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66 lines
2.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
66 lines
2.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _submitting_pull_requests:
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*********************************
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`Submitting Pull Requests`:index:
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*********************************
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Before developing a feature or bug fix for pgAdmin you should always contact
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the developers on the mailing list pgadmin-hackers@postgresql.org to discuss
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your plans. This ensures that others know what you are doing and can then
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avoid duplicating your work, and in the case of large changes, gives the
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community the chance to discuss and refine your ideas before investing too
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much time writing code that may later be rejected.
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You should always develop changes against a checkout of the source code from
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the GIT source code repository, and not a release tarball. This ensures that
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you're working with the latest code on the branch and makes it easier to
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generate Pull Requests correctly.
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As of September 2022, the pgAdmin source repository can found at
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https://github.com/pgadmin-org/pgadmin4. A typical workflow for a relatively
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simple change might look as follows:
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1. Visit the pgAdmin 4 project on GitHub, and click the *Fork* button to create
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your own development repository in your GitHub account.
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2. Checkout a local copy of the source code with a command like:
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ git clone https://github.com/<your GitHub username>/pgadmin4.git
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3. Develop and test your change in your local development environment.
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4. Review your changes and check them thoroughly to ensure they meet the
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pgAdmin :doc:`coding_standards`, and review them against the
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:doc:`code_review` to minimise the chances of them being rejected.
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5. Once you're happy with your change, commit it with a suitable message.
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Include a one-line summary at the top, and if appropriate, further
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paragraphs following a blank line after the summary.
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6. Push your changes to your fork of the repository.
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7. Back in GitHub, create a new Pull Request against the *pgadmin-org/pgadmin4*
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*master* branch.
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.. note::
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Each Pull Request should encompass a single bug fix or feature as a single
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commit. If necessary, you should squash multiple commits for larger changes
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or features into a single commit before submitting.
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8. Your Pull Request will be reviewed by one or more members of the development
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team and either accepted or sent back with requested changes. In some cases
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it may be rejected if the change is not considered appropriate - this is
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why it's important to discuss your work with the team before spending any
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significant time on it.
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For more complex changes, you may wish to use a *Feature Branch* in your fork
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of the pgAdmin repository, and use that to create the Pull Request.
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.. note::
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This is a simple example of a workflow. You may choose to use other
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tools such as the `GitHub CLI <https://cli.github.com>`_ instead; documenting
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such tools and workflows is outside the scope of the pgAdmin documentation
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however.
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