Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
207 lines (129 loc) · 8.59 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

207 lines (129 loc) · 8.59 KB

Contributing to API Platform

First of all, thank you for contributing, you're awesome!

To have your code integrated in the API Platform project, there are some rules to follow, but don't panic, it's easy!

Reporting Bugs

If you happen to find a bug, we kindly request you to report it. However, before submitting it, please:

Then, if it appears that it's a real bug, you may report it using GitHub by following these 3 points:

  • Check if the bug is not already reported!
  • A clear title to resume the issue
  • A description of the workflow needed to reproduce the bug

NOTE: Don't hesitate giving as much information as you can (OS, PHP version extensions...)

Pull Requests

Writing a Pull Request

First of all, you must decide on what branch your changes will be based depending of the nature of the change. See the dedicated documentation entry.

To prepare your patch directly in the vendor/ of an existing project (convenient to fix a bug):

  1. Remove the existing copy of the library: rm -Rf vendor/api-platform/core
  2. Reinstall the lib while keeping Git metadata: composer install --prefer-source
  3. You can now work directly in vendor/api-platform/core, create a new branch: git checkout -b my_patch
  4. When your patch is ready, fork the project and add your Git remote: git remote add <your-name> [email protected]:<your-name>/core.git
  5. You can now push your code and open your Pull Request: git push <your-name> my_patch

Alternatively, you can also work with the test application we provide:

cd tests/Fixtures/app
./console assets:install --symlink
symfony serve

# if you prefer keeping the server in your terminal:
symfony server:start --dir tests/Fixtures/app

# or if you prefer using the PHP built-in web server
php -S localhost:8000 -t public/

You also have access to a console:

APP_DEBUG=1 tests/Fixtures/app/console debug:config

Matching Coding Standards

The API Platform project follows Symfony coding standards. But don't worry, you can fix CS issues automatically using the PHP CS Fixer tool:

php-cs-fixer.phar fix

And then, add the fixed file to your commit before pushing. Be sure to add only your modified files. If any other file is fixed by cs tools, just revert it before committing.

Backward Compatibility Promise

API Platform is following the Symfony Backward Compatibility Promise.

As users need to use named arguments when using our attributes, they don't follow the backward compatibility rules applied to the constructor.

When you are making a change, make sure no BC break is added.

Deprecating Code

Adding a deprecation is sometimes necessary in order to follow the backward compatibility promise and to improve an existing implementation.

They can only be introduced in minor or major versions (main branch) and exceptionally in patch versions if they are critical.

See also the related documentation for Symfony.

Sending a Pull Request

When you send a PR, just make sure that:

  • You add valid test cases (Behat and PHPUnit).
  • Tests are green.
  • You make a PR on the related documentation in the api-platform/docs repository.
  • You make the PR on the same branch you based your changes on. If you see commits that you did not make in your PR, you're doing it wrong.
  • Also don't forget to add a comment when you update a PR with a ping to the maintainers, so he/she will get a notification.

The commit messages must follow the Conventional Commits specification. The following types are allowed:

  • fix: bug fix
  • feat: new feature
  • docs: change in the documentation
  • spec: spec change
  • test: test-related change
  • perf: performance optimization
  • ci: CI-related change
  • chore: updating dependencies and related changes

Examples:

fix(metadata): resource identifiers from properties 

feat(validation): introduce a number constraint

feat(metadata)!: new resource metadata system, BC break

docs(doctrine): search filter on uuids

test(doctrine): mongodb disambiguation

We strongly recommend the use of a scope on API Platform core. Only the first commit on a Pull Request need to use a conventional commit, other commits will be squashed.

Tests

On api-platform/core there are two kinds of tests: unit (phpunit) and integration tests (behat).

Note that we stopped using prophesize for new tests since 3.2, use phpunit stub system.

Both phpunit and behat are development dependencies and should be available in the vendor directory.

Recommendations:

  • don't change existing tests if possible
  • always add a new ApiResource or a new Entity/Document to add a new test instead of changing an existing class
  • as of API Platform 3 each component has its own test directory, avoid the tests/ directory except for functional tests
  • dependencies between components must be kept at its minimal (api-platform/metadata, api-platform/state) except for bridges (Doctrine, Symfony, Laravel etc.)
  • for functional testing with phpunit (see tests/Functional, add your ApiResource to ApiPlatform\Tests\Fixtures\PhpUnitResourceNameCollectionFactory)

Note that in most of the testing, you don't need Doctrine take a look at how we write fixtures at:

#[ApiResource(
operations: [
new Get(
provider: [TestIssue5926::class, 'provide']
),
]
)]

PHPUnit and Coverage Generation

To launch unit tests:

vendor/bin/phpunit --stop-on-defect

If you want coverage, you will need the pcov PHP extension and run:

vendor/bin/phpunit --coverage-html coverage --stop-on-defect

Sometimes there might be an error with too many open files when generating coverage. To fix this, you can increase the ulimit, for example:

ulimit -n 4000

Coverage will be available in coverage/index.html.

Behat

The command to launch Behat tests is:

php -d memory_limit=-1 ./vendor/bin/behat --profile=default --stop-on-failure --format=progress

If you want to launch Behat tests for MongoDB, the command is:

MONGODB_URL=mongodb://localhost:27017 APP_ENV=mongodb php -d memory_limit=-1 ./vendor/bin/behat --profile=mongodb --stop-on-failure --format=progress

To get more details about an error, replace --format=progress by -vvv. You may run a mongo instance using docker:

docker run -p 27017:27017 mongo:latest

Start by adding a fixture, usually using Doctrine entities in tests/Fixtures/TestBundle/Entity. Note that we often duplicate the fixture in the tests/Fixtures/TestBundle/Document directory for MongoDB ODM, if your test doesn't need to be tested with MongoDB use the @!mongodb group on the Behat scenario. If you need a Given step, add it to the doctrine context in tests/Core/Behat/DoctrineContext.php, for example:

    /**
     * @Given there is a payment
     */
    public function thereIsAPayment()
    {
        $this->manager->persist(new Payment('123.45'));
        $this->manager->flush();
    }

The last step is to add you feature inside features/. You can add your test in one of our existing features, or create your own.

Components tests

API Platform is split into several components. There are tests for each of these, to run them cd src/Doctrine/Common then composer update and ./vendor/bin/phpunit. We do not provide a way to run all these tests at once yet.

License and Copyright Attribution

When you open a Pull Request to the API Platform project, you agree to license your code under the MIT license and to transfer the copyright on the submitted code to Kévin Dunglas.

Be sure to you have the right to do that (if you are a professional, ask your company)!

If you include code from another project, please mention it in the Pull Request description and credit the original author.

Releases

This section is for maintainers.

  1. Update the JavaScript dependencies by running ./update-js.sh (always check if it works in a browser)
  2. Update the CHANGELOG.md file (be sure to include Pull Request numbers when appropriate)
  3. Create a signed tag: git tag -s vX.Y.Z -m "Version X.Y.Z"
  4. Create a release using GitHub's UI and copy the changelog
  5. Create a new release of api-platform/api-platform