Contributing¶
Summary¶
PRs welcome!
- Consider starting a discussion to see if there's interest in what you want to do.
- Submit PRs from feature branches on forks to the
developbranch. - Ensure PRs pass all CI checks.
- Maintain test coverage at 100%.
Git¶
- Why use Git? Git enables creation of multiple versions of a code repository called branches, with the ability to track and undo changes in detail.
- Install Git by downloading from the website, or with a package manager like Homebrew.
- Configure Git to connect to GitHub with SSH.
- Fork this repo.
- Create a branch in your fork.
- Commit your changes with a properly-formatted Git commit message.
- Create a pull request (PR) to incorporate your changes into the upstream project you forked.
Code quality¶
Code style¶
- Python code is formatted with Black. Configuration for Black is stored in pyproject.toml.
- Python imports are organized automatically with isort.
- The isort package organizes imports in three sections:
- Standard library
- Dependencies
- Project
- Within each of those groups,
importstatements occur first, thenfromstatements, in alphabetical order. - You can run isort from the command line with
poetry run isort .. - Configuration for isort is stored in pyproject.toml.
- The isort package organizes imports in three sections:
- Other web code (JSON, Markdown, YAML) is formatted with Prettier.
Static type checking¶
- Mypy is used for type-checking.
- To learn type annotation basics, see this gist and the Real Python type checking tutorial.
Pre-commit¶
Pre-commit runs Git hooks. Configuration is stored in .pre-commit-config.yaml. It can run locally before each commit (hence "pre-commit"), or on different Git events like pre-push. Pre-commit is installed in the Poetry environment. To use:
# after running `poetry install`
path/to/fastenv
❯ poetry shell
# install hooks that run before each commit
path/to/fastenv
.venv ❯ pre-commit install
# and/or install hooks that run before each push
path/to/fastenv
.venv ❯ pre-commit install --hook-type pre-push
Python¶
Poetry¶
This project uses Poetry for dependency management.
Install project with all dependencies: poetry install -E all.
Highlights¶
- Automatic virtual environment management: Poetry automatically manages the
virtualenvfor the application. - Automatic dependency management: rather than having to run
pip freeze > requirements.txt, Poetry automatically manages the dependency file (called pyproject.toml), and enables SemVer-level control over dependencies like npm. Poetry also manages a lockfile (called poetry.lock), which is similar to package-lock.json for npm. Poetry uses this lockfile to automatically track specific versions and hashes for every dependency. - Dependency resolution: Poetry will automatically resolve any dependency version conflicts. pip did not have dependency resolution until the end of 2020.
- Dependency separation: Poetry can maintain separate lists of dependencies for development and production in the pyproject.toml. Production installs can skip development dependencies for speed.
- Builds: Poetry has features for easily building the project into a Python package.
Installation¶
The recommended installation method is through the Poetry custom installer, which vendorizes dependencies into an isolated environment, and allows you to update Poetry with poetry self update.
You can also install Poetry however you prefer to install your user Python packages (pipx install poetry, pip install --user poetry, etc). Use the standard update methods with these tools (pipx upgrade poetry, pip install --user --upgrade poetry, etc).
Key commands¶
# Basic usage: https://python-poetry.org/docs/basic-usage/
poetry install # create virtual environment and install dependencies
poetry show --tree # list installed packages
poetry add PACKAGE@VERSION # add package production dependencies
poetry add PACKAGE@VERSION --dev # add package to development dependencies
poetry update # update dependencies (not available with standard tools)
poetry version # list or update version of this package
poetry shell # activate the virtual environment, like source venv/bin/activate
poetry run COMMAND # run a command within the virtual environment
poetry env info # https://python-poetry.org/docs/managing-environments/
poetry config virtualenvs.in-project true # install virtualenvs into .venv
poetry export -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt --dev # export deps
Testing with pytest¶
- Tests are in the tests/ directory.
- Run tests by invoking
pytestfrom the command-line within the Poetry environment in the root directory of the repo. - pytest features used include:
- pytest plugins include:
- pytest configuration is in pyproject.toml.
- Test coverage results are reported when invoking
pytestfrom the command-line. To see interactive HTML coverage reports, invoke pytest withpytest --cov-report=html. - Test coverage reports are generated within GitHub Actions workflows by pytest-cov with coverage.py, and uploaded to Codecov using codecov/codecov-action. Codecov is then integrated into pull requests with the Codecov GitHub app.
GitHub Actions workflows¶
GitHub Actions is a continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD) service that runs on GitHub repos. It replaces other services like Travis CI. Actions are grouped into workflows and stored in .github/workflows. See Getting the Gist of GitHub Actions for more info.
Maintainers¶
- The default branch is
develop. - PRs should be merged into
develop. Head branches are deleted automatically after PRs are merged. - The only merges to
mainshould be fast-forward merges fromdevelop. - Branch protection is enabled on
developandmain.develop:- Require signed commits
- Include adminstrators
- Allow force pushes
main:- Require signed commits
- Include adminstrators
- Do not allow force pushes
- Require status checks to pass before merging (commits must have previously been pushed to
developand passed all checks)
- To create a release:
- Bump the version number in
pyproject.tomlwithpoetry versionand commit the changes todevelop. - Push to
developand verify all CI checks pass. - Fast-forward merge to
main, push, and verify all CI checks pass. - Create an annotated and signed Git tag
- Follow SemVer guidelines when choosing a version number.
- List PRs and commits in the tag message:
git log --pretty=format:"- %s (%h)" \ "$(git describe --abbrev=0 --tags)"..HEAD - Omit the leading
v(use1.0.0instead ofv1.0.0) - Example:
git tag -a -s 1.0.0
- Push the tag. GitHub Actions and Poetry will build the Python package and publish to PyPI.
- Bump the version number in