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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Contributions are welcome. This project accepts pull requests on GitHub.

This project adheres to a code of conduct. By participating in this project and its community, you are expected to uphold this code.

Communication Channels

You can find help and discussion in the following places:

Reporting Bugs

Report bugs using the project's issue tracker.

⚠️ ATTENTION!!! DO NOT include passwords or other sensitive information in your bug report.

When submitting a bug report, please include enough information to reproduce the bug. A good bug report includes the following sections:

  • Description

    Provide a short and clear description of the bug.

  • Steps to reproduce

    Provide steps to reproduce the behavior you are experiencing. Please try to keep this as short as possible. If able, create a reproducible script outside of any framework you are using. This will help us to quickly debug the issue.

  • Expected behavior

    Provide a short and clear description of what you expect to happen.

  • Screenshots or output

    If applicable, add screenshots or program output to help explain your problem.

  • Environment details

    Provide details about the system where you're using this package, such as PHP version and operating system.

  • Additional context

    Provide any additional context that may help us debug the problem.

Fixing Bugs

This project welcomes pull requests to fix bugs!

If you see a bug report that you'd like to fix, please feel free to do so. Following the directions and guidelines described in the "Adding New Features" section below, you may create bugfix branches and send pull requests.

Adding New Features

If you have an idea for a new feature, it's a good idea to check out the issues or active pull requests first to see if anyone is already working on the feature. If not, feel free to submit an issue first, asking whether the feature is beneficial to the project. This will save you from doing a lot of development work only to have your feature rejected. We don't enjoy rejecting your hard work, but some features don't fit with the goals of the project.

When you do begin working on your feature, here are some guidelines to consider:

  • Your pull request description should clearly detail the changes you have made. We will use this description to update the CHANGELOG. If there is no description, or it does not adequately describe your feature, we may ask you to update the description.
  • ramsey/conventional-commits follows a superset of PSR-12 coding standard. Please ensure your code does, too. Hint: run composer dev:lint to check.
  • Please write tests for any new features you add.
  • Please ensure that tests pass before submitting your pull request. ramsey/conventional-commits automatically runs tests for pull requests. However, running the tests locally will help save time. Hint: run composer test.
  • Use topic/feature branches. Please do not ask to pull from your main branch.
  • Submit one feature per pull request. If you have multiple features you wish to submit, please break them into separate pull requests.
  • Write good commit messages. This project follows the Conventional Commits specification and uses Git hooks to ensure all commits follow this standard. Running composer install will set up the Git hooks, so when you run git commit, you'll be prompted to create a commit using the Conventional Commits rules.

Developing

To develop this project, you will need PHP 7.4 or greater and Composer.

After cloning this repository locally, execute the following commands:

cd /path/to/repository
composer install

Now, you are ready to develop!

Tooling

This project uses CaptainHook to validate all staged changes prior to commit.

Commands

To see all the commands available for contributing to this project:

composer list dev

Coding Standards

This project follows a superset of PSR-12 coding standards, enforced by PHP_CodeSniffer.

CaptainHook will run coding standards checks before committing.

You may lint the codebase manually using the following commands:

# Lint
composer dev:lint

# Attempt to auto-fix coding standards issues
composer dev:lint:fix

Static Analysis

This project uses a combination of PHPStan and Psalm to provide static analysis of PHP code.

CaptainHook will run static analysis checks before committing.

You may run static analysis manually across the whole codebase with the following command:

# Static analysis
composer dev:analyze

Project Structure

This project uses pds/skeleton as its base folder structure and layout.

Running Tests

The following must pass before we will accept a pull request. If this does not pass, it will result in a complete build failure. Before you can run this, be sure to composer install.

To run all the tests and coding standards checks, execute the following from the command line, while in the project root directory:

composer test

CaptainHook will automatically run all tests before pushing to the remote repository.

Functional Tests

This project includes a suite of functional tests located in tests/expect/. These tests use the Expect tool to automate CLI interactions. The tests will run automatically as part of continuous integration, or you may run them locally with:

composer test-functional

To run the tests, you must have an up-to-date version of coreutils (8.30 or later).

To generate a new functional test:

cd tests/expect/
autoexpect ../../bin/conventional-commits prepare --config ../configs/default.json

Follow the prompts to enter the data you wish to test. When finished, autoexpect will save the test to script.exp. Rename it with a more descriptive name, and run it to ensure it does what you expect: ./script.exp. You may need to edit the test file or add to it, according to your needs.

When done, cd ../.. and run composer test-functional. Your new test should run along with the other functional tests.