* update contributing * formatting * add documentation section and user-book * add crate names section * formatting * add `A-help-wanted` label * add monerod binary note
8.2 KiB
Contributing to Cuprate
Thank you for wanting to help out!
Cuprate is in the stage where things are likely to change quickly, so it's recommended you ask questions in our public Matrix room.
- 1. Submitting a pull request
- 2. Crate names
- 3. Coding guidelines
- 4. Keeping track of issues and PRs
- 5. Documentation
- 6. Books
1. Submitting a pull request
Once you have found something you would like to work on by:
- Looking at the open issues
- Looking at issues with the
A-help-wanted
label - or joining Cuprate's Matrix room and asking
it is recommended to make your interest on working on that thing known so people don't duplicate work.
Before starting, consider reading/using Cuprate's:
Documentation
(practicalcargo
docs)Books
(Cuprate's architecture and protocol)
These may answer some questions you have, or may confirm an issue you would like to fix.
Note: Cuprate is currently a work-in-progress; documentation will be changing/unfinished.
1.1 Rust toolchain
Cuprate is written in Rust.
If you are editing code, you will need Rust's toolchain and package manager,
cargo
, to develop and submit PRs effectively.
Get started with Rust here: https://www.rust-lang.org/learn/get-started.
1.2 Draft PR
Consider opening a draft PR until you have passed all CI.
This is also the stage where you can ask for feedback from others. Keep in mind that feedback may take time especially if the change is large.
1.3 Passing CI
Each commit pushed in a PR will trigger our lovely, yet pedantic CI.
It currently:
- Checks code formatting
- Checks documentation
- Looks for typos
- Runs
clippy
(and fails on warnings) - Runs all tests
- Builds all targets
- Automatically add approriate labels to your PR
Before pushing your code, please run the following at the root of the repository:
Command | Does what |
---|---|
cargo fmt --all |
Formats code |
typos -w |
Fixes typos |
typos
can be installed with cargo
from: https://github.com/crate-ci/typos.
After that, ensure all other CI passes by running:
Command | Does what |
---|---|
RUSTDOCFLAGS='-D warnings' cargo doc --workspace --all-features |
Checks documentation is OK |
cargo clippy --workspace --all-features --all-targets -- -D warnings |
Checks clippy lints are satisfied |
cargo test --all-features --workspace |
Runs all tests |
cargo build --all-features --all-targets --workspace |
Builds all code |
Note: in order for some tests to work, you will need to place a monerod
binary at the root of the repository.
1.4 Ready for review
Once your PR has passed all CI and is ready to go, open it for review. Others will leave their thoughts and may ask for changes to be made.
Finally, if everything looks good, we will merge your code! Thank you for contributing!
2. Crate names
All of Cuprate's crates (libraries) are prefixed with cuprate-
. All directories containing crates however, are not.
For example:
Crate Directory | Crate Name |
---|---|
storage/database |
cuprate-database |
net/levin |
cuprate-levin |
net/wire |
cuprate-wire |
3. Coding guidelines
This is a list of rules that are not mandated by any automation, but contributors generally follow.
You should keep these in mind when submitting code:
- Separate and sort imports as core, std, third-party, Cuprate crates, current crate
- Follow the Rust API Guidelines
// Comment like this.
and not//like this
- Use
TODO
instead ofFIXME
- Avoid
unsafe
And the most important rule:
- Break any and all of the above rules when it makes sense
4. Keeping track of issues and PRs
The Cuprate GitHub repository has a lot of issues and PRs to keep track of. Cuprate makes use of generic labels and labels grouped by a prefixes to help with this.
Some labels will be automatically added/removed if certain file paths have been changed in a PR.
The following section explains the meaning of various labels used. This section is primarily targeted at maintainers. Most contributors aren't able to set these labels.
Labels | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
A- | The area of the project an issue relates to. | A-storage , A-rpc , A-docs |
C- | The category of an issue. | C-cleanup , C-optimization |
D- | Issues for diagnostics. | D-confusing , D-verbose |
E- | The experience level necessary to fix an issue. | E-easy , E-hard |
I- | The importance of the issue. | I-crash , I-memory |
O- | The operating system or platform that the issue is specific to. | O-windows , O-macos , O-linux |
P- | The issue priority. These labels can be assigned by anyone that understand the issue and is able to prioritize it, and remove the [I-prioritize] label. | P-high , P-low |
5. Documentation
Cuprate's crates (libraries) have inline documentation.
These can be built and viewed using the cargo
tool. For example, to build and view a specific crate's documentation, run the following command at the repository's root:
cargo doc --open --package $CRATE
$CRATE
can be any package listed in the root Cargo.toml
's workspace members list, for example, cuprate-blockchain
.
You can also build all documentation at once:
cargo doc
and view by using a web-browser to open the index.html
file within the build directory: target/doc/$CRATE/index.html
, for example, target/doc/cuprate_blockchain/index.html
.
6. Books
Cuprate has various documentation books whose source files live in books/
.
Please contribute if you found a mistake! The files are mostly markdown files and can be easily edited. See the books/
directory for more information.
These books are also good resources to understand how Cuprate and Monero work.
6.1 Architecture book
This book documents Cuprate's architecture and implementation.
- https://architecture.cuprate.org
- https://github.com/Cuprate/architecture-book
- https://github.com/Cuprate/cuprate/tree/main/books/architecture
6.2 Protocol book
This book documents the Monero protocol.
- https://monero-book.cuprate.org
- https://github.com/Cuprate/monero-book
- https://github.com/Cuprate/cuprate/tree/main/books/protocol
6.3 User book
This book is a user-guide for using Cuprate.