Contributing to calista
All contributions, bug reports, bug fixes, documentation improvements, enhancements, and ideas are welcome.
Bug reports and enhancement requests
Bug reports and enhancement requests are an important part of making calista more stable and are curated though Github issues. When reporting an issue or request, please select the appropriate category and fill out the issue form fully to ensure others and the core development team can fully understand the scope of the issue.
The issue will then show up to the calista community and be open to comments/ideas from others.
Submitting a pull request
Version control, Git, and GitHub
calista is hosted on GitHub, and to contribute, you will need to sign up for a free GitHub account. We use Git for version control to allow many people to work together on the project.
If you are new to Git, you can reference some of these resources for learning Git:
Also, the project follows a forking workflow further described on this page whereby contributors fork the repository, make changes and then create a pull request. So please be sure to read and follow all the instructions in this guide.
If you are new to contributing to projects through forking on GitHub, take a look at the GitHub documentation for contributing to projects. GitHub provides a quick tutorial using a test repository that may help you become more familiar with forking a repository, cloning a fork, creating a feature branch, pushing changes and making pull requests.
Below are some useful resources for learning more about forking and pull requests on GitHub:
Getting started with Git
GitHub has instructions for installing git, setting up your SSH key, and configuring git. All these steps need to be completed before you can work seamlessly between your local repository and GitHub.
Create a fork of calista
You will need your own copy of calista (aka fork) to work on the code. Go to the calista project
page and hit the Fork button. Please uncheck the box to copy only the main branch before selecting Create Fork.
You will want to clone your fork to your machine
git clone https://github.com/your-user-name/calista.git calista-yourname
cd calista-yourname
git remote add upstream https://github.com/Aubay-Data-AI/calista
git fetch upstream
This creates the directory calista-yourname and connects your repository to
the upstream (main project) calista repository.
Creating a feature branch
Your local main branch should always reflect the current state of calista repository.
First ensure it’s up-to-date with the main calista repository.
git checkout main
git pull upstream main --ff-only
Then, create a feature branch for making your changes. For example
git checkout -b shiny-new-feature
This changes your working branch from main to the shiny-new-feature branch. Keep any
changes in this branch specific to one bug or feature so it is clear
what the branch brings to calista. You can have many feature branches
and switch in between them using the git checkout command.
Making code changes
Then once you have made code changes, you can see all the changes you’ve currently made by running.
git status
For files you intended to modify or add, run.
git add path/to/file-to-be-added-or-changed.py
Running git status again should display
On branch shiny-new-feature
modified: /relative/path/to/file-to-be-added-or-changed.py
Finally, commit your changes to your local repository with an explanatory commit message
git commit -m "your commit message goes here"
Pushing your changes
When you want your changes to appear publicly on your GitHub page, push your forked feature branch’s commits
git push origin shiny-new-feature
Here origin is the default name given to your remote repository on GitHub.
You can see the remote repositories
git remote -v
If you added the upstream repository as described above you will see something like
origin git@github.com:yourname/calista.git (fetch)
origin git@github.com:yourname/calista.git (push)
upstream git://github.com/Aubay-Data-AI/calista.git (fetch)
upstream git://github.com/Aubay-Data-AI/calista.git (push)
Now your code is on GitHub, but it is not yet a part of the calista project. For that to happen, a pull request needs to be submitted on GitHub.
Making a pull request
If everything looks good, you are ready to make a pull request. A pull request is how code from your local repository becomes available to the GitHub community to review and merged into project to appear the in the next release. To submit a pull request:
Navigate to your repository on GitHub
Click on the
Compare & pull requestbuttonYou can then click on
CommitsandFiles Changedto make sure everything looks okay one last timeWrite a descriptive title
Write a description of your changes in the
Preview DiscussiontabClick
Send Pull Request.
This request then goes to the repository maintainers, and they will review the code.
Updating your pull request
Based on the review you get on your pull request, you will probably need to make some changes to the code.
It is also important that updates in the calista main branch are reflected in your pull request.
To update your feature branch with changes in the calista main branch, run:
git checkout shiny-new-feature
git fetch upstream
git merge upstream/main
If there are no conflicts (or they could be fixed automatically), a file with a default commit message will open, and you can simply save and quit this file.
If there are merge conflicts, you need to solve those conflicts. See for example at https://help.github.com/articles/resolving-a-merge-conflict-using-the-command-line/ for an explanation on how to do this.
Once the conflicts are resolved, run:
git add -uto stage any files you’ve updated;git committo finish the merge.
Note
If you have uncommitted changes at the moment you want to update the branch with
main, you will need to stash them prior to updating (see the
stash docs).
This will effectively store your changes and they can be reapplied after updating.
After the feature branch has been update locally, you can now update your pull request by pushing to the branch on GitHub:
git push origin shiny-new-feature
Any git push will automatically update your pull request with your branch’s changes
and restart the Continuous Integration checks.
Updating the development environment
It is important to periodically update your local main branch with updates from the calista main
branch and update your development environment to reflect any changes to the various packages that
are used during development.
If using pip, do:
git checkout main
git fetch upstream
git merge upstream/main
# activate the virtual environment based on your platform
python -m pip install --upgrade -r requirements-dev.txt