption and inaccessibility fixes.
 
- - Security fixes.
 
- - Forward-compatibility improvements.
 
- - Documentation corrections.
 
- .. rubric:: Maintainer part
 
- From time to time a maintainer will backport the changes for a
 
- maintenance branch, typically before a release or if enough changes
 
- were collected:
 
- 1. Notify others that you're doing this to avoid duplicate work.
 
- 2. Branch a backporting branch off the maintenance branch.
 
- 3. Cherry pick and backport the changes from each labelled PR, remove
 
-    the label for each PR you've backported.
 
-    To preserve authorship metadata, do not follow the ``git cherry-pick``
 
-    instructions to use ``git commit`` after resolving conflicts. Instead,
 
-    stage conflict resolutions and run ``git cherry-pick --continue``,
 
-    much like using ``git rebase``.
 
-    To avoid merge issues (a cherry pick is a form of merge), use
 
-    these options (similar to the ``git merge`` options used previously,
 
-    the ``-x`` option adds a reference to the original commit)::
 
-      git cherry-pick --strategy recursive -X rename-threshold=5% -x
 
- 4. Make a PR of the backporting branch against the maintenance branch
 
-    for backport review. Mention the backported PRs in this PR, e.g.:
 
-        Includes changes from #2055 #2057 #2381
 
-    This way GitHub will automatically show in these PRs where they
 
-    were backported.
 
- .. rubric:: Historic model
 
- Previously (until release 1.0.10) Borg used a `"merge upwards"
 
- <https://git-scm.com/docs/gitworkflows#_merging_upwards>`_ model where
 
- most minor changes and fixes where committed to a maintenance branch
 
- (eg. 1.0-maint), and the maintenance branch(es) were regularly merged
 
- back into the main development branch. This became more and more
 
- troublesome due to merges growing more conflict-heavy and error-prone.
 
- How to submit a pull request
 
- ----------------------------
 
- In order to contribute to Borg, you will need to fork the ``borgbackup/borg``
 
- main repository to your own Github repository. Then clone your Github repository
 
- to your local machine. The instructions for forking and cloning a repository
 
- can be found there:
 
- `<https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/quickstart/fork-a-repo>`_ .
 
- Make sure you also fetched the git tags, because without them, ``setuptools-scm``
 
- will run into issues determining the correct borg version. Check if ``git tag``
 
- shows a lot of release tags (version numbers).
 
- If it does not, use ``git fetch --tags`` to fetch them.
 
- To work on your contribution, you first need to decide which branch your pull
 
- request should be against. Often, this might be master branch (esp. for big /
 
- risky contributions), but it could be also a maintenance branch like e.g.
 
- 1.4-maint (esp. for small fixes that should go into next maintenance release,
 
- e.g. 1.4.x).
 
- Start by checking out the appropriate branch:
 
- ::
 
-     git checkout master
 
- It is best practice for a developer to keep local ``master`` branch as an
 
- uptodate copy of the upstream ``master`` branch and always do own work in a
 
- separate feature or bugfix branch.
 
- This is useful to be able to rebase own branches onto the upstream branches
 
- they were branched from, if necessary.
 
- This also applies to other upstream branches (like e.g. ``1.4-maint``), not
 
- only to ``master``.
 
- Thus, create a new branch now:
 
- ::
 
-     git checkout -b MYCONTRIB-master  # choose an appropriate own branch name
 
- Now, work on your contribution in that branch. Use these git commands:
 
- ::
 
-     git status   # is there anything that needs to be added?
 
-     git add ...  # if so, add it
 
-     git commit   # finally, commit it. use a descriptive comment.
 
- Then push the changes to your Github repository:
 
- ::
 
-     git push --set-upstream origin MYCONTRIB-master
 
- Finally, make a pull request on ``borgbackup/borg`` Github repository against
 
- the appropriate branch (e.g. ``master``) so that your changes can be reviewed.
 
- What to do if work was accidentally started in wrong branch
 
- -----------------------------------------------------------
 
- If you accidentally worked in ``master`` branch, check out the ``master``
 
- branch and make sure there are no uncommitted changes. Then, create a feature
 
- branch from that, so that your contribution is in a feature branch.
 
- ::
 
-     git checkout master
 
-     git checkout -b MYCONTRIB-master
 
- Next, check out the ``master`` branch again. Find the commit hash of the last
 
- commit that was made before you started working on your contribution and perform
 
- a hard reset.
 
- ::
 
-     git checkout master
 
-     git log
 
-     git reset --hard THATHASH
 
- Then, update the local ``master`` branch with changes made in the upstream
 
- repository.
 
- ::
 
-     git pull borg master
 
- Rebase feature branch onto updated master branch
 
- ------------------------------------------------
 
- After updating the local ``master`` branch from upstream, the feature branch
 
- can be checked out and rebased onto (the now uptodate) ``master`` branch.
 
- ::
 
-     git checkout MYCONTRIB-master
 
-     git rebase -i master
 
- Next, check if there are any commits that exist in the feature branch
 
- but not in the ``master`` branch and vice versa. If there are no
 
- conflicts or after resolving them, push your changes to your Github repository.
 
- ::
 
-     git log
 
-     git diff master
 
-     git push -f
 
- Code and issues
 
- ---------------
 
- Code is stored on GitHub, in the `Borgbackup organization
 
- <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/>`_. `Issues
 
- <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/issues>`_ and `pull requests
 
- <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/pulls>`_ should be sent there as
 
- well. See also the :ref:`support` section for more details.
 
- Style guide / Automated Code Formatting
 
- ---------------------------------------
 
- We use `black`_ for automatically formatting the code.
 
- If you work on the code, it is recommended that you run black **before each commit**
 
- (so that new code is always using the desired formatting and no additional commits
 
- are required to fix the formatting).
 
- ::
 
-     pip install -r requirements.d/codestyle.txt     # everybody use same black version
 
-     black --check .                                 # only check, don't change
 
-     black .                                         # reformat the code
 
- The CI workflows will check the code formatting and will fail if it is not formatted correctly.
 
- When (mass-)reformatting existing code, we need to avoid ruining `git blame`, so please
 
- follow their `guide about avoiding ruining git blame`_:
 
- .. _black: https://black.readthedocs.io/
 
- .. _guide about avoiding ruining git blame: https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/guides/introducing_black_to_your_project.html#avoiding-ruining-git-blame
 
- Continuous Integration
 
- ----------------------
 
- All pull requests go through `GitHub Actions`_, which runs the tests on misc.
 
- Python versions and on misc. platforms as well as some additional checks.
 
- .. _GitHub Actions: https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/actions
 
- Output and Logging
 
- ------------------
 
- When writing logger calls, always use correct log level (debug only for
 
- debugging, info for informative messages, warning for warnings, error for
 
- errors, critical for critical errors/states).
 
- When directly talking to the user (e.g. Y/N questions), do not use logging,
 
- but directly output to stderr (not: stdout, it could be connected to a pipe).
 
- To control the amount and kinds of messages output emitted at info level, use
 
- flags like ``--stats`` or ``--list``, then create a topic logger for messages
 
- controlled by that flag.  See ``_setup_implied_logging()`` in
 
- ``borg/archiver.py`` for the entry point to topic logging.
 
- Building a development environment
 
- ----------------------------------
 
- First, just install borg into a virtual env :ref:`as described before <git-installation>`.
 
- To install some additional packages needed for running the tests, activate your
 
- virtual env and run::
 
-   pip install -r requirements.d/development.txt
 
- This project utilizes pre-commit to format and lint code before it is committed.
 
- Although pre-commit is installed when running the command above, the pre-commit hooks
 
- will have to be installed separately. Run this command to install the pre-commit hooks::
 
-   pre-commit install
 
- Running the tests
 
- -----------------
 
- The tests are in the borg/testsuite package.
 
- To run all the tests, you need to have fakeroot installed. If you do not have
 
- fakeroot, you still will be able to run most tests, just leave away the
 
- ``fakeroot -u`` from the given command lines.
 
- To run the test suite use the following command::
 
-   fakeroot -u tox  # run all tests
 
- Some more advanced examples::
 
-   # verify a changed tox.ini (run this after any change to tox.ini):
 
-   fakeroot -u tox --recreate
 
-   fakeroot -u tox -e py313  # run all tests, but only on python 3.13
 
-   fakeroot -u tox borg.testsuite.locking  # only run 1 test module
 
-   fakeroot -u tox borg.testsuite.locking -- -k '"not Timer"'  # exclude some tests
 
-   fakeroot -u tox borg.testsuite -- -v  # verbose py.test
 
- Important notes:
 
- - When using ``--`` to give options to py.test, you MUST also give ``borg.testsuite[.module]``.
 
- Running the tests (using the pypi package)
 
- ------------------------------------------
 
- Since borg 1.4, it is also possible to run the tests without a development
 
- environment, using the borgbackup dist package (downloaded from pypi.org or
 
- github releases page):
 
- ::
 
-     # optional: create and use a virtual env:
 
-     python3 -m venv env
 
-     . env/bin/activate
 
-     # install packages
 
-     pip install borgbackup
 
-     pip install pytest pytest-benchmark
 
-     # run the tests
 
-     pytest -v -rs --benchmark-skip --pyargs borg.testsuite
 
- Adding a compression algorithm
 
- ------------------------------
 
- If you want to add a new compression algorithm, please refer to :issue:`1633`
 
- and leave a post there in order to discuss about the proposal.
 
- Documentation
 
- -------------
 
- Generated files
 
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
- Usage documentation (found in ``docs/usage/``) and man pages
 
- (``docs/man/``) are generated automatically from the command line
 
- parsers declared in the program and their documentation, which is
 
- embedded in the program (see archiver.py). These are committed to git
 
- for easier use by packagers downstream.
 
- When a command is added, a command line flag changed, added or removed,
 
- the usage docs need to be rebuilt as well::
 
-   python scripts/make.py build_usage
 
-   python scripts/make.py build_man
 
- However, we prefer to do this as part of our :ref:`releasing`
 
- preparations, so it is generally not necessary to update these when
 
- submitting patches that change something about the command line.
 
- Building the docs with Sphinx
 
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
- The documentation (in reStructuredText format, .rst) is in docs/.
 
- To build the html version of it, you need to have Sphinx installed
 
- (in your Borg virtualenv with Python 3)::
 
-   pip install -r requirements.d/docs.txt
 
- Now run::
 
-   cd docs/
 
-   make html
 
- Then point a web browser at docs/_build/html/index.html.
 
- The website is updated automatically by ReadTheDocs through GitHub web hooks on the
 
- main repository.
 
- Using Vagrant
 
- -------------
 
- We use Vagrant for the automated creation of testing environments and borgbackup
 
- standalone binaries for various platforms.
 
- For better security, there is no automatic sync in the VM to host direction.
 
- The plugin `vagrant-scp` is useful to copy stuff from the VMs to the host.
 
- The "windows10" box requires the `reload` plugin (``vagrant plugin install vagrant-reload``).
 
- Usage::
 
-    # To create and provision the VM:
 
-    vagrant up OS
 
-    # same, but use 6 VM cpus and 12 workers for pytest:
 
-    VMCPUS=6 XDISTN=12 vagrant up OS
 
-    # To create an ssh session to the VM:
 
-    vagrant ssh OS
 
-    # To execute a command via ssh in the VM:
 
-    vagrant ssh OS -c "command args"
 
-    # To shut down the VM:
 
-    vagrant halt OS
 
-    # To shut down and destroy the VM:
 
-    vagrant destroy OS
 
-    # To copy files from the VM (in this case, the generated binary):
 
-    vagrant scp OS:/vagrant/borg/borg.exe .
 
- Creating standalone binaries
 
- ----------------------------
 
- Make sure you have everything built and installed (including fuse stuff).
 
- When using the Vagrant VMs, pyinstaller will already be installed.
 
- With virtual env activated::
 
-   pip install pyinstaller  # or git checkout master
 
-   pyinstaller -F -n borg-PLATFORM borg/__main__.py
 
-   for file in dist/borg-*; do gpg --armor --detach-sign $file; done
 
- If you encounter issues, see also our `Vagrantfile` for details.
 
- .. note:: Standalone binaries built with pyinstaller are supposed to
 
-           work on same OS, same architecture (x86 32bit, amd64 64bit)
 
-           without external dependencies.
 
- .. _releasing:
 
- Creating a new release
 
- ----------------------
 
- Checklist:
 
- - Make sure all issues for this milestone are closed or moved to the
 
-   next milestone.
 
- - Check if there are any pending fixes for security issues.
 
- - Find and fix any low hanging fruit left on the issue tracker.
 
- - Check that GitHub Actions CI is happy.
 
- - Update ``CHANGES.rst``, based on ``git log $PREVIOUS_RELEASE..``.
 
- - Check version number of upcoming release in ``CHANGES.rst``.
 
- - Render ``CHANGES.rst`` via ``make html`` and check for markup errors.
 
- - Verify that ``MANIFEST.in``, ``pyproject.toml`` and ``setup.py`` are complete.
 
- - Run these commands and commit::
 
-     python scripts/make.py build_usage
 
-     python scripts/make.py build_man
 
- - Tag the release::
 
-     git tag -s -m "tagged/signed release X.Y.Z" X.Y.Z
 
- - Create a clean repo and use it for the following steps::
 
-     git clone borg borg-clean
 
-   This makes sure no uncommitted files get into the release archive.
 
-   It will also reveal uncommitted required files.
 
-   Moreover, it makes sure the vagrant machines only get committed files and
 
-   do a fresh start based on that.
 
- - Run tox and/or binary builds on all supported platforms via vagrant,
 
-   check for test failures.
 
- - Create sdist, sign it, upload release to (test) PyPi:
 
-   ::
 
-     scripts/sdist-sign X.Y.Z
 
-     scripts/upload-pypi X.Y.Z test
 
-     scripts/upload-pypi X.Y.Z
 
-   Note: the signature is not uploaded to PyPi any more, but we upload it to
 
-   github releases.
 
- - Put binaries into dist/borg-OSNAME and sign them:
 
-   ::
 
-     scripts/sign-binaries 201912312359
 
- - Close the release milestone on GitHub.
 
- - `Update borgbackup.org
 
-   <https://github.com/borgbackup/borgbackup.github.io/pull/53/files>`_ with the
 
-   new version number and release date.
 
- - Announce on:
 
-   - Mailing list.
 
-   - Mastodon / BlueSky / X (aka Twitter).
 
-   - IRC channel (change ``/topic``).
 
- - Create a GitHub release, include:
 
-   - pypi dist package and signature
 
-   - Standalone binaries (see above for how to create them).
 
-     - For macOS, document the macFUSE version in the README of the binaries.
 
-       macFUSE uses a kernel extension that needs to be compatible with the
 
-       code contained in the binary.
 
-   - A link to ``CHANGES.rst``.
 
 
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