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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Sloop uses GitHub to manage contributions. You'll need to sign up for a GitHub account if you don't have one.

Steps to Contribute

  1. Pick an issue you are interested in working on. It’s a good idea to comment on an Issue that you want to help with and ask some questions before doing any major coding work

  2. Fork the repository: Look for the “Fork” button in the top right corner of salesforce/sloop repo

  3. Clone the fork: Click on the green “clone or download” button,you can choose “clone with HTTPS.” Or, you can use SSH, which is compatible with 2-factor authentication, but just some more work to set up. Go to the folder where you want to save the repository, type git clone that-https-url-you-copied

  4. Add a remote pointing to the original repository so you can sync changes: git remote add upstream git@github.com:salesforce/sloop.git

  5. Make a git branch: If you type git status you will see the branch name that you’re on, called master. In most projects, master is a special place where the most stable, reviewed, up-to-date code is. So, you’ll need to make your own branch and switch to that branch: git checkout -b name-for-your-branch

  6. Make some commits:

When you have some code that you want to keep, you should save it in git by creating a commit. Here’s how:

git status shows you the files you changed

git add path-to-your-file allows you to pre-select the files you want to save

git status again to make sure you added the files you want to keep

git commit -m "some message here #123" groups your changes together into a commit. The message should be short, describe the work that you did, and include the issue number that you are working on.

git push origin name-for-your-branch to save your work online

  1. Open a Pull Request: To create one, go to your fork of the project, click on the Pull Requests tab, and click the big green “New Pull Request” button. After you choose your branch, click the green “Create Pull Request” button. It will be super helpful if you can write a sentence or two summarizing the work you did and include a link to the Issue you were working on. If you are working on a new issue, please create one under Issues tab

  2. Expect changes and be patient: Next up, a maintainer or contributor will review your code. Once your work is approved, it will be merged in! Congratulations and thank you for giving back to the open source community :)

Pull Request Checklist

  1. Design

  2. Functionality

  3. Tests

  4. Naming

  5. Comments

Versioning & Dependency Management

Go Version

The Go Version required in Sloop is primarily influenced by two factors.

Firstly, the Go project supports 2 versions at a time for bug fixes and vulnerability patching. We target the lowest supported version to maximise compatibility with users systems.

Secondly, the Kubernetes client library used by Sloop for interacting with Kubernetes clusters defines its own required Go version.

Sloop uses whichever of these two versions is the most recent.

Kubernetes client-go

Sloop uses the client-go library for interacting with Kubernetes clusters.

The Kubernetes project has its own release cadence and maintains support for each release for a period of time. This support includes fixing bugs and patching vulnerabilities.

The Sloop project aims to only support Kubernetes releases that are currently maintained by the Kubernetes project. This is a sliding window of releases.

When a new Kubernetes version is released it may require updating the Go version to support the new client-go version compatible with the Kubernetes API.

It's possible that Sloop may continue to work for older end-of-life Kubernetes releases but that is outside of the Sloop project goals.

Go Modules

Sloop uses go modules. This requires a working Go environment with the version defined in the go.mod file or greater installed.

To add or update a new dependency:

  1. use go get to pull in the new dependency
  2. run go mod tidy

Protobuf Schema Changes

When changing schema in pkg/sloop/store/typed/schema.proto you will need to do the following:

  1. Install protobuf. On OSX you can do brew install protobuf
  2. Grab protoc-gen-go with go get -u github.com/golang/protobuf/protoc-gen-go
  3. Run this makefile target: make protobuf

Changes to Generated Code

Sloop uses genny to code-gen typed table wrappers. Any changes to pkg/sloop/store/typed/tabletemplate*.go will need to be followed with go generate. We have a Makefile target for this: make generate