mirror of
https://github.com/urbit/shrub.git
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252 lines
9.7 KiB
Markdown
252 lines
9.7 KiB
Markdown
## Workflow
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Before beginning any unit of work, you should have a GitHub issue detailing the
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scope of the work. This could be an issue someone else filed and has been
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assigned to you (or you've assigned to yourself) or a new issue you filed
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specifically for this unit of work. As much as possible, discussion of the work
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should take place in the issue. When this is not possible, please update the
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issue with relevant details from any offline conversations. Each issue should
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provide a clear and thorough history of the work from inception to completion.
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## Issues
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The [GitHub tracker][issu] is our canonical source of truth around issues, bugs,
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performance problems and feature requests. If you encounter any issues when
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developing on Urbit, feel free to submit a report about it here.
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A good bug report, description of a crash, etc., should ideally be
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*reproducible*, with clear steps as to how another developer can replicate and
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examine your problem. That said, this isn't always possible -- some bugs depend
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on having created a complicated or unusual state, or can otherwise simply be
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difficult to trigger again.
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Your issue should thus at a minimum be *informative*. The best advice here is
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probably "don't write bad issues," where "bad" is a matter of judgment and
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taste. Issues that the maintainers don't judge to be sufficiently useful or
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informative may be closed.
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Feature requests are welcome, but they should include sufficient detail and
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explanation, as well as a discussion of perceived benefits one could expect from
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them. "It would be cool if.." probably does not, in itself, constitute a good
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feature request; instead, try to be specific about what you're requesting, and
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what your desired feature would accomplish.
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### Feature Branch Names
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Every branch that you intend to put up for review must adhere to the form
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`i/<N>/<...>`, where `<N>` is the number of the issue that the branch
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corresponds to and `<...>` is an optional short description of the branch to aid
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in readability. If `<...>` is omitted, the `/` should be omitted as well, which
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makes `i/<N>` a well-formed branch name. These feature branches should be based
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off of `develop`.
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### Commits
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Commits should generally be relevant, atomic, and have descriptions formatted in
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the following manner:
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> component: short description
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>
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> long description
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The 'component' is a short prefix of what area of the codebase the commit
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applies to. If a commit patches `%gall`, for example, the description should be
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prefixed by 'gall'. If it touches `:aqua`, it should be prefixed by 'aqua'. If
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it touches multiple components, then separate these by commas, e.g. "gall, aqua,
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ph" -- but note that this may be a warning that too many changes are being
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packed into a single commit. The 'component' and 'short description' combined
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should be no more than 50 characters.
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Every individual commit should at a minimum be in a compiling and runnable state.
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Broken commits or commits simply marked "wip" are not allowed. If you need to
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clean up the commits in your branch, you can soft reset to an earlier state and
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recommit with better metadata (or if the change is small enough, squash to one
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good commit at the end).
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A lengthier description is encouraged, but is not always strictly required. You
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should use the longer description to give any useful background on or motivation
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for the commit, provide a summary of what it does, link to relevant issues,
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proposals, or other commits, and so on.
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Here is an example of our commit format, taken from a commit in the history:
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> zuse: remove superfluous 'scup' and 'culm' types.
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>
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> %zuse includes definitions for 'scup' and 'culm', both of which are
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> superfluous. 'scup' is simply (pair ship desk) and is used only in the
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> definition of 'culm', a tagged union in which three of the four branches are
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> commented out (i.e. are unused).
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>
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> This commit deletes 'scup' and 'culm' and refactors what little code made use
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> of them.
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Note that the short description is prefixed by `zuse:`, which is what the commit
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touches. Otherwise it just includes a summary of the change.
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Here's another example:
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> build: give arvo a high priority
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>
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> 0bdced981e4 introduced the 'arvo-ropsten' derivation. Attempting to install
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> both 'arvo' and 'arvo-ropsten' via nix-env will result in a priority error;
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> this assigns a higher priority to 'arvo' to resolve the conflict.
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>
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> Fixes #1912.
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Note that it cites a previous relevant commit, `0bdced981e4`, in its summary,
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and also points at the issue that it resolves.
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When we say commits should be "atomic", we mean with respect to some distinct
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logical unit, e.g. a type definition used across many files, or a single file,
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or just a single function in a single file. Commits should be atomic at the
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level of *code*, not of entire features. You don't have to squash your commits
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into a single one that captures everything you're trying to do -- the history
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will never make for pleasant bedtime reading, so focus instead on making your
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commits useful for tools like `git-blame` and `git-bisect`.
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Your contribution must apply cleanly to `develop` in order to be considered
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mergeable. You may want to regularly [rebase your changes][reba] onto
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`develop` in order to both clean up any intermediate "development" commits you
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make and to ensure that you're up to date.
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### Pull Requests and Merges
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When your work is ready for review, open a pull request, making sure to link to
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the tracking issue in the description, which should be formatted as follows
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(where `<N>` is the number of this work's tracking issue):
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```
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### Description
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Resolves #<N>.
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Thoroughly describe the changes made.
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### Related
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Reference any related issues, links, papers, etc. here.
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```
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Tests will run automatically via GitHub Actions when you open a pull request or
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push new commits to an existing pull request.
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Once you've collected and addressed feedback, tests are passing, and your PR has
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been approved, merge the pull request.
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**Note**: If you are merging into develop, you *must* be syncing OTAs from
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`~binnec-dozzod-marzod` which gets the tip of develop deployed to it. If
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your merge breaks `binnec` it's your responsibility to alert people and
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fix it. Your PR is shipped when it's successfully been deployed to
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`~binnec` and picked up by your personal ship. If you're merging on behalf
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of an external developer, this is also your responsibility.
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If you properly included the "Resolves
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#N." directive in the pull request description, merging will automatically close
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the tracking issue associated with the pull request.
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## Code style
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Hoon will be a less familiar language to many contributors. We've published
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some [style guidelines for Hoon][hoon], but above all you should try to mimic
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the style of the code around you. With regards to the style used throughout the
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codebase: the more recently the code was written, the more standard and accepted
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its style is likely to be.
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### Kernel Development and Pills
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Urbit bootstraps itself from a pill (you can see it being fetched from
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`bootstrap.urbit.org` on boot). This is the compiled version of the kernel
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(which you can find in the `sys` directory of [Arvo][arvo]), along with a
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complete copy of the Arvo source.
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You can find the latest solid pill, as well as the latest so-called *brass*
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and *ivory* pills, in the `bin/` directory at the repository root.
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Any contribution that touches the kernel (i.e., anything in `pkg/arvo/sys`),
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should be accompanied by an updated [solid pill](#the-kernel-and-pills). Pills
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are tracked in the repository via [git LFS][git-lfs].
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```
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$ git lfs install
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$ git lfs pull
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```
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[git-lfs]: https://git-lfs.github.com
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The +solid command is used to write the compiled kernel to a file.
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```
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> .urbit/pill +solid
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```
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When the compilation finishes, your pill will be found in the `[pier]/.urb/put/`
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directory as `urbit.pill`.
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You can boot a new ship from your local pill with `-B`:
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```
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$ urbit -F zod -B path/to/urbit.pill -c my-fake-zod
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```
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Release pills, i.e. those corresponding to vere releases, are cached at
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`https://bootstrap.urbit.org` and are indexed by the vere version number, e.g.
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`urbit-0.8.2.pill`.
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Whenever you make a contribution to the kernel, please create a new solid pill
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via:
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```
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sh/update-solid-pill
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```
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You should include the updated pill in the same commit that updates the source.
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## Development Environment
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Although you likely have an identity on the live network, developing on the live
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network is high-risk and largely unnecessary. Instead, standard practice is to
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work on a fake ship. Fake ships use deterministic keys derived from the ship's
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address, don't communicate on the live network, and can communicate with other
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fake ships over the local loopback.
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### Boot a New Fake Ship
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To boot a new fake ship, pass the `-F` flag and a valid Urbit ship name to
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`urbit`:
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```console
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$ bazel build :urbit
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$ ln -s bazel-bin/pkg/vere/urbit urbit
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$ ./urbit -F <ship>
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```
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By default, booting a fake ship will use the same pill that livenet ships use,
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which leads to a non-trivial boot time on the order of tens of minutes. However,
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using a development specific "solid" pill reduces this time to a couple minutes.
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To boot using the solid pill, download or create one as described in the Kernel
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Development and Pills section above and then run the following:
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```console
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$ ./urbit -F <ship> -B solid.pill
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```
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### Launch an Existing Fake Ship
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To launch an existing fake ship, supply the pier (the ship directory), which is
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simply the name of the ship[^1], to `urbit`:
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```console
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$ ./urbit <ship>
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```
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[^1]: Unless you specified the pier name using the `-c` flag.
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[list]: https://groups.google.com/a/urbit.org/forum/#!forum/dev
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[repo]: https://github.com/urbit/urbit
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[reba]: https://git-rebase.io/
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[issu]: https://github.com/urbit/urbit/issues
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[hoon]: https://urbit.org/docs/hoon/reference/style
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[main]: https://github.com/urbit/urbit/tree/master/pkg/arvo#maintainers
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