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mirror of https://github.com/wez/wezterm.git synced 2024-11-23 15:04:36 +03:00
wezterm/CONTRIBUTING.md
Danielkonge 3141131014
Contribute docs update (#4326)
* Update CONTRIBUTING.md

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: Wez Furlong <wez@wezfurlong.org>

* Update with new build method.

---------

Co-authored-by: Wez Furlong <wez@wezfurlong.org>
2023-09-21 17:52:26 -07:00

4.5 KiB

Contributing to wezterm

Thanks for considering donating your time and energy! I value any contribution, even if it is just to highlight a typo.

Included here are some guidelines that can help streamline taking in your contribution. They are just guidelines and not hard-and-fast rules. Things will probably go faster and smoother if you have the time and energy to read and follow these suggestions.

Contributing Documentation

There's never enough! Pretty much anything is fair game to improve here.

Running the doc build yourself

To check your documentation additions, you can optionally build the docs yourself and see how the changes will look on the webpage.

To serve them up, and then automatically rebuild and refresh the docs in your browser, run:

$ ci/build-docs.sh serve

And then click on the URL that it prints out after it has performed the first build.

Any arguments passed to build-docs.sh are passed down to the underlying mkdocs utility.

Look at mkdocs serve for more information on additional parameters.

Operating system specific installation instructions?

There are a lot of targets out there. Today we have docs that are Ubuntu biased and I know that there are a lot flavors of Linux. Rather than expand the README with instructions for those, please translate the instructions into steps that can be run in the get-deps script.

Contributing code

Yes please!

If you are new to the Rust language check out https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/.

Where to find things?

The term directory holds the core terminal model code. This is agnostic of any windowing system. If you want to add support for terminal escape sequences and that sort of thing, you probably want to be in the term dir. Keep in mind that for maximal compatibility and utility wezterm aims to be compatible with the xterm behavior. https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html is a useful resource!

The src directory holds the code for the wezterm program. This is the GUI renderer for the terminal model. If you want to change something about the GUI you want to be in the src dir.

Iterating

I tend to iterate and sanity check as I develop using cargo check; it will type-check your code without generating code which is much faster than building everything in release mode:

$ cargo check

Likewise, if you want to quick check that something works, you can run it in debug mode using:

$ cargo run

This will produce a debug instrumented binary with poor optimization. This will give you more detail in the backtrace produced if you run RUST_BACKTRACE=1 cargo run.

If you get a panic and want to examine local variables, you'll need to use gdb:

$ cargo build
$ gdb ./target/debug/wezterm
$ break rust_panic               # hit tab to complete the name of the panic symbol!
$ run
$ bt

Please include tests to cover your changes!

This will help ensure that your contributions keep working as things change.

You can run the existing tests using:

$ cargo test --all

There are some helper classes for writing tests for terminal behavior. Here's an example of a test to verify that the terminal contents match expectations:

https://github.com/wez/wezterm/blob/master/term/src/test/mod.rs#L334

Please also make a point of adding comments to your tests to help clarify the intent of the test!

Please also include documentation if you are adding or changing behavior

This helps to keep things well-understood and working in the long term. Don't worry if you're not a wordsmith or English isn't your first language as I can help with that. It is more important to capture the intent of the feature and having this written out in English also helps when it comes to reviewing the code.

Submitting a Pull Request

After considering all of the above, and once you're prepared your contribution and are ready to submit it, you'll need to create a pull request.

If you're new to GitHub pull requests, read through https://help.github.com/articles/creating-a-pull-request/ to understand how that process works.

Before your submit your code

Make sure that the tests are working and that the code is correctly formatted otherwise the continuous integration system will fail your build:

$ rustup component add rustfmt-preview          # you only need to do this once
$ cargo test --all
$ cargo fmt --all