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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Note: Any interaction with the Amethyst project is subject to our Code of Conduct.

Contributing to Amethyst

Amethyst is an open-source project that values community contribution. We could always use a helping hand! What would you like to do?

  1. I want to submit issues or request features.
  2. I want to contribute code.
  3. I want to write documentation.
  4. Are there any useful resources I can read?

Submitting Issues

One way you can help Amethyst is to report bugs or request features on our GitHub issue trackers. We can't fix problems we don't know about, so please report early and often! Make sure to post your issue on the tracker most relevant to you:

Before posting your issue, please take a moment to search the tracker's existing issues first, as it's possible that someone else reported the same issue before you. Though it helps save time, don't worry! We won't mind if you accidentally post a duplicate issue.

Amethyst does not officially support beta or nightly channels of Rust. If an issue can only be reproduced on those channels our resolution strategy will be to communicate with the Rust project itself to ensure the issue does not reach the stable branch.

That's all there is to it! Thanks for posting your issue; we'll take it to heart and try our best to resolve it.

Pull Requests

So, you want to write some code? Great!

To begin hacking, make sure you have git lfs installed, fork the repository to your account and git clone the forked copy to your local machine. On clone you will be on the master branch. This is the branch that contains all new work that has not been released yet. If you are adding a new feature to amethyst then you want to base your work off of this branch. Otherwise, if you are attemping to fix something in an older release you will have to base your work off of a released tag. This can be done after a clone by running git checkout TAG where TAG is a released tag eg v0.8.0. Now that you have the latest code you can start contributing.

Contributors should be familiar with the Git Style Guide and Commit Message Guidelines.

Submission Checklist

Before submitting your pull request to the repository, please make sure you have done the following things first:

  1. You have ensured the pull request is based on a recent version of your respective branch.
  2. You have processed your source code with cargo fmt (we use latest rustup stable).
  3. All of the following commands completed without errors.
    • cargo build --features "empty"
    • cargo test --all --features "empty"
    • cargo run --example {example-name} --features YOUR_BACKEND
    • mdbook test book -L target/debug/deps
  4. You have granted non-exclusive right to your source code under both the MIT License and the Apache License 2.0. Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache 2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
  5. You added your change in docs/CHANGELOG.md and linked your pull request number.
  6. You used cargo fmt at the root of the crate to format the code. Make sure that cargo fmt --version returns the latest stable version. If this is not the case, run rustup update or install rustfmt
  7. For new features or changes to an existing one, add or change either the book tutorial or the examples.

Note that if you do not have mdbook already installed you may do so with cargo install mdbook. If you find dependency resolution problems when testing mdbook, you may have to run cargo clean and cargo build again before retrying the mdbook test command.

Once you have submitted your pull request, please wait for a reviewer to give feedback on it. If no one responds, feel free to @-mention a developer or post publicly on Discord asking for a review. Once your code has been reviewed, revised if necessary, and then signed-off by a developer, it will be merged into the source tree.

Protocol for merging pull requests

The following rules shall be applied strictly for the amethyst repository. For other repositories of this organization, thorough review would be desirable, but no strict application is required there due to lower activity and less influence.

  • Pull Requests shall be approved by at least two members (two approvals from contributors can count as one member approval.)
  • Pull Requests opened by organization members may be merged if approved by one member.
  • Merging a PR shall be done with bors r+, if possible. If there is more than one reviewer the preferred format is bors r=@reviewer1, @reviewer2. You can read more about this here.
  • You may only block merging of a PR if the changes in it are relevant to an org team you have joined. This doesn't mean you can't make comments, but it does mean that team may ignore your comments if they so choose. Please do not use the "Request Changes" feature if the PR is not relevant to your team.

Everyone is welcome to review pull requests that they find interesting. It helps save time and improve the code quality for everyone, as well as gaining experience while doing so.

Note: The author of a PR cannot approve their own PR.

Special cases
Urgent fixes
  • If something went wrong (like a broken version has been released, the website doesn't work at all, ..) no approval is required for merging
  • Merging can be performed instant (but still with bors)
Experimental branches
  • If there are very experimental branches, there's no need to use bors; in fact, CI may even fail if that makes working on it easier.
  • A review would be good prior to merging, but rules don't need to be strict here
Architecture changes, API which influences the workflow / general design of the engine
  • Should be labeled with type: RFC
  • Needs at least three approvals by members only
  • Should be left open for reviews for a couple of days

Dealing With Upstream Changes

When pulling remote changes to a local branch or machine, we recommend users to rebase instead of creating merge commits.

This is used sometimes when an upstream change cause problems with your pull request. The best practice is to do a fast-forward ("ff") rebase.

First, setup a remote called upstream:

# Do one of the following. SSH is prefered, but not available on all
# environments.

$ # For ssh
$ git remote add upstream [email protected]:amethyst/amethyst.git
$ # For https
$ git remote add upstream https://github.com/amethyst/amethyst.git

If your origin remote points to the original repo we recommend you to set it to your own fork. Check with git remote origin get-url to be sure.

$ # Set origin remote to fork, <your-fork> is [email protected]:<your-username>/amethyst.git
$ # For https use https://github.com/<your-username>/amethyst.git
$ git remote origin set-url <your-fork>

To learn how to rebase a upstream change into your branch, please read this excellent wiki post.

TL;DR

$ # Fetch latest changes
$ git fetch upstream
$ # Rebase this branch to upstream
$ git checkout <branch-name>
$ git rebase upstream/<branch-to-sync-with>

If any errors occur, Git will try to guess what happened. If you can't figure out how to solve your problem, a quick Google search can help, or you can hit us up on our Discord chat.

If needed, abort with git rebase --abort and also sometimes git merge --abort.

To check whether anything major has changed upstream, you can do:

$ # Fetch latest changes
$ git fetch upstream
$ # Do a "non-intrusive" check.
$ git merge --ff-only --no-commit upstream

Then you can decide to do a FF rebase. This way, our commit logs remain nice and clean, and we'll be grateful.

Thank you so much for your contribution! Now Amethyst will be a little bit faster, stronger, and more efficient.

Writing Documentation

Documentation improvements are always welcome! A solid project needs to have solid documentation to go with it. You can search for documentation-related issues on any of our GitHub trackers by filtering by the green projects: docs label.

There are two types of documentation in Amethyst you can work on:

  1. API documentation
  2. The Amethyst book

Our Rust API documentation is generated directly from source code comments marked with either /// or //! using a tool called Rustdoc. See the official Rust book's chapter on Rustdoc for more information on how this works.

The Amethyst book is generated using a different documentation tool called mdBook. This tool generates pretty HTML e-books from individual Markdown (.md) files. You can find the source files for this book in the book/src/ directory of the Amethyst repository.

Documentation of any kind should adhere to the following standard:

  1. Lines must not extend beyond 80 characters in length.
  2. To enhance readability in text editors and terminals, use only reference style Markdown links, as shown in the example below. However, if the link points to an anchor that exists on the same page, the inline style should be used instead.
Here is some [example text][et] with a link in it. While we are at it, here is
yet [another link][al]. If we are linking to [an anchor](#anchor) on the same
page, we can do this inline.

[et]: https://some.url/
[al]: https://another.url/

When submitting your pull requests, please follow the same procedures described in the Pull Requests section above.

Profiling the engine

You can build Amethyst with a profiler feature like this:

cargo build --release --features profiler

Or if you wanted to run an example with profiler:

cargo run --example my_example --release --features profiler

After an Amethyst instance built with profiler feature shuts down a thread_profile.json file is generated. It holds information about engine performance (how much time do various bits of code take to run). Amethyst uses the same profiling method as webrender (thread_profiler crate). thread_profile.json can be viewed using Chromium tracing utility. You can access it by launching Chromium and typing in about:tracing in your address bar. Then you can hit load button and choose thread_profile.json file.

Useful Resources