* Replace many occurrences of DAML with Daml * Update docs logo * A few more CLI occurrences CHANGELOG_BEGIN - Change DAML capitalization and docs logo CHANGELOG_END * Fix some over-eager replacements * A few mor occurrences in md files * Address comments in *.proto files * Change case in comments and strings in .ts files * Revert changes to frozen proto files * Also revert LF 1.11 * Update get-daml.sh * Update windows installer * Include .py files * Include comments in .daml files * More instances in the assistant CLI * some more help texts
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Contributing to Daml
Welcome! This page gives a high-level overview of how to contribute to the development of Daml.
There are many ways you can contribute beyond coding. For example, you can report problems, clarify issues, and write documentation. If you're completely new to open source development, the Open Source Guides is a great place to start.
Working on the codebase
For information on how to build, test, and work on the codebase, see "Contributing to Daml" in the README.
Code of conduct
This project and everyone participating in it is governed by the Daml Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to community@digitalasset.com.
Git conventions
For Git commit messages, our principle is that git log --pretty=oneline
should give readers a clear idea of what has changed and the detailed descriptions should help them understand the rationale. To achieve this:
- Commits must have a concise, imperative title, e.g.:
- Fix performance regression in …
- Improve explanation of …
- Remove module X because it is not used.
- Commits should have a description that concisely explains the rationale and context for the change if that is not obvious.
- Commit descriptions should include a
Fixes #XX
line indicating what GitHub issue number the commit fixes. - The git logs are not intended for user-facing change logs, but should be a useful reference when writing them.
Pull request checklist
- Read this document (contribution guidelines).
- Does your PR include appropriate tests?
- Make sure your PR title and description makes it easy for other developers to understand what the contained commits do. The title should say what the changes do. The description should expand on what it does (if not obvious from the title alone), and say why it is being done.
- If your PR corresponds to an issue, add “Fixes #XX” to your pull request description. This will auto-close the corresponding issue when the commit is merged into main and tie the PR to the issue.
- the squashed commit for the PR MUST include in its body a section between the
CHANGELOG_BEGIN
andCHANGELOG_END
tags. This section MAY include a list of user-facing changes Follow these guidelines on how to write a good changelog entry.
The following is an example of a well-formed commit, including the description (first line) and a body that includes changelog additions:
Fixes #1311
Also fixes a typo in the Scala bindings documentation.
CHANGELOG_BEGIN
- [Sandbox] Introduced a new API for package management.
See `#1311 <https://github.com/digital-asset/daml/issues/1311>`__.
CHANGELOG_END
If you want to amend an existing changelog entry part of a PR already merged on main, do so by adding a WARNING
to your changelog additions:
CHANGELOG_BEGIN
WARNING: replace existing changelog entry "Introduced a new API for package management" with the following.
- [Sandbox] Introduce a new API for party management.
See `#1311 <https://github.com/digital-asset/daml/issues/1311>`__.
CHANGELOG_END
If the PR contains no user-facing change, the section MUST be there but can be left empty, as in the following example:
Fixes #6666
Improve contribution guidelines
CHANGELOG_BEGIN
CHANGELOG_END
If you want to verify the changelog entries as described by a range of Git revisions, you can use the unreleased.sh
script. In most cases, to see the entries added as part of commits added since branching off of main
, you can run:
./unreleased.sh main..
Writing a good changelog entry
Writing good changelog entries is important: as a developer, it gives visibility on your contribution; as a user, it makes clear what is new, what's changed, and how to deal with them, making the product more accessible and your work more meaningful.
The raw changelog is used to compile a meaningful summary of changes across releases. This happens some time after the PR has been merged and the person taking the responsibility of summarizing new user-facing features must be in the position to easily understand the nature of the change and report it. The ideal changelog entry can be more or less incorporated verbatim in the release notes.
Here are a few practical tips:
- if there are no user-facing changes, keep the changelog entry list empty
- the first term to appear should be the affected component -- here's a list
- write as many changelog entries as necessary
- don't be too succinct: a single entry does not have to fit on a single line
- on the other end, if the size grows beyond 5-6 lines, rather add a link to a relevant documentation or issue with more details
- the ultimate target are end users: focus on the impact on them, tell them what's new or how to deal with a change
List of components for changelog entries
This list should cover the vast majority of needs. If unsure, ask on the relevant GitHub issue or PR.
- Daml Compiler
- Daml on SQL
- Daml Studio
- Distribution/Releases
- Extractor
- Java Bindings
- Java Codegen
- JavaScript Client Libraries
- JavaScript Codegen
- JSON API
- Ledger API Specification
- Integration Kit †
- Navigator
- Daml REPL
- Sandbox
- Scala Bindings
- Scala Codegen
- Daml Script
- Daml Assistant
- Daml Standard Library
- Daml Triggers
† Covers the Ledger API Test Tool and changes to libraries that affect ledger integrations (e.g. kvutils
)
Working with issues
We use issues and pull requests to collaborate and track our work. Anyone is welcome to open an issue. If you just want to ask a question, please ask away on the Daml forum.
We encourage everyone to vote on issues that they support or not:
- 👍 - upvote
- 👎 - downvote
When you start working on an issue, we encourage you to tell others about it in an issue comment. If other contributors know that this issue is already being worked on, they might decide to tackle another issue instead.
When you add TODO
(nice to have) and FIXME
(should fix) comments in the code, we encourage you to create a corresponding issue and reference it as follows:
TODO(#XX): <description>
where#XX
corresponds to the GitHub issue.FIXME(#XX): <description>
where#XX
corresponds to the GitHub issue.
Labels
We use labels to indicate what component the issue relates to (component/...
). We use some special labels:
broken
to indicate that something in the repo is seriously broken and needs to be fixed.discussion
to indicate the issue is to discuss and decide on something.good-first-issue
to indicate that the issue is suitable for those who want to contribute but don't know where to start.
By default, issues represent "work to be done" -- that might be features, improvements, non-critical bug fixes, and so on.
The Daml Language team uses labels to indicate priority (the Daml Runtime team does not):
language/now
language/soon
language/later
You can see all labels here.
Milestones
In addition to labels, we group issues into milestones. The Daml Language team has all issues in a single Language milestone; the Daml Runtime team uses them to group work efforts (Add PostgreSQL backend to the Ledger for example). Maintenance and Backlog are special milestones.
Issues without a milestone are treated as in need of triaging.
You can see all the active milestones here.
Discussions
Please hold discussions that are relevant to Daml development and not confidential in GitHub issues. That way, anyone who wants to contribute or follow along can do so. If you have private discussions, please summarise them in an issue or comment to an issue.
You can also join a #daml-contributors
channel on our Slack: damldriven.slack.com.
Thank you!
Thank you for taking the time to contribute!