Thanks for your interest in Juju! Contributions like yours make good projects great.
- Bug reports should be filed on Launchpad, not GitHub. Please check that your bug has not already been reported.
- When opening a pull request:
- Check that your patch is targeting the correct branch - if not, please rebase it.
- Please sign the CLA if you haven't already.
- Use the checklist on the pull request template to check you haven't forgotten anything.
Issue tracker: https://bugs.launchpad.net/juju/+bugs
Documentation:
Community:
juju
is written in Go, a modern, compiled, statically typed,
concurrent language.
Generally, Juju is built against the most recent version of Go, with the caveat that Go versions are not incremented during a release cycle. This means that develop
will typically be using the latest version of Go, but any given release branch may lag by one version or so. Check the go.mod
file at the root of the project for the targeted version of Go, as this is authoritative.
For example, the following indicates that Go 1.19 is targeted:
module github.com/juju/juju
go 1.19
Go can be installed from the official distribution.
Snap may also be used to install Go on Linux.
snap install go --channel=1.19/stable --classic
The easiest way to get the Juju source code is to clone the GitHub repository:
git clone https://github.com/juju/juju.git
To build/install from source, cd
into the root directory of the cloned repo,
and use make
.
make go-build
will build the Juju binaries and put them in a_build
subdirectory.make go-install
will build the Juju binaries and install them in your $GOBIN directory (which defaults to$GOPATH/bin
or~/go/bin
).make build
andmake install
are as above, but they will also regenerate the facade schema. An up-to-date schema is always checked into the Juju repo, so you shouldn't need to do this unless you make facade changes.
Juju uses git
for version control. To get started, install it and configure
your username:
git config --global user.name "A. Hacker"
git config --global user.email "a.hacker@example.com"
For information on setting up and using git
, check out the following:
- https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/
- http://git-scm.com/book/en/Getting-Started-Git-Basics
- GitHub bootcamp
The upstream Juju repository is hosted on Github. Patches to Juju are contributed through pull requests (more on that in the Pushing section). So you should have a github account and a fork there. The following steps will help you get that ready:
- Sign up for GitHub (a free account is fine): https://github.com/join
- Add your ssh public key to your account: https://github.com/settings/ssh
- Hit the "Fork" button on the web page for the Juju repo: https://github.com/juju/juju
At this point you will have your own copy under your github account. Note that your fork is not automatically kept in sync with the official Juju repo (see Staying in sync).
Note that Juju has dependencies hosted elsewhere with other version control tools.
To contribute to Juju you will also need a local clone of your GitHub fork.
The earlier go get
command will have already cloned the Juju repo for you.
However, that local copy is still set to pull from and push to the upstream
Juju github account. Here is how to fix that (replace with your
github account name):
cd juju
git remote set-url origin git@github.com:<USERNAME>/juju.git
To simplify staying in sync with upstream, give it a "remote" name:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/juju/juju.git
Add the check script as a git hook:
cd juju
ln -s scripts/pre-push.bash .git/hooks/pre-push
This will ensure that any changes you commit locally pass a basic sanity check. Using pre-push requires git 1.8.2 or later, though alternatively running the check as a pre-commit hook also works.
Make sure your local copy and GitHub fork stay in sync with upstream:
cd juju
git pull upstream
In the top-level directory of the Juju repo, there is a file, go.mod, that holds the versions of all the external Go modules that Juju depends on. That file is used to freeze the code in external repositories so that Juju is insulated from changes to those repos.
Juju uses Go modules to manage dependencies. Your Go installation will ensure you are building with the correct version - you don't need to do anything.
To update a dependency, use
go get -u github.com/the/dependency
go mod tidy
Go provides a tool, go fmt
, which facilitates a standardized format to go source code. The Juju project has one additional policy:
Import statements are grouped into 3 sections: standard library, 3rd party libraries, juju imports. The tool "go fmt" can be used to ensure each group is alphabetically sorted. eg:
import (
"fmt"
"time"
"labix.org/v2/mgo"
"github.com/juju/loggo"
gc "gopkg.in/check.v1"
"github.com/juju/juju/state"
"github.com/juju/worker/v3"
)
Because "gopkg.in/check.v1" will be referenced frequently in test suites, its name gets a default short name of just "gc".
As a project, Juju follows a specific workflow:
- sync with upstream
- create a local feature branch
- make desired changes
- test the changes
- push the feature branch to your github fork
- reviews
- auto-merge
- continuous-integration
Naturally, it is not so linear in practice. Each of these is elaborated below.
Generally there are multiple versions of Juju in development concurrently, and so we keep a separate Git branch for each version. When submitting a patch, please make sure your changes are targeted to the correct branch.
The currently active branches are:
2.9
- bug fixes for Juju 2.9.x3.0
- bug fixes for Juju 3.0.xdevelop
- bug fixes and new features for Juju 3.1.x
If a bug affects multiple Juju versions, please target the lowest version of Juju which is affected. All patches in earlier versions are eventually "merged through" to later versions.
All development should be done on a new branch, based on the correct branch
determined above. Pull the latest version of this branch, then create and
checkout a new branch for your changes - e.g. for a patch targeting develop
:
git pull upstream develop
git checkout -b new_feature develop
Some tests may require local lxd to be installed, see installing lxd via snap.
Juju uses the gocheck
testing framework, which is automatically installed
as a dependency of juju
. You can read more about gocheck
at
http://godoc.org/gopkg.in/check.v1. gocheck
is integrated into the source of
each package so the standard go test
command is used to run gocheck
tests.
For example
go test github.com/juju/juju/...
will run all the tests in the Juju project. By default gocheck
prints only
minimal output, and as gocheck
is hooked into the testing framework via a
single go test
test per package, the usual go test -v
flags are less
useful. As a replacement the following commands produce more output from
gocheck
.
go test -gocheck.v
is similar to go test -v
and outputs the name of each test as it is run as
well as any logging statements. It is important to note that these statements
are buffered until the test completes.
go test -gocheck.vv
extends the previous example by outputting any logging data immediately, rather
than waiting for the test to complete. By default gocheck
will run all tests
in a package, selected tests can by run by passing -gocheck.f
to match a
subset of test names.
go test -gocheck.f '$REGEX'
Finally, because by default go test
runs the tests in the current package,
and is not recursive, the following commands are equal, and will produce no
output.
cd juju
go test
go test github.com/juju/juju
Many tests use a standalone instance of mongod
as part of their setup. The
mongod
binary found in $PATH
is executed by these suites. If you don't already have MongoDB installed, or have difficulty using your installed version to run Juju tests, you may want to install the juju-db
snap, which is guaranteed to work with Juju.
sudo snap install juju-db --channel 4.4/stable
sudo snap alias juju-db.mongod mongod
sudo snap alias juju-db.mongo mongo
Some tests (particularly those under ./store/...
) assume a MongoDB instance
that supports Javascript for map-reduce functions. These functions are not
supported by juju-mongodb
and the associated tests will fail unless disabled
with an environment variable:
JUJU_NOTEST_MONGOJS=1 go test github.com/juju/juju/...
When ready for feedback, push your feature branch to github, optionally after collapsing multiple commits into discrete changes:
git rebase -i --autosquash develop
git push origin new_feature
Go to the web page (https://github.com/$YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME/juju) and hit the
"Pull Request" button, selecting develop
as the target.
This creates a numbered pull request on the github site, where members of the Juju project can see and comment on the changes.
Make sure to add a clear description of why and what has been changed, and include the Launchpad bug number if one exists.
It is often helpful to mention newly created proposals on the Discourse forum, especially if you would like a specific developer to be aware of the proposal.
Note that updates to your GitHub project will automatically be reflected in your pull request.
Be sure to have a look at:
https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests
We welcome external contributions to Juju, but in order to incorporate these into the codebase, we will need you to sign the Canonical contributor licence agreement (CLA). This just gives us permission to use your contributions - you still retain full copyright of your code.
We have a GitHub Action which checks if you have signed the CLA. To ensure this passes, please follow these steps:
- Ensure your Git commits are signed by an email that you can access
(you can't use the
@users.noreply.github.com
email that GitHub provides). - Create an account on Launchpad, if you don't already have one.
- Ensure the email you used for Git commits is a verified email on your
Launchpad account. To do this:
- Go to your Launchpad homepage (
launchpad.net/~[username]
). - Check the addresses listed under the Email heading. If your Git email is listed, you're good.
- If not, click "Change email settings".
- Add your Git email as a new address.
- Follow the instructions to verify your email.
- Go to your Launchpad homepage (
- Visit the CLA website, scroll down and press "Sign the contributor agreement".
- Read the agreement and fill in your contact details. Ensure that you provide your Launchpad username in the "Launchpad id" box.
- Press "I agree" to sign the CLA.
Eventually, your Launchpad account should be added to the "Canonical Contributor Agreement" team. You will see it listed under "Memberships" on your Launchpad homepage. Once this happens, the CLA check will pass, and we will happily review your contribution.
All PRs run pre-merge check - unit tests and a small but representative sample of functional tests. This check is re-run anytime the PR changes, for example when a new commit is added.
You can also initiate this check by commenting /build
in the PR.
The Juju project uses peer review of pull requests prior to merging to facilitate improvements both in code quality and in design.
Once you have created your pull request, it will be reviewed. Make sure to address the feedback. Your request might go through several rounds of feedback before the patch is approved or rejected. Once you get an approval from a member of the Juju project, you are ready to have your patch merged. Congratulations!
Continuous integration is automated through Jenkins:
The bot runs on all commits during the PRE process, as well as handles merges.
Use the /merge
comment to land a PR.
Static Analysis can be performed by running make static-analysis
Required dependencies for full static analysis are:
- *nix tools (sh, grep etc.)
- shellcheck
- python3
- go
- golint
- goimports
- deadcode
- misspell
- unconvert
- ineffassign
The Juju community is growing and you have a number of options for interacting beyond the workflow and the issue tracker.
Use the following links to contact the community:
- Mattermost chat: https://chat.charmhub.io/
- Discourse forum: https://discourse.charmhub.io/