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About this project

The Federal Election Commission (FEC) is the independent regulatory agency charged with administering and enforcing the federal campaign finance law. The FEC has jurisdiction over the financing of campaigns for the U.S. House, Senate, Presidency and the Vice Presidency.

This project will provide a web application for filling out FEC campaign finance information. The project code is distributed across these repositories:

The FEC validator is designed around the disemination of FEC defined data specifications using the JSON Schema Specification.

The initial baseline spec for the definition of each form item is found in the FEC Format MS Excel spreadsheet found in the FEC Vendor Pack. (https://www.fec.gov/help-candidates-and-committees/filing-reports/fecfile-software/) See bin/generate-starter-schema.py for the script that created the initial schema definition files that were then manually curated and updated.

The data dictionary can be found in a human-freindly HTML format at: https://fecgov.github.io/fecfile-validate/

Custom Validation Algorithms

JSON schema properties with a "fec_" prefix are not part of the JSON Schema Standard but are custom validation enhancements performed by the FEC validation engine in addition to the validation performed by the JSON Schema Standard validation tools.

  • fec_recommended: Array of properties that if the property listed in the array is missing a value, the validation passes but with a warning issued about the missing value

Deployment (FEC team only)

Special Note: The requirements.txt field in the fecfile-web-api repo must be updated with the most recent commit hash for the commit changes to be pulled into the api build by CircleCI.

Create a feature branch

Using git-flow extensions: git flow feature start feature_branch

Without the git-flow extensions: git checkout develop git pull git checkout -b feature/feature_branch develop

  • Developer creates a GitHub PR when ready to merge to develop branch
  • Reviewer reviews and merges feature branch into develop via GitHub

Create a release branch

  • Using git-flow extensions:
git flow release start sprint-#
  • Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout develop
git pull
git checkout -b release/sprint-# develop
git push --set-upstream origin release/sprint-#
  • Developer creates a PR in GitHub to merge release/sprint-# branch into the main branch to track if commits pass deployment checks. The actual merge will happen when deploying a release to production.

Create and deploy a hotfix

  • Using git-flow extensions:
git flow hotfix start my-fix
# Work happens here
git flow hotfix finish my-fix
  • Without the git-flow extensions:
git checkout -b hotfix/my-fix main
# Work happens here
git push --set-upstream origin hotfix/my-fix
  • Developer creates a hotfix branch, commits changes, and makes a PR to the main and develop branches:
  • Reviewer merges hotfix/my-fix branch into develop and main
  • Developer deploys hotfix/my-fix branch to main using Deploying a release to production instructions below

Deploying a release to production

  • Reviewer approves PR and merges into main
  • Check CircleCI for passing pipeline tests
  • If tests pass, continue
  • (If commits were made to release/sprint-#) Developer creates a PR in GitHub to merge release/sprint-# branch into the develop branch
  • Reviewer approves PR and merges into develop
  • Delete release/sprint-# branch
  • Publish a new release using tag sprint-#, be sure to Auto-generate release notes
    • On Github, click on "Code" tab, then the "tags" link, then the "Releases" toggle
    • Click the button "Draft a new release"
    • Enter the new sprint tag "sprint-XX"
    • Set Target option to "main"
    • Set Release title to "sprint-XX"
    • Click the button "Generate release notes"
    • Click the "Publish release" button

Additional developer notes

This section covers a few topics we think might help developers after setup.

Git Secrets

Set up git secrets to protect oneself from committing sensitive information such as passwords to the repository.

Commit local code changes to origin daily

As a best practice policy, please commit any feature code changes made during the day to origin each evening before signing off for the day.

Google-style inline documentation

The project is using the Google Python Style Guide as the baseline to keep code style consistent across project repositories. See here for comment style rules: https://google.github.io/styleguide/pyguide.html#38-comments-and-docstrings