mirror of
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456 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
456 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
# Contributing
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<!--
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$ pip install md-toc
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$ md_toc -i gitlab CONTRIBUTING.md.template
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-->
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[](TOC)
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- [Contributing](#contributing)
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- [Introduction](#introduction)
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- [Setup](#setup)
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- [Setup SSH keys](#setup-ssh-keys)
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- [Setup Virtual Environments](#setup-virtual-environments)
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- [Project Types](#project-types)
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- [Project Layout](#project-layout)
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- [Dependency Management](#dependency-management)
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- [These are not used on production, or staging, only](#these-are-not-used-on-production-or-staging-only)
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- [on development machines and the CI environment.](#on-development-machines-and-the-ci-environment)
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- [These are the requirements produced for specific builds. They can be](#these-are-the-requirements-produced-for-specific-builds-they-can-be)
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- [used to debug version compatatbility issues . They are generated](#used-to-debug-version-compatatbility-issues-they-are-generated)
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- [using pip freeze](#using-pip-freeze)
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- [Vendoring](#vendoring)
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- [Development](#development)
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- [Linting](#linting)
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- [Type Checking](#type-checking)
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- [Documentation](#documentation)
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- [Setup to run docker](#setup-to-run-docker)
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- [PyCharm](#pycharm)
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- [Sublime Text](#sublime-text)
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- [Best Practices](#best-practices)
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[](TOC)
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## Introduction
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Friction for new contributors should be as low as possible. Ideally a
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new contributor, starting any unix[^1] system can go through these
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steps and not encounter any errors:
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1. `git clone <project_url>`
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2. `cd <project>`
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3. `make install`
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4. `# get some coffee`
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5. `make lint`
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6. `make test`
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7. `make serve`
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If you as a new contributor encounter any errors, then please create
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an issue report and you will already have made a great contribution!
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## Setup
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The development workflow described here is documented based on a Unix
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environment. Hopefully this will reduce discrepancies between
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development and production systems.
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### Setup SSH keys
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Projects which depend on private repositories require ssh to
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connect to remote servers. If this is the case, you should make
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sure that your ssh keys are available in `${HOME}/.ssh`, or you
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will have to do `ssh-keygen` and install the generated public
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key to host system. If this is not done, `pip install` will fail
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to install these dependencies from your private repositiories with
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an error like this
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```shell
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Downloading/unpacking git+git://...git
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Cloning Git repository git://
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Permission denied (publickey).
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fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly
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----------------------------------------
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Command /usr/local/bin/git clone ... failed with error code 128
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```
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### Setup Virtual Environments
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The first setup can take a while, since it will install miniconda and
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download lots of dependencies for the first time. If you would like to
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know more about conda, there is a good article written by Gergely
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Szerovay: https://medium.freecodecamp.org/85f155f4353c
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```shell
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dev@host:~
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$ git clone git@../group/project.git
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Cloning Git repository git@../group/project.git to project
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...
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$ cd project
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dev@host:~/project
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$ make install
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Solving environment:
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...
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```
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This will do quite a few things.
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1. Install miniconda3, if it isn't already installed. It checks
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the path `$HOME/miniconda3` for an existing installation
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2. Creates python virtual environments for all supported python
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versions of this project.
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3. Installs application and development dependencies to the
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environments.
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4. Installs vendored dependencies into `vendor/`
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If installation was successful, you should be able to at least
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run the linter (assuming previous developers have a bare minimum
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of diligence).
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```console
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$ make lint
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flake8 .. ok
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mypy .... ok
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doc ..... ok
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```
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If this is the first time conda has been installed on your
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system, you'll probably want to enable the `conda` command:
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```
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$ echo ". ${HOME}/miniconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh" >> ~/.bashrc
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$ conda --version
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conda 4.5.11
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```
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You can also activate the default virtual environment as follows.
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```shell
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(myproject_py36) dev@host:~/myproject
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$ source ./activate
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$ which python
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/home/dev/miniconda3/envs/myproject_py36/bin/python
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$ ipython
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Python 3.6.6 |Anaconda, Inc.| (default, Jun 28 2018, 17:14:51)
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t Type 'copyright', 'credits' or 'license' for more information
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IPython 6.5.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. Type '?' for help.
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In [1]: import sys
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In [2]: sys.path
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Out[2]:
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['/home/dev/miniconda3/envs/pycalver_py36/bin',
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'/home/dev/myproject/src',
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'/home/dev/myproject/vendor',
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...
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In [3]: import myproject
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In [4]: myproject.__file__
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Out[4]: '/home/dev/myproject/src/myproject/__init__.py'
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```
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Note that the `PYTHONPATH` has been set up to import modules
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of the project. You can review the definition for `make ipy`
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to see how to set up `PYTHONPATH` correctly.
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```shell
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$ make ipy --dry-run
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ENV=${ENV-dev} PYTHONPATH=src/:vendor/:$PYTHONPATH \
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/home/dev/miniconda3/envs/myproject_py36/bin/ipython
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$ make ipy
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Python 3.6.6 |Anaconda, Inc.| (default, Jun 28 2018, 17:14:51)
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Type 'copyright', 'credits' or 'license' for more information
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IPython 6.5.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. Type '?' for help.
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In [1]: import myproject
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In [2]: myproject.__file__
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Out[2]: '/home/dev/myproject/src/myproject/__init__.py'
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```
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## Project Types
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These guidelines written for different kinds of projects, each of
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which is ideally: small, focosued and reusable. These projects can be:
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1. Services: Projects which are deployed and run continuously.
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2. Libraries: Projects which are not deployed by themselves but
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installed and used by others.
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3. CLI Tools: Projects which are installed and mainly used by
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developers and admins.
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The choices made here are intended to make it easy to start new
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projects by reducing the burdon of project setup to a minimum.
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## Project Layout
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src/ # source code of project
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vendor/ # vendored dependencies
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stubs/ # mypy .pyi stub files
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test/ # pytest test files (files begin with test_)
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scripts/ # miscalenious scripts used deployment and ops
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requirements/ # dependency metadata files
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docs/ # documentation source files
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data/ # fixtures for unit tests and db initialization
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setup.py # main python package metadata
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setup.cfg # misc python tooling configuration
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README.md # project overview and status
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CONTRIBUTING.md # guide for developers
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CHANGELOG.md # short documentation of release history
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LICENSE # for public libraries (MIT preferred)
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makefile # project specific configuration
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# variables and make targets
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makefile.bootstrapit.make # bootstrapit make include library
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docker_base.Dockerfile # base image for CI (only conda envs)
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Dockerfile # image with source of the project
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### Dependency Management
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Dependencies are managed using a set of requirements/\*.txt files. You
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only need to know about this if you want to add or change a dependency.
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```shell
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requirements/conda.txt # installed via conda from main or conda-forge
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requirements/pypi.txt # installed via pip from pypi to virutal environments
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requirements/vendor.txt # installed via pip from pypi to vendor/
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# These are not used on production, or staging, only
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# on development machines and the CI environment.
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requirements/development.txt # useful packgages for development/debugging
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requirements/integration.txt # used for linting/testing/packaging
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# These are the requirements produced for specific builds. They can be
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# used to debug version compatatbility issues. They are generated
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# using make freeze
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requirements/20190214t212403_freeze.txt
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```
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When adding a new dependency please consider:
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- Only specify direct dependencies of the project, not transitive
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dependencies of other projects. These are installed via their
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own respective dependency declarations.
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- Whenever possible, the specifier for a package should be only its
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name without a version specifier. With this as the default, the
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project remains up to date in terms of security fixes and other
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library improvements.
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- Some packages consider some of their dependancies to be optional,
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in which case you will have to specify their transitive
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dependencies.
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- Only specify/pin/freeze a specific (older) version if there are
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known issues, or your project requires features from an unstable
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(alpha/beta) version of the package. Each pinned version should
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document why it was pinned, so that it can later be determined if
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the issue has been resolved in the meantime.
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One argument against this approach is the issue of rogue package
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maintainers. A package maintainer might release a new version which
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you automatically install using `make update`, and this new code opens
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a back door or proceeds to send data from your production system to a
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random server on the internet.
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The only prodection pypi or conda-forge have against this is to remove
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packages that are reported to them. If you are paranoid, you could
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start pinning dependencies to older versions, for which you feel
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comfortable that any issues would have been noticed. This is only a
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half measure however, since the issues may not be noticed even after
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months.
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Ultimately, if data breaches are a concern you should talk to your
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network admin about firewall rules and if data loss is a concern you
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should review your backup policy.
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Further Reading:
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https://hackernoon.com/building-a-botnet-on-pypi-be1ad280b8d6
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https://python-security.readthedocs.io/packages.html
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Dependencies are installed in this order:
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- `conda.txt`
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- `pypi.txt`
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- `vendor.txt`
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- `development.txt`
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- `integration.txt`
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Please review the documentation header at the beginning of each
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`requirements/*.txt` file to determine which file is appropriate
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for the dependency you want to add.
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Choose a file:
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- `conda.txt` is appropriate for non python packages and packages
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which would require compilation if they were downloaded from pypi
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or cannot be downloaded from pypi (such as openjdk or node).
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- `pypi.txt` is for dependencies on python packages, be they from
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pypi or git repositories.
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- `vendor.txt` is appropriate for pure python libaries which are
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written using mypy. This allows the mypy type checker to work with
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types defined in other packages
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After adding a new dependency, you can run `make update`
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```shell
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(myproject_py36) dev@host:~/myproject
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$ make update
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Solving environment: done
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Downloading and Extracting Packages
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requests-2.19.1 | 94 KB conda-forge
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...
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```
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Normally make update only does something if you update one of the
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`requirements/*.txt` files has changed. If you know a dependency
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was updated, and `make update` is not having an effect, you can
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force the update using `make force update`.
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### Vendoring
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Vendored dependencies are usually committed to git, but if you
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trust the package maintainer and the installation via `vendor.txt`,
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then it's not required.
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There are a few reasons to vendor a dependency:
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1. You want the source to be easilly accessible in your development
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tools. For example mypy can access the types of vendored projects.
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2. You don't trust the maintainer of a dependency, and want to review
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any updates using git diff.
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3. There is no maintainer or downloadable package, so your only option
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is to download it into a local directory. For example you may want to
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use some of the modules from https://github.com/TheAlgorithms/Python
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If you do vendor a dependency, avoid local modifications, instead
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contribute to the upstream project when possible.
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## Development
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The typical commands used during development are:
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- `make install`: Setup virtual environment
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- `source activate`: Activate virtual environment
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- `make help`: Overview of tasks
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- `make fmt`: Format code
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- `make lint`: Linting
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- `make mypy`: Typecheck
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- `make devtest`: Run unittests with dev interpreter against code from `src/`.
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Slightly less common but good to run before doing `git push`.
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- `make test`: Run unitests on all supported interpreters after installing
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using `python setup.py install`. This tests the code as the users of your
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library will have installed.
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- `make citest`: Run `make test` but inside a docker container, which is as
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close to the ci environment as possible. This is quite useful if you don't
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want to trigger dozens of CI builds to debug a tricky issue.
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### Docker
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The base image of the project is `docker_base.Dockerfile` which is
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used to create images that have only the conda virtual environment needed
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to run the project. The CI environment uses the image generated by
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`make docker_build`. While this means that the CI setup is simpler and faster,
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as you don't have to build the image for the test run in the CI environment, it does mean that you have to run `make docker_build` every time one of your dependencies is updated.
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The `docker_base.Dockerfile` uses the multi stage builder pattern, so that 1.
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your private key doesn't end up in the published image 2. the published image
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is as small as possible.
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```
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$ make docker_build
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Sending build context to Docker daemon 7.761MB
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Step 1/20 : FROM registry.gitlab.com/mbarkhau/bootstrapit/env_builder AS builder
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...
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conda create --name myproject_py36 python=3.6 ...
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Solving environment: ...working... done
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...
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conda create --name myproject_py35 python=3.5 ...
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Solving environment: ...working... done
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docker push
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```
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As is the case for your local development setup, every version of python
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that you have configured to be supported, is installed in the image. If
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you want to create a minimal image for a production system, you may wish
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to trim this down.
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### Documentation
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Documentation is written in Github Flavoured Markdown. Typora is
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decent cross platform editor.
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TODO: `make doc`
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### Editor Setup
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https://gitlab.com/mbarkhau/straitjacket#editortooling-integration
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TODO: Expand how to set editor, possibly by sharing editor config files?
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## Best Practices
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While not all practices linked here are followed (they are
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contradictory to each other in places), reading them will give you a
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good overview of how different people think about structuring their
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code in order to minimize common pitfalls.
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Please read, view at your leasure:
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- Talks:
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- [Stop Writing Classes by Jack Diederich](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9pEzgHorH0)
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- [The Naming of Ducks: Where Dynamic Types Meet Smart Conventions by Brandon Rhodes](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YklKUuDpX5c)
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- [Transforming Code into Beautiful, Idiomatic Python by Raymond Hettinger](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSGv2VnC0go)
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- [Beyond PEP 8 -- Best practices for beautiful intelligible code by Raymond Hettinger](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wf-BqAjZb8M)
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- Articles, Essays, Books:
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- Short ebook for Novice to Intermediate Pythonistas:
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[How to Make Mistakes in Python](https://www.oreilly.com/programming/free/how-to-make-mistakes-in-python.csp)
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- [The Little Book of Python Anti-Patterns](https://docs.quantifiedcode.com/python-anti-patterns/)
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- Style Guides:
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- https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
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- https://github.com/amontalenti/elements-of-python-style
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- https://github.com/google/styleguide/blob/gh-pages/pyguide.md
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Keep in mind, that all of this is about the form of your code, and
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catching common pitfalls or gotchas. None of this releives you of the
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burdon of thinking about your code. The reason to use linters and type
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checking is not to have a tool to make your code correct, but to
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support you to make your code correct.
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For now I won't go into the effort of writing yet another style guide.
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Instead, if your code passes `make fmt lint`, then it's acceptable.
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Every time you encounter a linting error, consider it as an opportinity
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to learn a best practice and look up the error code.
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[^1]: Linux, MacOS and [WSL](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10)
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