Thank you for your interest in contributing to the Apache Thrift project! Information on why and how to contribute is available on the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) web site. In particular, we recommend the following to become acquainted with Apache Contributions:
For Windows systems, see our detailed instructions on the CMake README.
For Windows Native C++ builds, see our detailed instructions on the WinCPP README.
For unix systems, see our detailed instructions on the Docker README.
- Review the GitHub Pull Request Backlog. Code reviews are open to all.
- Review the Jira issue tracker. You can search for tickets relating to languages you are interested in or currently using with thrift, for example a Jira search (Issues -> Search For Issues) query of
project = THRIFT AND component in ("Erlang - Library") and status not in (resolved, closed)
will locate all the open Erlang Library issues.
- Check to see if the issue is already in the Jira issue tracker.
- If not, create a ticket describing the change you're proposing in the Jira issue tracker.
- Contribute your code changes using the GitHub pull request method:
This is the preferred method of submitting changes. When you submit a pull request through github, it activates the continuous integration (CI) build systems at Appveyor and Travis to build your changes on a variety of Windows and Linux configurations and run all the test suites.
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Create a fork in your GitHub account of http://github.com/apache/thrift
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Clone the fork to your development system.
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Create a branch for your changes (best practice is issue as branch name, e.g. THRIFT-9999).
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Modify the source to include the improvement/bugfix, and:
- Remember to provide tests for all submitted changes!
- Use test-driven development (TDD): add a test that will isolate the bug before applying a change that fixes it.
- Verify that you follow Thrift Coding Standards (you can run 'make style', which ensures proper format for some languages).
- [optional] Verify that your change works on other platforms by adding a GitHub service hook to Travis CI and AppVeyor. You can use this technique to run the Thrift CI jobs in your account to check your changes before they are made public. Every GitHub pull request into Thrift will run the full CI build and test suite on your changes.
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Squash your changes to a single commit. This is very important as it makes the process of applying your commit upstream much easier.
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Commit and push changes to your branch (please use issue name and description as commit title, e.g. "THRIFT-9999: make it perfect").
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Use GitHub to create a pull request going from your branch to apache:master. Ensure that the Jira ticket number is at the beginning of the title of your pull request, same as the commit title.
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Wait for other contributors or committers to review your new addition, and for a CI build to complete.
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Wait for a committer to commit your patch. You can nudge the committers if necessary by sending a message to the Apache Thrift mailing list.
Some changes do not require a build, for example in documentation. For changes that are not code or build related, you can submit a patch on Jira for review. To create a patch from changes in your local directory:
git diff > ../THRIFT-NNNN.patch
then wait for contributors or committers to review your changes, and then for a committer to apply your patch.
Sometimes commmitters may ask you to take actions in your pull requests. Here are some recipes that will help you accomplish those requests. These examples assume you are working on Jira issue THRIFT-9999. You should also be familiar with the upstream repository concept.
If you have not submitted a pull request yet, or if you have not yet rebased your existing pull request, you can squash all your commits down to a single commit. This makes life easier for the committers. If your pull request on GitHub has more than one commit, you should do this.
- Use the command
git log
to identify how many commits you made since you began. - Use the command
git rebase -i HEAD~N
where N is the number of commits. - Leave "pull" in the first line.
- Change all other lines from "pull" to "fixup".
- All your changes are now in a single commit.
If you already have a pull request outstanding, you will need to do a "force push" to overwrite it since you changed your commit history:
git push -u origin THRIFT-9999 --force
A more detailed walkthrough of a squash can be found at Git Ready.
If your pull request has a conflict with master, it needs to be rebased:
git checkout THRIFT-9999
git rebase upstream master
(resolve any conflicts, make sure it builds)
git push -u origin THRIFT-9999 --force
If your pull request contains commits that are not yours, then you should use the following technique to fix the bad merge in your branch:
git checkout master
git pull upstream master
git checkout -b THRIFT-9999-take-2
git cherry-pick ...
(pick only your commits from your original pull request in ascending chronological order)
squash your changes to a single commit if there is more than one (see above)
git push -u origin THRIFT-9999-take-2:THRIFT-9999
This procedure will apply only your commits in order to the current master, then you will squash them to a single commit, and then you force push your local THRIFT-9999-take-2 into remote THRIFT-9999 which represents your pull request, replacing all the commits with the new one.