tqdm/CONTRIBUTING.md

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# HOW TO CONTRIBUTE TO TQDM
This file describes how to
- contribute changes to the project, and
- upload released to the pypi repository.
Most of the management commands have been directly placed inside the
Makefile:
```
make [<alias>] # on UNIX-like environments
python setup.py make [<alias>] # if make is unavailable
```
Use the alias `help` (or leave blank) to list all available aliases.
## HOW TO COMMIT CONTRIBUTIONS
Contributions to the project are made using the "Fork & Pull" model. The
typical steps would be:
1. create an account on [github](https://github.com)
2. fork [tqdm](https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm)
3. make a local clone: `git clone https://github.com/your_account/tqdm.git`
4. make changes on the local copy
5. test (see below) and commit changes `git commit -a -m "my message"`
6. `push` to your github account: `git push origin`
7. create a Pull Request (PR) from your github fork
(go to your fork's webpage and click on "Pull Request."
You can then add a message to describe your proposal.)
## TESTING
To test functionality (such as before submitting a Pull
Request), there are a number of unit tests.
### Standard unit tests
The standard way to run the tests:
- install `tox`
- `cd` to the root of the `tqdm` directory (in the same folder as this file)
- run the following command:
```
[python setup.py] make test
# or:
tox --skip-missing-interpreters
```
This will build the module and run the tests in a virtual environment.
Errors and coverage rates will be output to the console/log. (Ignore missing
interpreters errors - these are due to the local machine missing certain
versions of Python.)
Note: to install all versions of the Python interpreter that are specified
in [tox.ini](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/tqdm/tqdm/master/tox.ini),
you can use `MiniConda` to install a minimal setup. You must also make sure
that each distribution has an alias to call the Python interpreter:
`python27` for Python 2.7's interpreter, `python32` for Python 3.2's, etc.
### Alternative unit tests with Nose
Alternatively, use `nose` to run the tests just for the current Python version:
- install `nose` and `flake8`
- run the following command:
```
[python setup.py] make alltests
```
# MANAGE A NEW RELEASE
This section is intended for the project's maintainers and describes
how to build and upload a new release. Once again,
`[python setup.py] make [<alias>]` will help.
## SEMANTIC VERSIONING
The tqdm repository managers should:
- regularly bump the version number in the file
[_version.py](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/tqdm/tqdm/master/tqdm/_version.py)
- follow the [Semantic Versioning](https://semver.org/) convention
- take care of this (instead of users) to avoid PR conflicts
solely due to the version file bumping
Note: tools can be used to automate this process, such as
[bumpversion](https://github.com/peritus/bumpversion) or
[python-semanticversion](https://github.com/rbarrois/python-semanticversion/).
## CHECKING SETUP.PY
To check that the `setup.py` file is compliant with PyPi requirements (e.g.
version number; reStructuredText in README.rst) use:
```
[python setup.py] make testsetup
```
To upload just metadata (including overwriting mistakenly uploaded metadata)
to PyPi, use:
```
[python setup.py] make pypimeta
```
## MERGING PULL REQUESTS
This section describes how to cleanly merge PRs.
### 1 Rebase
From your project repository, merge and test
(replace `pr-branch-name` as appropriate):
```
git fetch origin
git checkout -b pr-branch-name origin/pr-branch-name
git rebase master
```
If there are conflicts:
```
git mergetool
git rebase --continue
```
### 2 Push
Update branch with the rebased history:
```
git push origin pr-branch-name --force
```
Non maintainers can stop here.
Note: NEVER just `git push --force` (this will push all local branches,
overwriting remotes).
### 3 Merge
```
git checkout master
git merge --no-ff pr-branch-name
```
### 4 Test
```
[python setup.py] make alltests
```
### 5 Version
Modify tqdm/_version.py and ammend the last (merge) commit:
```
git add tqdm/_version.py
git commit --amend # Add "+ bump version" in the commit message
```
### 6 Push to master
```
git push origin master
```
## BUILDING A RELEASE AND UPLOADING TO PYPI
Formally publishing requires additional steps: testing and tagging.
### Test
- ensure that all online CI tests have passed
- check `setup.py` and `MANIFEST.in` - which define the packaging
process and info that will be uploaded to [pypi](https://pypi.org) -
using `[python setup.py] make installdev`
### Tag
- ensure the version has been bumped, committed **and** tagged.
The tag format is `v{major}.{minor}.{patch}`, for example: `v4.4.1`.
The current commit's tag is used in the version checking process.
If the current commit is not tagged appropriately, the version will
display as `v{major}.{minor}.{patch}-{commit_hash}`.
### Upload
Build tqdm into a distributable python package:
```
[python setup.py] make build
```
This will generate several builds in the `dist/` folder. On non-windows
machines the windows `exe` installer may fail to build. This is normal.
Finally, upload everything to pypi. This can be done easily using the
[twine](https://github.com/pypa/twine) module:
```
[python setup.py] make pypi
```
Also, the new release can (should) be added to `github` by creating a new
release from the web interface; uploading packages from the `dist/` folder
created by `[python setup.py] make build`.
The [wiki] can be automatically updated with github release notes by
running `make` within the wiki repository.
[wiki]: https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm/wiki
### Notes
- you can also test on the pypi test servers `test.pypi.org`
before the real deployment
- in case of a mistake, you can delete an uploaded release on pypi, but you
cannot re-upload another with the same version number
- in case of a mistake in the metadata on pypi (e.g. bad README),
updating just the metadata is possible: `[python setup.py] make pypimeta`
## UPDATING GH-PAGES
The most important file is README.rst, which sould always be kept up-to-date
and in sync with the in-line source documentation. This will affect all of the
following:
- The [main repository site](https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm) which automatically
serves the latest README.rst as well as links to all of github's features.
This is the preferred online referral link for tqdm.
- The [PyPi mirror](https://pypi.org/project/tqdm) which automatically
serves the latest release built from README.rst as well as links to past
releases.
- Many external web crawlers.
Additionally (less maintained), there exists:
- A [wiki] which is publicly editable.
- The [gh-pages project](https://tqdm.github.io/tqdm/) which is built from the
[gh-pages branch](https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm/tree/gh-pages), which is
built using [asv](https://github.com/spacetelescope/asv/).
- The [gh-pages root](https://tqdm.github.io/) which is built from a separate
outdated [github.io repo](https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm.github.io).
## QUICK DEV SUMMARY
For expereinced devs, once happy with local master:
1. bump version in `tqdm/_version.py`
2. test (`[python setup.py] make alltests`)
3. `git commit [--amend] # -m "bump version"`
4. `git push`
5. wait for tests to pass
a) in case of failure, fix and go back to (2)
6. `git tag vM.m.p && git push --tags`
7. `[python setup.py] make distclean`
8. `[python setup.py] make build`
9. upload to PyPI using one of the following:
a) `[python setup.py] make pypi`
b) `twine upload -s -i $(git config user.signingkey) dist/tqdm-*`
10. create new release on https://github.com/tqdm/tqdm/releases
a) add helpful release notes
b) attach dist/tqdm-* binaries (usually only *.whl*)
11. run `make` in the `wiki` submodule to update release notes
12. run `make deploy` in the `docs` submodule to update website
13. accept the automated PR in the `feedstock` submodule to update conda
The last thee steps require a one-time `make submodules` to clone
`docs`, `wiki`, and `feedstock`.