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alacritty/CONTRIBUTING.md
Christian Duerr f0cb1e7cf3
Bump alacritty_terminal version
This change bumps the version of the `alacritty_terminal` crate to force
it out of sync with the Alacritty application. Since it is a library
that will be published on crates.io, it should be following semver
rather than our binary's release version.

While it would be possible to just keep it at 0.5.0, explicitly
disconnecting it from the Alacritty version should give it a clean
starting-off point and prevent unnecessary confusion. Bumping it to
0.10.0 instead of something like 0.6.0 should allow for a nice gap
between the different versions without being too arbitrary. Changing the
version to 0.1.0 is not an option since decreasing semver version would
likely cause a lot of problems.

While it would be possible to further separate the Alacritty terminal
library from the Alacritty terminal emulator, by renaming it from
`alacritty_terminal` to something different, I don't think that is
necessary or a good idea at the moment. Even though the
`alacritty_terminal` library *can* be used for other terminals, its
primary goal is still to support the Alacritty terminal emulator and I
don't see that changing. So making that clear in its name seems like a
good idea. Since there is no plan to maintain this library separately
from Alacritty, but to keep both tied together, the naming should
reflect this.
2020-07-19 14:14:31 +00:00

7.9 KiB

Contributing to Alacritty

Thank you for your interest in contributing to Alacritty!

Table of Contents:

  1. Feature Requests
  2. Bug Reports
  3. Patches / Pull Requests
    1. Testing
    2. Performance
    3. Documentation
    4. Style
  4. Release Process
  5. Contact

Feature Requests

Feature requests should be reported in the Alacritty issue tracker. To reduce the number of duplicates, please make sure to check the existing enhancement and missing feature issues.

Bug Reports

Bug reports should be reported in the Alacritty issue tracker.

If a bug was not present in a previous version of Alacritty, providing the exact commit which introduced the regression helps out a lot.

Patches / Pull Requests

All patches have to be sent on Github as pull requests.

If you are looking for a place to start contributing to Alacritty, take a look at the help wanted and easy issues.

Please note that the minimum supported version of Alacritty is Rust 1.41.0. All patches are expected to work with the minimum supported version.

Since alacritty_terminal's version always tracks the next release, make sure that the version is bumped according to semver when necessary.

Testing

To make sure no regressions were introduced, all tests should be run before sending a pull request. The following command can be run to test Alacritty:

cargo test

Additionally if there's any functionality included which would lend itself to additional testing, new tests should be added. These can either be in the form of Rust tests using the #[test] annotation, or Alacritty's ref tests.

To record a new ref test, a release version of the patched binary should be created and run with the --ref-test flag. After closing the Alacritty window, or killing it (exit and ^D do not work), some new files should have been generated in the working directory. Those can then be copied to the ./tests/ref/NEW_TEST_NAME directory and the test can be enabled by editing the ref_tests! macro in the ./tests/ref.rs file. When fixing a bug, it should be checked that the ref test does not complete correctly with the unpatched version, to make sure the test case is covered properly.

Performance

If changes could affect throughput or latency of Alacritty, these aspects should be benchmarked to prevent potential regressions. Since there are often big performance differences between Rust's nightly releases, it's advised to perform these tests on the latest Rust stable release.

Alacritty mainly uses the vtebench tool for testing Alacritty's performance. Instructions on how to use it can be found in its README.

Latency is another important factor for Alacritty. On X11, Windows, and macOS the typometer tool allows measuring keyboard latency.

Documentation

Code should be documented where appropriate. The existing code can be used as a guidance here and the general rustfmt rules can be followed for formatting.

If any change has been made to the config.rs file, these changes should also be documented in the example configuration file alacritty.yml.

Changes compared to the latest Alacritty release which have a direct effect on the user (opposed to things like code refactorings or documentation/tests) additionally need to be documented in the CHANGELOG.md. The existing entries should be used as a style guideline. The change log should be used to document changes from a user-perspective, instead of explaining the technical background (like commit messages). More information about Alacritty's change log format can be found here.

Style

All Alacritty changes are automatically verified by CI to conform to its rustfmt guidelines. If a CI build is failing because of formatting issues, you can install rustfmt using rustup component add rustfmt and then format all code using cargo fmt.

Unless otherwise specified, Alacritty follows the Rust compiler's style guidelines:

https://rust-lang.github.io/api-guidelines

All comments should be fully punctuated with a trailing period. This applies both to regular and documentation comments.

Release Process

Alacritty's release process aims to provide stable and well tested releases without having to hold back new features during the testing period.

To achieve these goals, a new branch is created for every new release. Both the release candidates and the final version are only comitted and tagged in this branch. The master branch only tracks development versions, allowing us to keep the branches completely separate without merging releases back into master.

The exact steps for an exemplary 0.2.0 release might look like this:

  1. Initially, the version on the latest master is 0.2.0-dev
  2. A new v0.2.0 branch is created for the release
  3. On master, the version is bumped to 0.3.0-dev
  4. In the branch, the version is bumped to 0.2.0-rc1
  5. The new commit in the branch is tagged as v0.2.0-rc1
  6. A GitHub release is created for the v0.2.0-rc1 tag
  7. The changelog since the last release (stable or RC) is added to the GitHub release description
  8. Bug fixes are cherry-picked from master into the branch and steps 4-7 are repeated until no major issues are found in the release candidates
  9. In the branch, the version is bumped to 0.2.0
  10. The new commit in the branch is tagged as v0.2.0
  11. The new version is published to crates.io
  12. A GitHub release is created for the v0.2.0 tag
  13. The changelog since the last stable release (not RC) is added to the GitHub release description
  14. The -dev is stripped from the 0.2.0-dev changelog entries on master

On master and with new planned releases, only the minor version is bumped. This makes it possible to create bug fix releases by incrementing the patch version of a previous minor release, without having to adjust the next planned release's version number.

The exact steps for an exemplary 0.2.3 release might look like this:

  1. Initially, the version on the latest master is 0.3.0-dev and the latest release was 0.2.2
  2. A new v0.2.3 branch is forked from the v0.2.2 branch
  3. All bug fixes are cherry-picked from master into the v0.2.3 branch
  4. The version is bumped to v0.2.3-rc1 and the changelog is updated to include all fixes
  5. Follow Steps 5-12 of the regular release's example
  6. The release's changelog is ported back to master, removing fixes from the 0.2.3 release

The alacritty_terminal crate is released in synchronization with alacritty, keeping the -dev and -rcX version suffix identical across the two crates. As soon as the new Alacritty stable release is made, releases are tagged as alacritty_terminal_vX.Y.Z and pushed to crates.io. During a release, only the patch version is bumped on master, since there haven't been any changes since the last release yet.

Contact

If there are any outstanding questions about contributing to Alacritty, they can be asked on the Alacritty issue tracker.

As a more immediate and direct form of communication, the Alacritty IRC channel (#alacritty on Freenode) can be used to contact many of the Alacritty contributors.