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First Steps

To get started contributing to Covalent, you should fork this repository for your own development. (Learn more about how to fork a repo.)

Clone your fork locally:

git clone https://github.com/my-github/covalent-executor-template

where my-github is your personal GitHub account.

We recommend using Conda to create an environment to install and develop Covalent. After you have installed conda, create an environment:

conda create -n covalent-dev python=3.8
conda activate covalent-dev

Install Covalent's core requirements as well as the pre-commit package:

conda install setuptools pip
pip install covalent pre-commit
pre-commit install

Start the Covalent servers in developer mode:

covalent start -d

You are now ready to begin development on your custom executor plugin.

Style Guide

Contributing to the Covalent codebase should be an easy process, but there are a few things to consider to ensure your contributions meet the minimum software quality standards. The main points are explained below, and they are roughly grouped into the following categories: stylization, documentation, and testing.

General Guidelines

  • Use American English spellings and grammar.  Documentation with typos will be rejected.
  • Use complete sentences with capitalization and punctuation, except in short descriptions of arguments, return values, attributes, and exceptions in source code.
  • Multi-sentence argument descriptions, or longer sentence fragments with mid-sentence punctuation marks, should use capitalization and punctuation.
  • Comments may be written more informally than docstrings, as long as consistency and clarity are maintained. Capitalization and punctuation should be used with multi-sentence comments to aid with readability.
  • Avoid complex stylization in docstrings; these must be readable for users in a terminal/Jupyter environment.
  • Assume the user does not have access to any source files.
  • Variables must be restricted to the scope in which they are used; avoid use of global variables except when absolutely necessary.
  • Limit all lines to 99 characters.  Use a four-character indent for Python files; bash files use a two-character indent, and C uses a tab indent. These will be adjusted as needed by the pre-commit hooks.
  • Input parameters to scripts should be passed using flags, rather than positional arguments. This may be implemented using the getopt libraries.  Bash scripts may accept parameters passed with or without flags.
  • Functions should perform a single task.  Generally functions should not contain more than 30 lines of code, not including line breaks, comments, and whitespace.
  • Use the pylint tool to improve the quality of your code. Contributions which decrease the codebase's code quality will be rejected.
  • All changes must be documented in the changelog as a new version.
  • New features or changes to UX must include a usage description in the form of a how-to guide.
  • All software source files should contain the copyright boilerplate displayed below, which includes a docstring describing the purpose of the file.

Source Code Boilerplate

All files submitted must contain the following before all other lines:

# Copyright 2021 Agnostiq Inc.
#
# This file is part of Covalent.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). A copy of the
# License may be obtained with this software package or at
#
#     https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Use of this file is prohibited except in compliance with the License.
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.

"""Single-sentence description of the file."""

Bash files may contain the shebang #!/usr/bin/env bash on a line before the boilerplate.  Afterwards, the following should be written before the body of code:

set -eu -o pipefail

and files should end with an explicit exit code, e.g., exit 0 indicates a successful exit.

Naming Conventions

  • Class names use CamelCase
  • Functions, variables, filenames, and directories use snake_case
  • Constants use SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE
  • Acronyms are a sequence of all-capitalized letters
  • Names should be descriptive and concise
  • Mathematical variables (“x”) may be used only when they are documented. This may be appropriate for standard variables used in literature.
  • Avoid using “I”, “l”, and “O” as variable names
  • Private objects and methods/functions of a class should start with an underscore, e.g., self._variable or self._internal_function(). A "private" class object is one that should not be used outside of the class definition. Unlike C++, Python has no way of stopping a user/developer from accessing or modifying any object in the class (hence the quotations around private). The underscore lets them know the object is for internal use only and that its internal usage could change without warning.

References

  • Add references to other code units where applicable. Use the roles :class:, :func:, :attr:, :meth:, and :mod: so that Sphinx generates a cross-reference in generated documentation.
  • Add URL references to code taken from or inspired by code found online.
  • All digital references must specify a DOI, ISBN, arXiv ID, or URL, in that order of preference.
  • Add references to literature where applicable.  Academic journal articles should be in the following format:
A.B. Lastname1, C. Lastname2 and D. Lastname3. Title of Article. Jour. Abbrev. 1, 123456 (2021).
doi: 10.1001/abcdef
arXiv: quant-ph/000000

Standard journal abbreviations can be found here.  In the above example, ‘1’ refers to the volume number, and ‘123456’ refers to the first page number of the article.  For six or more authors use the first author’s name followed by et al.  References to other material should follow the apsrev4-1 bibliography style and generally follow the same stylization as that for articles.  The DOI, if one exists, should be on the first line following a reference; if an arXiv ID also exists it may be added on a line following the DOI.

Python Docstrings

Docstrings should follow Google style.

Functions and Methods

def func(arg1: <arg1_type>, arg2: <arg2_type>, arg3: <arg3_type> = "default_value", **kwargs) -> <return_type>:
    """Single sentence that summarizes the function.

    Multi-line description of the function (optional, only if necessary).

    Args:
        arg1: Description.
            Continuation line is indented if needed.
        arg2: Description.
        arg3: Description. Do not provide the default.
            value, as this is already present in the signature.

    Returns:
        Description of the return type and semantics.
        Continuation line is on the same indent level.

    Raises:
        <exception_type>: description

    .. seealso:: :func:`~.relevant_func`, :class:`~.RelevantClass` (optional)

    Example:
        Minimal example with 1 or 2 code blocks (required).
        .. code-block:: python

           myvalue = func(arg1, arg2, arg3)


    Usage Details:
        More complicated use cases, options, and larger code blocks (optional).

    Related tutorials:
        Links to any relevant notebook examples (optional).

    References:
        References to academic articles, books, or websites (optional).

        A.B. Lastname1, C. Lastname2 and D. Lastname3. Title of Article. Jour. Abbrev. 1, 123456 (2021).
        doi: 10.1001/abcdef
        arXiv: quant-ph/000000
    """
  • Relevant mathematical expressions should be formatted using inline latex and placed in the multi-line description.  Important or long equations may go on their own line.
  • Algorithmic functions should contain details about scaling with time and/or problem size, e.g., O(N); this information also goes in the multi-line description.
  • <arg1_type>, <arg2_type>, <arg3_type> and <return_type> are placeholders for the type hints of arg1, arg2, arg3 and the return value.

Classes

class MyClass:
    """Single sentence that summarizes the class.

    Multi-line description of the class (optional, if required).

    Attributes:
        attr1: description
    """
  • Include public attributes here in the Attributes section, using the same formatting as a function's Args section.
  • Do not list methods in the class docstring.
  • Private attributes of a class do not need to be described in the class docstring. These are class objects that should not be used outside of the class definition.

Variables

Variables may optionally be documented using a docstring below their definition:

num_gates = {"CNOT": 17, "RY": 31}
"""dict[str, int]: Number of gates in wire 2"""

Bash Docstrings

All bash scripts must begin by validating input parameters and offering a help string:

# This example uses two parameters: an integer and a string
if [ $# -eq 2 ] && [ $1 =~ '^[+-]?[0-9]+$' ] ; then
  var1=$1
  var2=$2
else
  echo "$(basename $0) [var1] [var2] -- short description of this script."
  echo "Longer help string and explanation of parameters."
  exit 1
fi

# Continue with the rest of the script

Code Examples

  • You may assume that ‘covalent’ is imported as ‘ct’. All other imports must be specified explicitly.
  • For single line statements and associated output, use Python console syntax (pycon):
>>> ct.dispatch(pipeline)(**params) # Dispatching a workflow returns a unique dispatch id.
'8a7bfe54-d3c7-4ca1-861b-f55af6d5964a'
  • Multi-line statements should use “...” to indicate continuation lines:
>>> dispatch_ids = []
>>> params = [1, 2, 3, 4]
>>> for a in params:
...     dispatch_ids.append(ct.dispatch(pipeline)(a=a))
  • For larger, more complicated code blocks, use standard Python code-block with Python console syntax for displaying output:
>>> @ct.electron
... def identity(x):
...     return x
...
>>> @ct.lattice
... def pipeline(a):
...     res = identity(a)
...     return res
...
>>> dispatch_id = ct.dispatch(pipeline)(a=1)
>>> result = pipeline.get_result(dispatch_id=dispatch_id)
>>> print(result)

Lattice Result
==============
status: COMPLETED
result: 1
inputs: {'a': 1}
error: None

start_time: 2022-01-24 04:13:00.667919+00:00
end_time: 2022-01-24 04:13:00.684457+00:00

results_dir: /home/user/covalent
dispatch_id: e4efd26c-240d-4ab1-9826-26ada91e429f

Code Comments

  • Comments are used to explain the implementation or algorithm.  Assume the reader is a proficient programmer and understands basic principles and syntax.
  • Self-document code when possible.  Code should be clear and concise, flow logically, and be organized into stanzas according to what’s happening.  This helps avoid unnecessary comments.
  • Comments should occur directly above the code that is being described.  Use a single space between the "#" character and the start of text.

Python Type Hints

Type hints should be used for input parameters in functions and classes, as well as for return values as well. The typing module should be used for several circumstances:

  • When a parameter or return type is a container for multiple parameters. Examples include a dict mapping strings to floats uses, Dict[str,float], or a list of integers uses, List[int]

  • Nested Types: A dict mapping an integer to a list of floats is written Dict[int,List[float]]

  • If a parameter can be multiple types, use Union. E.g., if it can be a string or a list of strings or an integer, use Union[str,List[str],int].

  • If a parameter can be anything, use Any. This is more permissive than using object. Type checkers will ignore it completely.

  • Optional parameters use Optional. E.g., an optional integer is written Optional[int].

Any user-defined class type can be used in a type hint, but the class must have been imported beforehand.

Some examples of type hints in use:

from typing import Union, List, Dict, Any, Optional

import MyClass

def some_function(some_variable: float,
                  some_index: int,
                  float_or_string: Union[float,str],
                  some_integer_list: List[int],
                  some_string_list: List[str],
                  my_class_object: MyClass, # This will fail if MyClass has not been imported
                  some_dict: Dict[int,str],
                  literally_anything: Any,
                  optional_string: Optional[str] = 'default string',
                  optional_int: Optional[int] = -1,
                  optional_int_or_string: Optional[Union[int,str]] = 9999
                  optional_int_list: Optional[List[int]] = [0,1,2,3]) -> Union[str,float,None]:

    """Function description

    Args:
        some_variable: some_variable description
        some_index: some_index description
        float_or_string: float_or_string description
        some_integer_list: some_integer_list description
        some_string_list: some_string_list description
        my_class_object: my_class_object description
        some_dict: some_dict description
        literally_anything: literally_anything description
        optional_string: optional_string description
        optional_int: optional_int description
        optional_int_or_string: optional_int_or_string description
        optional_int_list: optional_int_list description

    Returns:
        return_variable: return description
    """

    n = 5 * some_index

    if n == 20:
        return 'ok'
    elif n == 455:
        return n * 3.14159
    else:
        return

Python Logging

Covalent uses the Python logging module for errors, warnings, debug and info statements. There is a small module (covalent/_shared_files/logger.py) which encapsulates the default logger. Modules can access the logger using the following:

from covalent._shared_files import logger
app_log = logger.app_log
log_stack_info = logger.log_stack_info
log_debug_info = logger.log_debug_info

Warning, info and debug statements are done with the following commands:

>>> app_log.warning('here is the warning message')
<file_name>: Line 8 in <function_name>:
WARNING - here is the warning message
>>> app_log.info('message for informational purposes')
<file_name>: Line 12 in <function_name>:
INFO - message for informational purposes
>>> app_log.debug('debug statement')
<file_name>: Line 15 in <function_name>:
DEBUG - debug statement

where <file_name> and <function_name> are stand-ins for the file and function that the log statement occurred in.

For more urgent messages, denoting errors which will stop the program from executing correctly, use error statements. Usage is similar, except that we want the program to exit and optionally show a stack-trace pointing to the error.

The level of warning seen when executing code depends on the user's environment variable LOGLEVEL. Choices are:

Level Numeric value
CRITICAL 50
ERROR 40
WARNING 30
INFO 20
DEBUG 10
NOTSET 0

The lower the level, the more log messages are shown to the user. Executing, for example,

export LOGLEVEL=INFO

guarantees all info, warning, error and critical messages will be shown. If this environment variable is not set, the default value of WARNING is used.

Writing Tests

All feature changes and bug fixes should be accompanied by tests. These can be a combination of unit, integration and functional tests. Unit tests are the highest priority and should be the bulk of the tests in the repo. Following that, integration tests, checking that various modules function as expected are the next highest priority. Lastly, functional tests, which test various software use cases should be proportionately the minority of the tests (without undermining their importance).

In the case of bug fixes, it is necessary to write tests for which the code breaks before implementing the bug fix.

It is further advisable to consider how feature changes could be implemented so that the code is easily testable.

pytest is the framework of choice for testing in this repo with additional packages such as pytest-asyncio to test asynchronous code and pytest-mock for the purpose of mocking and monkey-patching.

The test suite for covalent can be run locally via:

pytest -v

Running the entire test suite will take a while and for the purpose of development, one can focus on more specific tests using syntax in the examples shown below.

  1. To run a specific test module:
pytest tests/covalent_dispatcher_tests/_executor/local_test.py -vv -s
  1. To run a specific test:
pytest tests/electron_return_value_test.py::test_arithmetic_1_rev -vv -s

Contributor License Agreement

All contributors to Covalent must agree to the terms in the Contributor License Agreement. Individual contributors should sign on their own behalf, while corporate contributors should sign on behalf of their employer. If you have any questions, direct them to the support team.