The project lead is @xiaq, who is reachable in the user group most of the time.
If you intend to make user-visible changes to Elvish's behavior, it is good idea to talk to him first; this will make it easier to review your changes.
On the other hand, if you find it easier to express your thoughts directly in code, it is also completely fine to directly send a pull request, as long as you don't mind the risk of the PR being rejected due to lack of prior discussion.
The Makefile
encapsulates common development workflows:
-
Use
make fmt
to format files. -
Use
make test
to run tests. -
Use
make all-checks
ormake most-checks
to run checks.
You can use the tools/pre-push
script as a Git hook, which
runs all the tests and checks (make test all-checks
), among other things.
The same tests and checks are also run by Elvish's CI environments, so running them locally before pushing minimizes the chance of CI errors. (The CI environments run the tests on multiple platforms, so CI errors can still happen if you break some tests for a different platform.)
Use make fmt
to format Go and Markdown files in the repo.
The Go plugins of most popular editors already support formatting Go files automatically on save; consult the documentation of the plugin you use.
The Markdown formatter is cmd/elvmdfmt
, which lives inside
this repo. Run it like this:
go run src.elv.sh/cmd/elvmdfmt -width 80 -w $filename
To format Markdown files automatically on save, configure your editor to run the
command above when saving Markdown files. You'll also want to configure this
command to only run inside the Elvish repo, since elvmdfmt
is tailored to
Markdown files in this repo and may not work well for other Markdown files.
If you use VS Code, install the
Run on Save
extension and add the following to the workspace (not user) settings.json
file:
"emeraldwalk.runonsave": {
"commands": [
{
"match": "\\.md$",
"cmd": "go run src.elv.sh/cmd/elvmdfmt -width 80 -w ${file}"
}
]
}
Note: Using go run
ensures that you are always using the elvmdfmt
implementation in the repo, but it incurs a small performance penalty since the
Go toolchain does not cache binary files and has to rebuild it every time. If
this is a problem (for example, if your editor runs the command synchronously),
you can speed up the command by installing src.elv.sh/cmd/elvmdfmt
and using
the installed elvmdfmt
. However, if you do this, you must re-install
elvmdfmt
whenever there is a change in its implementation that impacts the
output.
Write comprehensive unit tests for your code, and make sure that existing tests
are passing. Run tests with make test
.
Respect established patterns of how unit tests are written. Some packages unfortunately have competing patterns, which usually reflects a still-evolving idea of how to best test the code. Worse, parts of the codebase are poorly tested, or even untestable. In either case, discuss with the project lead on the best way forward.
Some unit tests depend on time thresholds. The default values of these time thresholds are suitable for a reasonably powerful laptop, but on resource-constraint environments (virtual machines, embedded systems) they might not be enough.
Set the ELVISH_TEST_TIME_SCALE
environment variable to a number greater than 1
to scale up the time thresholds used in tests. The CI environments use
ELVISH_TEST_TIME_SCALE = 10
.
Always document user-visible changes.
Add a brief list item to the release note of the next release, in the
appropriate section. You can find the document at the root of the repo (called
$version-release-notes.md
).
Reference docs are written as "elvdocs", comment blocks before unindented fn
or var
declarations in Elvish files. A
large subset of
CommonMark is supported. Examples:
# Does something.
#
# Examples:
#
# ```elvish-transcript
# ~> foo
# some output
# ```
fn foo {|a b c| }
# Some variable.
var bar
Most of Elvish's builtin modules are implemented in Go, not Elvish. For those
modules, put dummy declarations in .d.elv
files (d
for "declaration"). For
example, elvdocs for functions implemented in builtin_fn_num.go
go in
builtin_fn_num.d.elv
.
For a comment block to be considered an elvdoc, it has to be continuous, and
each line should either be just #
or start with #
and a space.
Style guides for elvdocs for functions:
-
The first sentence should start with a verb in 3rd person singular (i.e. ending with a "s"), as if there is an implicit subject "this function".
-
The end of the elvdoc should show or more
elvish-transcript
code blocks showing example usages, which are transcripts of actual REPL input and output. Transcripts must use the default prompt~>
and default value output indicator▶
. You can useelvish -norc
if you have customized either in yourrc.elv
.
It is quite common for elvdocs to link to other elvdocs, and Elvish's website
toolchain provides special support for that. If a link has a single code span
and an empty target, it gets rewritten to a link to an elvdoc section. For
example, [`put`]()
will get rewritten to [`put`](builtin.html#put)
, or
just [`put`](#put)
within the documentation for the builtin module.
In the doc comment for exported types and functions, it's customary to use the symbol itself as the first word of the comment. For unexported types and functions, this becomes a bit awkward as their names don't start with a capital letter, so don't repeat the symbol. Examples:
// Foo does foo.
func Foo() { }
// Does foo.
func foo() { }
Elvish uses generated code in a few places. As is the usual case with Go projects, they are committed into the repo, and if you change the input of a generated file you should re-generate it.
Use the standard command, go generate ./...
to regenerate all files.
Some of the generation rules depend on the stringer
tool. Install with
go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer@latest
.
There are some checks on the source code that can be run with make all-checks
or make most-checks
. The difference is that all-checks
includes a check
(tools/check-gen.sh
) that requires the Git repo to have
a clean working tree, so may not be convenient to use when you are working on
the source code. The most-checks
target excludes that, so can be always be
used.
The checks depend on some external programs, which can be installed as follows:
go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports@latest
go install honnef.co/go/tools/cmd/staticcheck@v0.4.2
pip install --user codespell==2.2.1
By contributing, you agree to license your code under the same license as existing source code of elvish. See the LICENSE file.