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Contributing to VyOS

You wan't to help us improve VyOS? This is awesome!

We accept any kind of Pull Requests on GitHub. In order to get your changes into the main repository as smooth as possible please take yourself some time and review this contribution guideline.

The following paragraphs are an excerpt from our Documentation.

Submit a Patch

Patches are always more than welcome. To have a clean and easy to maintain repository we have some guidelines when working with Git. A clean repository eases the automatic generation of a changelog file.

A good approach for writing commit messages is actually to have a look at the file(s) history by invoking git log path/to/file.txt.

Prepare patch/commit

In a big system, such as VyOS, that is comprised of multiple components, it’s impossible to keep track of all the changes and bugs/feature requests in one’s head. We use a bugtracker named Phorge (formerly known Phabricator) for it (“issue tracker” would be a better term, but this one stuck).

The information is used in three ways:

  • Keep track of the progress (what we have already done in this branch and what we still need to do).
  • Prepare automatic release notes for upcoming releases
  • Help future maintainers of VyOS (it could be you!) to find out why certain things have been changed in the codebase or why certain features have been added

To make this approach work, every change must be associated with a task number (prefixed with T) and a component. If there is no bug report/feature request for the changes you are going to make, you have to create a development portal task first. Once there is an entry in the development portal, you should reference its id in your commit message, as shown below:

  • ddclient: T1030: auto create runtime directories
  • Jenkins: add current Git commit ID to build description

If there is no development portal reference in the commits of your pull request, we have to ask you to amend the commit message. Otherwise we will have to reject it.

Writing good commit messages

The format should be and is inspired by this very good and detailed Git documentation, it is also worth reading https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/.

This is nothing VyOS specific - it is more a general topic for distributed development environments.

  • A single, short, summary of the commit (recommended 50 characters or less, not exceeding 80 characters) containing a prefix of the changed component and the corresponding development portal reference e.g. snmp: T1111: or ethernet: T2222: - multiple components could be concatenated as in snmp: ethernet: T3333
  • In some contexts, the first line is treated as the subject of an email and the rest of the text as the body. The blank line separating the summary from the body is critical (unless you omit the body entirely); tools like rebase can get confused if you run the two together.
  • Followed by a message which describes all the details like:
    • What/why/how something has been changed, makes everyone’s life easier when working with git bisect
    • All text of the commit message should be wrapped at 72 characters if possible which makes reading commit logs easier with git log on a standard terminal (which happens to be 80x25)
    • If applicable a reference to a previous commit should be made linking those commits nicely when browsing the history: After commit abcd12ef ("snmp: this is a headline") a Python import statement is missing, throwing the following exception: ABCDEF
  • Always use the -x option to the git cherry-pick command when back or forward porting an individual commit. This automatically appends the line: (cherry picked from commit <ID>) to the original authors commit message making it easier when bisecting problems.
  • Every change set must be consistent (self containing)! Do not fix multiple bugs in a single commit. If you already worked on multiple fixes in the same file use git add –patch to only add the parts related to the one issue into your upcoming commit.

Bug Report/Issue

Issues or bugs are found in any software project. VyOS is not an exception.

All issues should be reported to the developers. This lets the developers know what is not working properly. Without this sort of feedback every developer will believe that everything is working correctly.

I have found a bug, what should I do?

When you believe you have found a bug, it is always a good idea to verify the issue prior to opening a bug request.

  • Consult our Documentation to ensure that you have configured your system correctly
  • Get community support via Slack or our online Forum

Ensure the problem is reproducible

When you are able to verify that it is actually a bug, spend some time to document how to reproduce the issue. This documentation can be invaluable.

When you wish to have a developer fix a bug that you found, helping them reproduce the issue is beneficial to everyone. Be sure to include information about the hardware you are using, commands that you were running, any other activities that you may have been doing at the time. This additional information can be very useful.

  • What were you attempting to achieve?
  • What was the configuration prior to the change?
  • What commands did you use? Use e.g. show configuration commands

Include output

The output you get when you find a bug can provide lots of information. If you get an error message on the screen, copy it exactly. Having the exact message can provide detail that the developers can use. Like wise if you have any log messages that also are from the time of the issue, include those. They may also contain information that is helpful for the development team.

Reporting

In order to open up a bug-report/feature request you need to create yourself an account in the development portal. On the left side of the specific project (VyOS 1.2 or VyOS 1.3) you will find quick-links for opening a bug-report/feature request.

  • Provide as much information as you can
  • Which version of VyOS are you using? Use operational level command: show version
  • How can we reproduce this Bug? Please include a CLI configuration, you can use show configuration command | strip-private to remove sensitive information before publishing.

Feature Request

You have an idea of how to make VyOS better or you are in need of a specific feature which all users of VyOS would benefit from? To send a feature request please search the development portal if there is already a request pending. You can enhance it or if you don't find one, create a new one by use the quick link in the left side under the specific project.

Code Contribution

For contributing code to VyOS please take a short moment and review the guideline outlined in our Documentation at https://docs.vyos.io/en/latest/contributing/development.html#submit-a-patch

Coding Guidelines

We have some small coding guidelines which are defined in a separate section of at https://docs.vyos.io/en/latest/contributing/development.html#coding-guidelines. The guidelines cover how to create the necessary XML structure for new features and also how to read in the code from the CLI into the Python based scripting backend.

Thank you for taking the time reading this guide.

It might also worth browsing our Blog for additional info and updates.