3948fcb03c
This file is mega out-of-date and no longer helpful. Remove it. Change-Id: Ic7e215c3e48a9c453d19355ad7d683494811d2af Signed-off-by: Stephen Finucane <sfinucan@redhat.com>
299 lines
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299 lines
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ReStructuredText
Contributing to DevStack
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========================
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General
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-------
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DevStack is written in UNIX shell script. It uses a number of bash-isms
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and so is limited to Bash (version 4 and up) and compatible shells.
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Shell script was chosen because it best illustrates the steps used to
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set up and interact with OpenStack components.
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DevStack's official repository is located on opendev.org at
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https://opendev.org/openstack/devstack. Besides the master branch that
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tracks the OpenStack trunk branches a separate branch is maintained for all
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OpenStack releases starting with Diablo (stable/diablo).
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Contributing code to DevStack follows the usual OpenStack process as described
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in `How To Contribute`__ in the OpenStack wiki. `DevStack's LaunchPad project`__
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contains the usual links for blueprints, bugs, etc.
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__ contribute_
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.. _contribute: https://docs.openstack.org/infra/manual/developers.html
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__ lp_
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.. _lp: https://launchpad.net/devstack
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The `Gerrit review
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queue <https://review.opendev.org/#/q/project:openstack/devstack>`__
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is used for all commits.
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The primary script in DevStack is ``stack.sh``, which performs the bulk of the
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work for DevStack's use cases. There is a subscript ``functions`` that contains
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generally useful shell functions and is used by a number of the scripts in
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DevStack.
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A number of additional scripts can be found in the ``tools`` directory that may
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be useful in supporting DevStack installations. Of particular note are ``info.sh``
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to collect and report information about the installed system, and ``install_prereqs.sh``
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that handles installation of the prerequisite packages for DevStack. It is
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suitable, for example, to pre-load a system for making a snapshot.
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Repo Layout
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-----------
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The DevStack repo generally keeps all of the primary scripts at the root
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level.
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``doc`` - Contains the Sphinx source for the documentation.
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A complete doc build can be run with ``tox -edocs``.
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``extras.d`` - Contains the dispatch scripts called by the hooks in
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``stack.sh``, ``unstack.sh`` and ``clean.sh``. See :doc:`the plugins
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docs <plugins>` for more information.
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``files`` - Contains a variety of otherwise lost files used in
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configuring and operating DevStack. This includes templates for
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configuration files and the system dependency information. This is also
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where image files are downloaded and expanded if necessary.
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``lib`` - Contains the sub-scripts specific to each project. This is
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where the work of managing a project's services is located. Each
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top-level project (Keystone, Nova, etc) has a file here. Additionally
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there are some for system services and project plugins. These
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variables and functions are also used by related projects, such as
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Grenade, to manage a DevStack installation.
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``samples`` - Contains a sample of the local files not included in the
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DevStack repo.
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``tests`` - the DevStack test suite is rather sparse, mostly consisting
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of test of specific fragile functions in the ``functions`` and
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``functions-common`` files.
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``tools`` - Contains a collection of stand-alone scripts. While these
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may reference the top-level DevStack configuration they can generally be
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run alone.
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Scripts
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-------
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DevStack scripts should generally begin by calling ``env(1)`` in the shebang line::
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
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Sometimes the script needs to know the location of the DevStack install directory.
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``TOP_DIR`` should always point there, even if the script itself is located in
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a subdirectory::
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# Keep track of the current DevStack directory.
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TOP_DIR=$(cd $(dirname "$0") && pwd)
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Many scripts will utilize shared functions from the ``functions`` file. There are
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also rc files (``stackrc`` and ``openrc``) that are often included to set the primary
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configuration of the user environment::
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# Keep track of the current DevStack directory.
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TOP_DIR=$(cd $(dirname "$0") && pwd)
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# Import common functions
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source $TOP_DIR/functions
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# Import configuration
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source $TOP_DIR/openrc
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``stack.sh`` is a rather large monolithic script that flows through from beginning
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to end. It has been broken down into project-specific subscripts (as noted above)
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located in ``lib`` to make ``stack.sh`` more manageable and to promote code reuse.
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These library sub-scripts have a number of fixed entry points, some of which may
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just be stubs. These entry points will be called by ``stack.sh`` in the
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following order::
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install_XXXX
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configure_XXXX
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init_XXXX
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start_XXXX
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stop_XXXX
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cleanup_XXXX
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There is a sub-script template in ``lib/templates`` to be used in creating new
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service sub-scripts. The comments in ``<>`` are meta comments describing
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how to use the template and should be removed.
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In order to show the dependencies and conditions under which project functions
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are executed the top-level conditional testing for things like ``is_service_enabled``
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should be done in ``stack.sh``. There may be nested conditionals that need
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to be in the sub-script, such as testing for keystone being enabled in
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``configure_swift()``.
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stackrc
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-------
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``stackrc`` is the global configuration file for DevStack. It is responsible for
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calling ``local.conf`` (or ``localrc`` if it exists) so local user configuration
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is recognized.
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The criteria for what belongs in ``stackrc`` can be vaguely summarized as
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follows:
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* All project repositories and branches handled directly in ``stack.sh``
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* Global configuration that may be referenced in ``local.conf``, i.e. ``DEST``, ``DATA_DIR``
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* Global service configuration like ``ENABLED_SERVICES``
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* Variables used by multiple services that do not have a clear owner, i.e.
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``VOLUME_BACKING_FILE_SIZE`` (nova-compute and cinder) or
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``PUBLIC_NETWORK_NAME`` (only neutron but formerly nova-network too)
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* Variables that can not be cleanly declared in a project file due to
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dependency ordering, i.e. the order of sourcing the project files can
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not be changed for other reasons but the earlier file needs to dereference a
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variable set in the later file. This should be rare.
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Also, variable declarations in ``stackrc`` before ``local.conf`` is sourced
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do NOT allow overriding (the form
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``FOO=${FOO:-baz}``); if they did then they can already be changed in ``local.conf``
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and can stay in the project file.
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Documentation
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-------------
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The DevStack repo now contains all of the static pages of devstack.org in
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the ``doc/source`` directory. The OpenStack CI system rebuilds the docs after every
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commit and updates devstack.org (now a redirect to https://docs.openstack.org/devstack/latest/).
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All of the scripts are processed with shocco_ to render them with the comments
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as text describing the script below. For this reason we tend to be a little
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verbose in the comments _ABOVE_ the code they pertain to. Shocco also supports
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Markdown formatting in the comments; use it sparingly. Specifically, ``stack.sh``
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uses Markdown headers to divide the script into logical sections.
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.. _shocco: https://github.com/dtroyer/shocco/tree/rst_support
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The script used to drive <code>shocco</code> is <code>tools/build_docs.sh</code>.
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The complete docs build is also handled with <code>tox -edocs</code> per the
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OpenStack project standard.
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Bash Style Guidelines
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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DevStack defines a bash set of best practices for maintaining large
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collections of bash scripts. These should be considered as part of the
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review process.
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DevStack uses the bashate_ style checker
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to enforce basic guidelines, similar to pep8 and flake8 tools for Python. The
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list below is not complete for what bashate checks, nor is it all checked
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by bashate. So many lines of code, so little time.
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.. _bashate: https://pypi.org/project/bashate/
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Whitespace Rules
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----------------
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- lines should not include trailing whitespace
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- there should be no hard tabs in the file
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- indents are 4 spaces, and all indentation should be some multiple of
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them
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Control Structure Rules
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-----------------------
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- then should be on the same line as the if
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- do should be on the same line as the for
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Example::
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if [[ -r $TOP_DIR/local.conf ]]; then
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LRC=$(get_meta_section_files $TOP_DIR/local.conf local)
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for lfile in $LRC; do
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if [[ "$lfile" == "localrc" ]]; then
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if [[ -r $TOP_DIR/localrc ]]; then
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warn $LINENO "localrc and local.conf:[[local]] both exist, using localrc"
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else
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echo "# Generated file, do not edit" >$TOP_DIR/.localrc.auto
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get_meta_section $TOP_DIR/local.conf local $lfile >>$TOP_DIR/.localrc.auto
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fi
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fi
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done
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fi
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Variables and Functions
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-----------------------
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- functions should be used whenever possible for clarity
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- functions should use ``local`` variables as much as possible to
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ensure they are isolated from the rest of the environment
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- local variables should be lower case, global variables should be
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upper case
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- function names should_have_underscores, NotCamelCase.
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- functions should be declared as per the regex ^function foo {$
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with code starting on the next line
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Review Criteria
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---------------
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There are some broad criteria that will be followed when reviewing
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your change
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* **Is it passing tests** -- your change will not be reviewed
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thoroughly unless the official CI has run successfully against it.
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* **Does this belong in DevStack** -- DevStack reviewers have a
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default position of "no" but are ready to be convinced by your
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change.
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For very large changes, you should consider :doc:`the plugins system
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<plugins>` to see if your code is better abstracted from the main
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repository.
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For smaller changes, you should always consider if the change can be
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encapsulated by per-user settings in ``local.conf``. A common example
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is adding a simple config-option to an ``ini`` file. Specific flags
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are not usually required for this, although adding documentation
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about how to achieve a larger goal (which might include turning on
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various settings, etc) is always welcome.
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* **Work-arounds** -- often things get broken and DevStack can be in a
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position to fix them. Work-arounds are fine, but should be
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presented in the context of fixing the root-cause of the problem.
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This means it is well-commented in the code and the change-log and
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mostly likely includes links to changes or bugs that fix the
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underlying problem.
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* **Should this be upstream** -- DevStack generally does not override
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default choices provided by projects and attempts to not
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unexpectedly modify behavior.
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* **Context in commit messages** -- DevStack touches many different
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areas and reviewers need context around changes to make good
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decisions. We also always want it to be clear to someone -- perhaps
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even years from now -- why we were motivated to make a change at the
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time.
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Making Changes, Testing, and CI
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-------------------------------
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Changes to Devstack are tested by automated continuous integration jobs
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that run on a variety of Linux Distros using a handful of common
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configurations. What this means is that every change to Devstack is
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self testing. One major benefit of this is that developers do not
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typically need to add new non voting test jobs to add features to
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Devstack. Instead the features can be added, then if testing passes
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with the feature enabled the change is ready to merge (pending code
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review).
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A concrete example of this was the switch from screen based service
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management to systemd based service management. No new jobs were
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created for this. Instead the features were added to devstack, tested
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locally and in CI using a change that enabled the feature, then once
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the enabling change was passing and the new behavior communicated and
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documented it was merged.
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Using this process has been proven to be effective and leads to
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quicker implementation of desired features.
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