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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to cuxfilter

If you are interested in contributing to cuxfilter, your contributions will fall into three categories:

  1. You want to report a bug, feature request, or documentation issue
    • File an issue describing what you encountered or what you want to see changed.
    • The RAPIDS team will evaluate the issues and triage them, scheduling them for a release. If you believe the issue needs priority attention comment on the issue to notify the team.
  2. You want to propose a new Feature and implement it
    • Post about your intended feature, and we shall discuss the design and implementation.
    • Once we agree that the plan looks good, go ahead and implement it, using the code contributions guide below.
  3. You want to implement a feature or bug-fix for an outstanding issue
    • Follow the code contributions guide below.
    • If you need more context on a particular issue, please ask and we shall provide.

Code contributions

Your first issue

  1. Read the project's README.md to learn how to setup the development environment
  2. Find an issue to work on. The best way is to look for the good first issue or help wanted labels
  3. Comment on the issue saying you are going to work on it
  4. Code! Make sure to update unit tests!
  5. When done, create your pull request
  6. Verify that CI passes all status checks. Fix if needed
  7. Wait for other developers to review your code and update code as needed
  8. Once reviewed and approved, a RAPIDS developer will merge your pull request

Remember, if you are unsure about anything, don't hesitate to comment on issues and ask for clarifications!

Seasoned developers

Once you have gotten your feet wet and are more comfortable with the code, you can look at the prioritized issues of our next release in our project boards.

Pro Tip: Always look at the release board with the highest number for issues to work on. This is where RAPIDS developers also focus their efforts.

Look at the unassigned issues, and find an issue you are comfortable with contributing to. Start with Step 3 from above, commenting on the issue to let others know you are working on it. If you have any questions related to the implementation of the issue, ask them in the issue instead of the PR.

Attribution

Portions adopted from https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md

Setting up your build environment

The following instructions are for developers and contributors to cuxfilter OSS development. These instructions are tested on Linux Ubuntu 16.04 & 18.04. Use these instructions to build cuxfilter from source and contribute to its development. Other operating systems may be compatible, but are not currently tested.

Code Formatting

Python

cuxfilter uses Black and flake8 to ensure a consistent code format throughout the project. Black and flake8 can be installed with conda or pip:

conda install black flake8
pip install black flake8

These tools are used to auto-format the Python code in the repository. Additionally, there is a CI check in place to enforce that committed code follows our standards. You can use the tools to automatically format your python code by running:

black python/cuxfilter

and then check the syntax of your Python by running:

flake8 python/cuxfilter

Additionally, many editors have plugins that will apply Black as you edit files, as well as use flake8 to report any style / syntax issues.

Optionally, you may wish to setup pre-commit hooks to automatically run Black, and flake8 when you make a git commit. This can be done by installing pre-commit via conda or pip:

conda install -c conda-forge pre_commit
pip install pre-commit

and then running:

pre-commit install

from the root of the cuxfilter repository. Now Black and flake8 will be run each time you commit changes.

Script to build cuxfilter from source

Build from Source

To install cuxfilter from source, ensure the dependencies are met and follow the steps below:

  • Clone the repository and submodules
CUXFILTER_HOME=$(pwd)/cuxfilter
git clone https://github.com/rapidsai/cuxfilter.git $CUXFILTER_HOME
cd $CUXFILTER_HOME
  • Create the conda development environment cuxfilter_dev:
# create the conda environment (assuming in base `cuxfilter` directory)
conda env create --name cuxfilter_dev --file conda/environments/all_cuda-118_arch-x86_64.yaml
# activate the environment
source activate cuxfilter_dev
  • Build the cuxfilter python packages, in the python folder:
$ cd $CUXFILTER_HOME/python
$ python setup.py install
  • To run tests (Optional):
$ cd $CUXFILTER_HOME/python/cuxfilter/tests
$ pytest

Done! You are ready to develop for the cuxfilter OSS project

Adding support for new viz libraries

cuxfilter.py acts like a connector library and it is easy to add support for new libraries. The cuxfilter/charts/core directory has all the core chart classes which can be inherited and used to implement a few (viz related) functions and support dashboarding in cuxfilter directly.

You can see the examples to implement viz libraries in the bokeh and datashader directories.

Current plan is to add support for the following libraries apart from bokeh and datashader:

  1. deckgl

Open a feature request for requesting support for libraries other than the above mentioned ones.