- You have Go 1.16.13 installed on your local host/development machine.
- You have Docker installed on your local host/development machine. Docker is required for building lvm-driver container images and to push them into a Kubernetes cluster for testing.
- You have
kubectl
installed. For running integration tests, you can create a Minikube cluster on local host/development machine. Don't worry if you don't have access to the Kubernetes cluster, raising a PR with the data-populator repository will run integration tests for your changes against a Minikube cluster.
- Visit https://github.com/openebs/data-populator
- Click
Fork
button (top right) to establish a cloud-based fork.
Place openebs/data-populator's code on your local machine using the following cloning procedure. Create your clone:
git clone https://github.com/$user/data-populator.git
cd data-populator git remote add upstream https://github.com/openebs/data-populator.git
git remote set-url --push upstream no_push
git remote -v
Install the build dependencies.
* Run `make bootstrap` to install the required Go tools
## Git Development Workflow
### Always sync your local repository:
Open a terminal on your local host. Change directory to the data-populator fork root.
```sh
$ cd data-populator
Checkout the develop branch.
$ git checkout develop
Switched to branch 'develop'
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/develop'.
Recall that origin/develop is a branch on your remote GitHub repository. Make sure you have the upstream remote openebs/data-populator by listing them.
$ git remote -v
origin https://github.com/$user/data-populator.git (fetch)
origin https://github.com/$user/data-populator.git (push)
upstream https://github.com/openebs/data-populator.git (fetch)
upstream https://github.com/openebs/data-populator.git (no_push)
If the upstream is missing, add it by using below command.
$ git remote add upstream https://github.com/openebs/data-populator.git
Fetch all the changes from the upstream develop branch.
$ git fetch upstream develop
remote: Counting objects: 141, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (29/29), done.
remote: Total 141 (delta 52), reused 46 (delta 46), pack-reused 66
Receiving objects: 100% (141/141), 112.43 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (79/79), done.
From github.com:openebs/data-populator
* branch develop -> FETCH_HEAD
Rebase your local develop with the upstream/develop.
$ git rebase upstream/develop
First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it...
Fast-forwarded develop to upstream/develop.
This command applies all the commits from the upstream develop to your local develop.
Check the status of your local branch.
$ git status
On branch develop
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/develop' by 38 commits.
(use "git push" to publish your local commits)
nothing to commit, working directory clean
Your local repository now has all the changes from the upstream remote. You need to push the changes to your own remote fork which is origin develop.
Push the rebased develop to origin develop.
$ git push origin develop
Username for 'https://github.com': $user
Password for 'https://[email protected]':
Counting objects: 223, done.
Compressing objects: 100% (38/38), done.
Writing objects: 100% (69/69), 8.76 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Total 69 (delta 53), reused 47 (delta 31)
To https://github.com/$user/lvm-localpv.git
8e107a9..5035fa1 develop -> develop
Always start with creating a new branch from develop to work on a new feature or bugfix. Your branch name should have the format XX-descriptive where XX is the issue number you are working on followed by some descriptive text. For example:
$ git checkout develop
# Make sure the develop is rebased with the latest changes as described in previous step.
$ git checkout -b 1234-fix-developer-docs
Switched to a new branch '1234-fix-developer-docs'
Happy Hacking!
-
run
make
in the top directory. It will:- Build the binary.
- Build the docker image with the binary.
-
Test your changes
- Integration tests are yet to be written
Rebasing is very import to keep your branch in sync with the changes being made by others and to avoid huge merge conflicts while raising your Pull Requests. You will always have to rebase before raising the PR.
# While on your myfeature branch (see above)
git fetch upstream
git rebase upstream/develop
While you rebase your changes, you must resolve any conflicts that might arise and build and test your changes using the above steps.
Before you raise the Pull Requests, ensure you have reviewed the checklist in the CONTRIBUTING GUIDE:
- Ensure that you have re-based your changes with the upstream using the steps above.
- Ensure that you have added the required unit tests for the bug fixes or new feature that you have introduced.
- Ensure your commits history is clean with proper header and descriptions.
Go to the openebs/data-populator github and follow the Open Pull Request link to raise your PR from your development branch.