development.rst 12 KB

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  1. .. include:: global.rst.inc
  2. .. highlight:: bash
  3. .. _development:
  4. Development
  5. ===========
  6. This chapter will get you started with |project_name| development.
  7. |project_name| is written in Python (with a little bit of Cython and C for
  8. the performance critical parts).
  9. Contributions
  10. -------------
  11. ... are welcome!
  12. Some guidance for contributors:
  13. - discuss changes on the GitHub issue tracker, on IRC or on the mailing list
  14. - make your PRs on the ``master`` branch (see `Branching Model`_ for details)
  15. - do clean changesets:
  16. - focus on some topic, resist changing anything else.
  17. - do not do style changes mixed with functional changes.
  18. - try to avoid refactorings mixed with functional changes.
  19. - if you need to fix something after commit/push:
  20. - if there are ongoing reviews: do a fixup commit you can
  21. squash into the bad commit later.
  22. - if there are no ongoing reviews or you did not push the
  23. bad commit yet: amend the commit to include your fix or
  24. merge the fixup commit before pushing.
  25. - have a nice, clear, typo-free commit comment
  26. - if you fixed an issue, refer to it in your commit comment
  27. - follow the style guide (see below)
  28. - if you write new code, please add tests and docs for it
  29. - run the tests, fix any issues that come up
  30. - make a pull request on GitHub
  31. - wait for review by other developers
  32. Branching model
  33. ---------------
  34. Borg development happens on the ``master`` branch and uses GitHub pull
  35. requests (if you don't have GitHub or don't want to use it you can
  36. send smaller patches via the borgbackup :ref:`mailing_list` to the maintainers).
  37. Stable releases are maintained on maintenance branches named ``x.y-maint``, eg.
  38. the maintenance branch of the 1.0.x series is ``1.0-maint``.
  39. Most PRs should be filed against the ``master`` branch. Only if an
  40. issue affects **only** a particular maintenance branch a PR should be
  41. filed against it directly.
  42. While discussing / reviewing a PR it will be decided whether the
  43. change should be applied to maintenance branches. Each maintenance
  44. branch has a corresponding *backport/x.y-maint* label, which will then
  45. be applied.
  46. Changes that are typically considered for backporting:
  47. - Data loss, corruption and inaccessibility fixes
  48. - Security fixes
  49. - Forward-compatibility improvements
  50. - Documentation corrections
  51. .. rubric:: Maintainer part
  52. From time to time a maintainer will backport the changes for a
  53. maintenance branch, typically before a release or if enough changes
  54. were collected:
  55. 1. Notify others that you're doing this to avoid duplicate work.
  56. 2. Branch a backporting branch off the maintenance branch.
  57. 3. Cherry pick and backport the changes from each labelled PR, remove
  58. the label for each PR you've backported.
  59. To preserve authorship metadata, do not follow the ``git cherry-pick``
  60. instructions to use ``git commit`` after resolving conflicts. Instead,
  61. stage conflict resolutions and run ``git cherry-pick --continue``,
  62. much like using ``git rebase``.
  63. To avoid merge issues (a cherry pick is a form of merge), use
  64. these options (similar to the ``git merge`` options used previously,
  65. the ``-x`` option adds a reference to the original commit)::
  66. git cherry-pick --strategy recursive -X rename-threshold=5% -x
  67. 4. Make a PR of the backporting branch against the maintenance branch
  68. for backport review. Mention the backported PRs in this PR, e.g.:
  69. Includes changes from #2055 #2057 #2381
  70. This way GitHub will automatically show in these PRs where they
  71. were backported.
  72. .. rubric:: Historic model
  73. Previously (until release 1.0.10) Borg used a `"merge upwards"
  74. <https://git-scm.com/docs/gitworkflows#_merging_upwards>`_ model where
  75. most minor changes and fixes where committed to a maintenance branch
  76. (eg. 1.0-maint), and the maintenance branch(es) were regularly merged
  77. back into the main development branch. This became more and more
  78. troublesome due to merges growing more conflict-heavy and error-prone.
  79. Code and issues
  80. ---------------
  81. Code is stored on GitHub, in the `Borgbackup organization
  82. <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/>`_. `Issues
  83. <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/issues>`_ and `pull requests
  84. <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/pulls>`_ should be sent there as
  85. well. See also the :ref:`support` section for more details.
  86. Style guide
  87. -----------
  88. We generally follow `pep8
  89. <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/>`_, with 120 columns
  90. instead of 79. We do *not* use form-feed (``^L``) characters to
  91. separate sections either. Compliance is tested automatically when
  92. you run the tests.
  93. Continuous Integration
  94. ----------------------
  95. All pull requests go through Travis-CI_, which runs the tests on Linux
  96. and Mac OS X as well as the flake8 style checker. Windows builds run on AppVeyor_,
  97. while additional Unix-like platforms are tested on Golem_.
  98. .. _AppVeyor: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/borgbackup/borg/
  99. .. _Golem: https://golem.enkore.de/view/Borg/
  100. .. _Travis-CI: https://travis-ci.org/borgbackup/borg
  101. Output and Logging
  102. ------------------
  103. When writing logger calls, always use correct log level (debug only for
  104. debugging, info for informative messages, warning for warnings, error for
  105. errors, critical for critical errors/states).
  106. When directly talking to the user (e.g. Y/N questions), do not use logging,
  107. but directly output to stderr (not: stdout, it could be connected to a pipe).
  108. To control the amount and kinds of messages output emitted at info level, use
  109. flags like ``--stats`` or ``--list``, then create a topic logger for messages
  110. controlled by that flag. See ``_setup_implied_logging()`` in
  111. ``borg/archiver.py`` for the entry point to topic logging.
  112. Building a development environment
  113. ----------------------------------
  114. First, just install borg into a virtual env as described before.
  115. To install some additional packages needed for running the tests, activate your
  116. virtual env and run::
  117. pip install -r requirements.d/development.txt
  118. Building on Windows
  119. +++++++++++++++++++
  120. Download and install MSYS from https://msys2.github.io/
  121. Use `Mingw64-w64 64bit Shell`::
  122. pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-python3 git mingw-w64-x86_64-lz4 mingw-w64-x86_64-python3-pip \
  123. mingw-w64-x86_64-cython mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc mingw-w64-x86_64-ntldd-git
  124. Use git to get the source and checkout `windows` branch then::
  125. pip3 install -r requirements.d/development.txt
  126. pip3 install -e .
  127. Running the tests
  128. -----------------
  129. The tests are in the borg/testsuite package.
  130. To run all the tests, you need to have fakeroot installed. If you do not have
  131. fakeroot, you still will be able to run most tests, just leave away the
  132. `fakeroot -u` from the given command lines.
  133. To run the test suite use the following command::
  134. fakeroot -u tox # run all tests
  135. Some more advanced examples::
  136. # verify a changed tox.ini (run this after any change to tox.ini):
  137. fakeroot -u tox --recreate
  138. fakeroot -u tox -e py35 # run all tests, but only on python 3.5
  139. fakeroot -u tox borg.testsuite.locking # only run 1 test module
  140. fakeroot -u tox borg.testsuite.locking -- -k '"not Timer"' # exclude some tests
  141. fakeroot -u tox borg.testsuite -- -v # verbose py.test
  142. Important notes:
  143. - When using ``--`` to give options to py.test, you MUST also give ``borg.testsuite[.module]``.
  144. As tox doesn't run on Windows you have to manually run command::
  145. py.test --cov=borg --cov-config=.coveragerc --benchmark-skip --pyargs borg/testsuite
  146. Running more checks using coala
  147. -------------------------------
  148. First install coala and some checkers ("bears"):
  149. pip install -r requirements.d/coala.txt
  150. You can now run coala from the toplevel directory; it will read its settings
  151. from ``.coafile`` there:
  152. coala
  153. Some bears have additional requirements and they usually tell you about
  154. them in case they are missing.
  155. Documentation
  156. -------------
  157. Generated files
  158. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  159. Usage documentation (found in ``docs/usage/``) and man pages
  160. (``docs/man/``) are generated automatically from the command line
  161. parsers declared in the program and their documentation, which is
  162. embedded in the program (see archiver.py). These are committed to git
  163. for easier use by packagers downstream.
  164. When a command is added, a command line flag changed, added or removed,
  165. the usage docs need to be rebuilt as well::
  166. python setup.py build_usage
  167. python setup.py build_man
  168. However, we prefer to do this as part of our :ref:`releasing`
  169. preparations, so it is generally not necessary to update these when
  170. submitting patches that change something about the command line.
  171. Building the docs with Sphinx
  172. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  173. The documentation (in reStructuredText format, .rst) is in docs/.
  174. To build the html version of it, you need to have Sphinx installed
  175. (in your Borg virtualenv with Python 3)::
  176. pip install -r requirements.d/docs.txt
  177. Now run::
  178. cd docs/
  179. make html
  180. Then point a web browser at docs/_build/html/index.html.
  181. The website is updated automatically by ReadTheDocs through GitHub web hooks on the
  182. main repository.
  183. Using Vagrant
  184. -------------
  185. We use Vagrant for the automated creation of testing environments and borgbackup
  186. standalone binaries for various platforms.
  187. For better security, there is no automatic sync in the VM to host direction.
  188. The plugin `vagrant-scp` is useful to copy stuff from the VMs to the host.
  189. The "windows10" box requires the `reload` plugin (``vagrant plugin install vagrant-reload``).
  190. Usage::
  191. # To create and provision the VM:
  192. vagrant up OS
  193. # same, but use 6 VM cpus and 12 workers for pytest:
  194. VMCPUS=6 XDISTN=12 vagrant up OS
  195. # To create an ssh session to the VM:
  196. vagrant ssh OS
  197. # To execute a command via ssh in the VM:
  198. vagrant ssh OS -c "command args"
  199. # To shut down the VM:
  200. vagrant halt OS
  201. # To shut down and destroy the VM:
  202. vagrant destroy OS
  203. # To copy files from the VM (in this case, the generated binary):
  204. vagrant scp OS:/vagrant/borg/borg.exe .
  205. Creating standalone binaries
  206. ----------------------------
  207. Make sure you have everything built and installed (including llfuse and fuse).
  208. When using the Vagrant VMs, pyinstaller will already be installed.
  209. With virtual env activated::
  210. pip install pyinstaller # or git checkout master
  211. pyinstaller -F -n borg-PLATFORM borg/__main__.py
  212. for file in dist/borg-*; do gpg --armor --detach-sign $file; done
  213. If you encounter issues, see also our `Vagrantfile` for details.
  214. .. note:: Standalone binaries built with pyinstaller are supposed to
  215. work on same OS, same architecture (x86 32bit, amd64 64bit)
  216. without external dependencies.
  217. On Windows use `python buildwin32.py` to build standalone executable in `win32exe` directory
  218. with all necessary files to run.
  219. .. _releasing:
  220. Creating a new release
  221. ----------------------
  222. Checklist:
  223. - make sure all issues for this milestone are closed or moved to the
  224. next milestone
  225. - find and fix any low hanging fruit left on the issue tracker
  226. - check that Travis CI is happy
  227. - update ``CHANGES.rst``, based on ``git log $PREVIOUS_RELEASE..``
  228. - check version number of upcoming release in ``CHANGES.rst``
  229. - verify that ``MANIFEST.in`` and ``setup.py`` are complete
  230. - ``python setup.py build_usage ; python setup.py build_man`` and
  231. commit (be sure to build with Python 3.5 as Python 3.6 added `more
  232. guaranteed hashing algorithms
  233. <https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/issues/2123>`_)
  234. - tag the release::
  235. git tag -s -m "tagged/signed release X.Y.Z" X.Y.Z
  236. - create a clean repo and use it for the following steps::
  237. git clone borg borg-clean
  238. This makes sure no uncommitted files get into the release archive.
  239. It will also reveal uncommitted required files.
  240. Moreover, it makes sure the vagrant machines only get committed files and
  241. do a fresh start based on that.
  242. - run tox and/or binary builds on all supported platforms via vagrant,
  243. check for test failures
  244. - create a release on PyPi::
  245. python setup.py register sdist upload --identity="Thomas Waldmann" --sign
  246. - close the release milestone on GitHub
  247. - announce on:
  248. - Mailing list
  249. - Twitter
  250. - IRC channel (change ``/topic``)
  251. - create a GitHub release, include:
  252. * standalone binaries (see above for how to create them)
  253. + for OS X, document the OS X Fuse version in the README of the binaries.
  254. OS X FUSE uses a kernel extension that needs to be compatible with the
  255. code contained in the binary.
  256. * a link to ``CHANGES.rst``