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302 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
302 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Contributing to Open MCT
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This document describes the process of contributing to Open MCT as well
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as the standards that will be applied when evaluating contributions.
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Please be aware that additional agreements will be necessary before we can
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accept changes from external contributors.
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## Summary
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The short version:
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1. Write your contribution.
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2. Make sure your contribution meets code, test, and commit message
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standards as described below.
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3. Submit a pull request from a topic branch back to `master`. Include a check
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list, as described below. (Optionally, assign this to a specific member
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for review.)
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4. Respond to any discussion. When the reviewer decides it's ready, they
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will merge back `master` and fill out their own check list.
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## Contribution Process
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Open MCT uses git for software version control, and for branching and
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merging. The central repository is at
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https://github.com/nasa/openmct.git.
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### Roles
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References to roles are made throughout this document. These are not intended
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to reflect titles or long-term job assignments; rather, these are used as
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descriptors to refer to members of the development team performing tasks in
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the check-in process. These roles are:
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* _Author_: The individual who has made changes to files in the software
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repository, and wishes to check these in.
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* _Reviewer_: The individual who reviews changes to files before they are
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checked in.
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* _Integrator_: The individual who performs the task of merging these files.
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Usually the reviewer.
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### Branching
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Three basic types of branches may be included in the above repository:
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1. Master branch
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2. Topic branches
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3. Developer branches
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Branches which do not fit into the above categories may be created and used
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during the course of development for various reasons, such as large-scale
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refactoring of code or implementation of complex features which may cause
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instability. In these exceptional cases it is the responsibility of the
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developer who initiates the task which motivated this branching to
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communicate to the team the role of these branches and any associated
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procedures for the duration of their use.
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#### Master Branch
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The role of the `master` branches is to represent the latest
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"ready for test" version of the software. Source code on the master
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branch has undergone peer review, and will undergo regular automated
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testing with notification on failure. Master branches may be unstable
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(particularly for recent features), but the intent is for the stability of
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any features on master branches to be non-decreasing. It is the shared
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responsibility of authors, reviewers, and integrators to ensure this.
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#### Topic Branches
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Topic branches are used by developers to perform and record work on issues.
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Topic branches need not necessarily be stable, even when pushed to the
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central repository; in fact, the practice of making incremental commits
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while working on an issue and pushing these to the central repository is
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encouraged, to avoid lost work and to share work-in-progress. (Small commits
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also help isolate changes, which can help in identifying which change
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introduced a defect, particularly when that defect went unnoticed for some
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time, e.g. using `git bisect`.)
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Topic branches should be named according to their corresponding issue
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identifiers, all lower case, without hyphens. (e.g. branch mct9 would refer
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to issue #9.)
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In some cases, work on an issue may warrant the use of multiple divergent
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branches; for instance, when a developer wants to try more than one solution
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and compare them, or when a "dead end" is reached and an initial approach to
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resolving an issue needs to be abandoned. In these cases, a short suffix
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should be added to the additional branches; this may be simply a single
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character (e.g. wtd481b) or, where useful, a descriptive term for what
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distinguishes the branches (e.g. wtd481verbose). It is the responsibility of
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the author to communicate which branch is intended to be merged to both the
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reviewer and the integrator.
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#### Developer Branches
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Developer branches are any branches used for purposes outside of the scope
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of the above; e.g. to try things out, or maintain a "my latest stuff"
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branch that is not delayed by the review and integration process. These
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may be pushed to the central repository, and may follow any naming convention
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desired so long as the owner of the branch is identifiable, and so long as
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the name chosen could not be mistaken for a topic or master branch.
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### Merging
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When development is complete on an issue, the first step toward merging it
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back into the master branch is to file a Pull Request. The contributions
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should meet code, test, and commit message standards as described below,
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and the pull request should include a completed author checklist, also
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as described below. Pull requests may be assigned to specific team
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members when appropriate (e.g. to draw to a specific person's attention).
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Code review should take place using discussion features within the pull
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request. When the reviewer is satisfied, they should add a comment to
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the pull request containing the reviewer checklist (from below) and complete
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the merge back to the master branch.
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## Standards
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Contributions to Open MCT are expected to meet the following standards.
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In addition, reviewers should use general discretion before accepting
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changes.
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### Code Standards
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JavaScript sources in Open MCT must satisfy JSLint under its default
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settings. This is verified by the command line build.
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#### Code Guidelines
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JavaScript sources in Open MCT should:
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* Use four spaces for indentation. Tabs should not be used.
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* Include JSDoc for any exposed API (e.g. public methods, constructors).
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* Include non-JSDoc comments as-needed for explaining private variables,
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methods, or algorithms when they are non-obvious.
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* Define one public class per script, expressed as a constructor function
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returned from an AMD-style module.
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* Follow “Java-like” naming conventions. These includes:
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* Classes should use camel case, first letter capitalized
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(e.g. SomeClassName).
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* Methods, variables, fields, and function names should use camel case,
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first letter lower-case (e.g. someVariableName).
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* Constants (variables or fields which are meant to be declared and
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initialized statically, and never changed) should use only capital
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letters, with underscores between words (e.g. SOME_CONSTANT).
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* File names should be the name of the exported class, plus a .js extension
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(e.g. SomeClassName.js).
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* Avoid anonymous functions, except when functions are short (a few lines)
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and/or their inclusion makes sense within the flow of the code
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(e.g. as arguments to a forEach call).
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* Avoid deep nesting (especially of functions), except where necessary
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(e.g. due to closure scope).
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* End with a single new-line character.
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* Expose public methods by declaring them on the class's prototype.
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* Within a given function's scope, do not mix declarations and imperative
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code, and present these in the following order:
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* First, variable declarations and initialization.
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* Second, function declarations.
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* Third, imperative statements.
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* Finally, the returned value.
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Deviations from Open MCT code style guidelines require two-party agreement,
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typically from the author of the change and its reviewer.
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#### Code Example
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```js
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/*global define*/
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/**
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* Bundles should declare themselves as namespaces in whichever source
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* file is most like the "main point of entry" to the bundle.
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* @namespace some/bundle
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*/
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define(
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['./OtherClass'],
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function (OtherClass) {
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"use strict";
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/**
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* A summary of how to use this class goes here.
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*
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* @constructor
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* @memberof some/bundle
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*/
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function ExampleClass() {
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}
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// Methods which are not intended for external use should
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// not have JSDoc (or should be marked @private)
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ExampleClass.prototype.privateMethod = function () {
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};
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/**
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* A summary of this method goes here.
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* @param {number} n a parameter
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* @returns {number} a return value
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*/
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ExampleClass.prototype.publicMethod = function (n) {
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return n * 2;
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}
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return ExampleClass;
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}
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);
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```
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### Test Standards
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Automated testing shall occur whenever changes are merged into the main
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development branch and must be confirmed alongside any pull request.
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Automated tests are typically unit tests which exercise individual software
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components. Tests are subject to code review along with the actual
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implementation, to ensure that tests are applicable and useful.
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Examples of useful tests:
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* Tests which replicate bugs (or their root causes) to verify their
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resolution.
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* Tests which reflect details from software specifications.
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* Tests which exercise edge or corner cases among inputs.
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* Tests which verify expected interactions with other components in the
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system.
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During automated testing, code coverage metrics will be reported. Line
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coverage must remain at or above 80%.
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### Commit Message Standards
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Commit messages should:
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* Contain a one-line subject, followed by one line of white space,
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followed by one or more descriptive paragraphs, each separated by one
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 line of white space.
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* Contain a short (usually one word) reference to the feature or subsystem
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the commit effects, in square brackets, at the start of the subject line
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(e.g. `[Documentation] Draft of check-in process`).
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* Contain a reference to a relevant issue number in the body of the commit.
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* This is important for traceability; while branch names also provide this,
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you cannot tell from looking at a commit what branch it was authored on.
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* This may be omitted if the relevant issue is otherwise obvious from the
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commit history (that is, if using `git log` from the relevant commit
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directly leads to a similar issue reference) to minimize clutter.
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* Describe the change that was made, and any useful rationale therefore.
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* Comments in code should explain what things do, commit messages describe
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how they came to be done that way.
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* Provide sufficient information for a reviewer to understand the changes
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made and their relationship to previous code.
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Commit messages should not:
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* Exceed 54 characters in length on the subject line.
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* Exceed 72 characters in length in the body of the commit,
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* Except where necessary to maintain the structure of machine-readable or
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machine-generated text (e.g. error messages).
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See [Contributing to a Project](http://git-scm.com/book/ch5-2.html) from
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Pro Git by Shawn Chacon and Ben Straub for a bit of the rationale behind
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these standards.
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## Issue Reporting
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Issues are tracked at https://github.com/nasa/openmct/issues.
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Issues should include:
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* A short description of the issue encountered.
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* A longer-form description of the issue encountered. When possible, steps to
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reproduce the issue.
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* When possible, a description of the impact of the issue. What use case does
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it impede?
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* An assessment of the severity of the issue.
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Issue severity is categorized as follows (in ascending order):
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* _Trivial_: Minimal impact on the usefulness and functionality of the
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software; a "nice-to-have."
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* _(Unspecified)_: Major loss of functionality or impairment of use.
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* _Critical_: Large-scale loss of functionality or impairment of use,
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such that remaining utility becomes marginal.
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* _Blocker_: Harmful or otherwise unacceptable behavior. Must fix.
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## Check Lists
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The following check lists should be completed and attached to pull requests
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when they are filed (author checklist) and when they are merged (reviewer
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checklist).
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### Author Checklist
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1. Changes address original issue?
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2. Unit tests included and/or updated with changes?
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3. Command line build passes?
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4. Changes have been smoke-tested?
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### Reviewer Checklist
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1. Changes appear to address issue?
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2. Appropriate unit tests included?
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3. Code style and in-line documentation are appropriate?
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4. Commit messages meet standards?
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