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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to the APM Agent

The APM Agent is open source and we love to receive contributions from our community — you!

There are many ways to contribute, from writing tutorials or blog posts, improving the documentation, submitting bug reports and feature requests or writing code.

You can get in touch with us through Discuss, feedback and ideas are always welcome.

Code contributions

If you have a bugfix or new feature that you would like to contribute, please find or open an issue about it first. Talk about what you would like to do. It may be that somebody is already working on it, or that there are particular issues that you should know about before implementing the change.

Submitting your changes

Generally, we require that you test any code you are adding or modifying. Once your changes are ready to submit for review:

  1. Sign the Contributor License Agreement (CLA)

    Please make sure you have signed our Contributor License Agreement. We are not asking you to assign copyright to us, but to give us the right to distribute your code without restriction. We ask this of all contributors in order to assure our users of the origin and continuing existence of the code. You only need to sign the CLA once.

  2. Test your changes

     npm test     # requires a local Docker
    

    If you are adding new code or changing existing code, write some automated tests that exercise this code. See the TESTING.md doc for details.

  3. Document your changes

    • See the Commit message guidelines below.
    • If your changes will be visible to users of this package, then add an item to the "Unreleased" section of the changelog.
    • If you are changing usage of this package, are there updates under "docs/" that should be made?
  4. Rebase your changes

    Update your local repository with the most recent code from the main repo, and rebase your branch on top of the latest main branch. We prefer your initial changes to be squashed into a single commit. Later, if we ask you to make changes, add them as separate commits. This makes them easier to review.

  5. Submit a pull request

    Push your local changes to your forked copy of the repository and submit a pull request. In the pull request, choose a title which sums up the changes that you have made, and in the body provide more details about what your changes do. Also mention the number of the issue where discussion has taken place, e.g. "Closes #123".

  6. Be patient

    We might not be able to review your code as fast as we would like to, but we'll do our best to dedicate it the attention it deserves. Your effort is much appreciated!

Commit message guidelines

This repo loosely encourages commit messages per Conventional Commits.

[optional type, e.g. "fix:", "feat:"] <description>

[Optional body paragraphs.]

[Optional "BREAKING CHANGE: ..." paragraphs.]

[Optional footers, e.g. "Fixes: #123" or "Co-authored-by: ...".]
  1. The first line should contain a short description of the change. Ideally a description is less than 50 characters, and certainly less than 72.

  2. The first line may optionally be prefixed with a type:

    • "fix:" when fixing a bug
    • "feat:" when adding a new feature
    • "docs:" when only updating documentation
    • "refactor:" when refactoring code without changing functional behavior
    • "test:" when only updating tests
    • "perf:" when improving performance without changing functional behavior
    • "chore:" when making some other task that does not change functional behavior
  3. The second line MUST be blank.

  4. Optionally provide body paragraphs that explain the what and why of the change, and not the how.

  5. Wrap all lines at 72 columns, within reason (URLs, quoted output).

  6. If your commit introduces a breaking change, it should (strongly encouraged) contain a "BREAKING CHANGE: ..." paragraph, explaining the reason for the change, which situations would trigger the breaking change, and what is the exact change.

  7. If fixing an open issue, add a footer block of the form Fixes: #123 or Closes: #123.

Of these guidelines, #1 and #3 are the most important. A succinct description and a body that answers "what" and "why" will best help future maintainers of the software.

Testing

For information about how to run the test suite, see TESTING.md.

Backporting

If a PR is marked with a backport:* label, it should be backported to the branch specified by the label after it has been merged.

To backport a commit, run the following command and follow the instructions in the terminal:

npm run backport

Workflow

All feature development and most bug fixes hit the main branch first. Pull requests should be reviewed by someone with commit access. Once approved, the author of the pull request, or reviewer if the author does not have commit access, should "Squash and merge".

Adding support for new modules

The following is an overview of what's required in order to add support to the agent for automatic instrumentation of an npm package.

  1. Add the instrumentation logic to a new file in the lib/instrumentation/modules directory named <package-name>.js, E.g. mysql.js for the mysql package
  2. Add the name of the package to the MODULES array in lib/instrumentation/index.js
  3. Add accompanying tests in the test/instrumentation/modules directory. If you only have one test file, place it in the root of the modules directory and name it the same as the lib file. If you have more than one test file, create a sub-directory with the name of the package and place all test files inside that
    1. If you created a sub-directory under test/instrumentation/modules, add it to the directories array in test/test.js
  4. List the supported versions of the package in docs/supported-technologies.asciidoc
  5. We use the test-all-versions module to test the agent against all supported versions of each package we instrument. Add the supported versions and required test commands to the .tav.yml file
  6. Add the name of the module to one of the TAV groups in .ci/tav.json for all Node.js versions. To better balance the work requried to run each TAV group, pick the TAV group that is currently running the fastest.

Releasing

If you have access to make releases, the process is as follows:

Current major

  1. Be sure you have checked out the main branch and have pulled latest changes.
  2. Make a PR titled "x.y.z" (the new version) which updates:
    • the version in package.json,
    • the version in package-lock.json (by running npm install),
    • all cases of "REPLACEME" in docs and comments,
    • "CHANGELOG.asciidoc": Add missing changelog entries, if any. Then change the "Unreleased" section title to:
      [[release-notes-x.y.z]]
      ==== x.y.z - YYYY/MM/DD
      
  3. Ensure PR checks pass, then merge to main.
  4. Working on the elastic repo now (not a fork), tag the merged-to-main commit with git tag vx.y.x && git push origin vx.y.z. For example: git tag v1.2.3 && git push origin v1.2.3. (The GitHub Actions CI "release" workflow will handle all the release steps -- including the npm publish. See the appropriate run at: https://github.com/elastic/apm-agent-nodejs/actions/workflows/release.yml)
  5. Reset the latest major branch (currently 3.x) to point to the current main, e.g. git branch -f 3.x main && git push origin 3.x. (The periodic docs CI job uses this branch to update the published docs.)
  6. For major releases, create an issue to request an update of the EOL table.

Past major

This is not currently supported. Until this issue is resolved one must not push a "vX.Y.Z" version tag to the repository on GitHub that is for a version other than the current major.