Thanks for your interest in Sceptre! We greatly appreciate any contributions to the project.
This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behaviour to [email protected].
Before submitting a bug, please check our issues page to see if it's already been reported.
When reporting a bug, fill out the required template, and please include as much detail as possible as it helps us resolve issues faster.
Enhancement proposals should:
- Use a descriptive title.
- Provide a step-by-step description of the suggested enhancement.
- Provide specific examples to demonstrate the steps.
- Describe the current behaviour and explain which behaviour you expected to see instead.
- Keep the scope as narrow as possible, to make it easier to implement.
Contributions should be made in response to a particular GitHub Issue. We find it easier to review code if we've already discussed what it should do, and assessed if it fits with the wider codebase.
Beginner friendly issues are marked with the beginner friendly
tag. We'll
endeavour to write clear instructions on what we want to do, why we want to do
it, and roughly how to do it. Feel free to ask us any questions that may arise.
A good pull request:
- Is clear.
- Works across all supported version of Python.
- Complies with the existing codebase style (flake8, pylint).
- Includes docstrings and comments for unintuitive sections of code.
- Includes documentation for new features.
- Includes tests cases that demonstrates the previous flaw that now passes with the included patch, or demonstrates the newly added feature.
- New code should have 100% test coverage. The build will fail if overall code-coverage falls below 92%.
- Is appropriately licensed (Apache 2.0).
Please keep in mind:
- The benefit of contribution must be compared against the cost of maintaining the feature, as maintenance burden of new contributions are usually put on the maintainers of the project.
-
Fork the
sceptre
repository on GitHub. -
Clone your fork locally
$ git clone [email protected]:<github_username>/sceptre.git
- Install Sceptre for development (we recommend you use a virtual environment)
$ cd sceptre/
$ pip install -r requirements/prod.txt
$ pip install -r requirements/dev.txt
$ pip install -e .
- Create a branch for local development:
$ git checkout -b <branch-name>
-
When you're done making changes, check that your changes pass linting, unit tests and have sufficient coverage and integration tests pass:
Check linting:
$ make lint
Run unit tests or coverage in your current environment - (handy for quickly running unit tests):
$ make test $ make coverage
Note: Sceptre aims to be compatible with Python 2 & 3, please run unit test against both versions. You will need the corresponding versions of Python installed on your system.
Run unit tests and coverage using tox for Python 2.7, 3.6 and 3.7:
$ tox -e py27 $ tox -e py36 -e py37
If you use pyenv to manage Python versions, try pip install tox-pyenv
to make
tox and pyenv play nicely.
Run integration tests:
If you haven't setup your local environment or personal CircleCI account to run integration tests then follow these steps:
To run on CircleCi (please do this before submitting your PR so we can see that your tests are passing):
- Login to CircleCi using your Github Account.
- Click
Add Projects
, you will be presented with a list of projects from your GitHub Account. - On your sceptre fork press the
Set Up Project
button. - You can ignore the setup steps, we already have a CircleCi config file in Sceptre. Click "Start Building".
- Modify the
Project Settings
, which can be found by navigating:Builds -> Sceptre
and selecting theSettings
icon, on the right hand side of the page. - Once in the
Project Settings
section underPermissions
selectAWS Permissions
. - Add your
Access Key ID
andSecret Access Key
that is associated with an IAM User from your AWS account. The IAM User will require "Full" permissions forCloudFormation
andS3
and Write permissions forSTS
(AssumeRole).
Once you have set up CircleCi any time you commit to a branch in your fork all tests will be run, including integration tests.
You can also (optionally) run the integration tests locally, which is quicker during development.
To run integration tests locally:
pip install awscli
- Setup AWS CLI Environment variables to work with an AWS account that you have access to. You can use the same user that you use for CircleCi.
pip install behave
run:
$ behave integration-tests
or to run a specific tests:
$ behave integration-tests -n "scenario-name"
Note: All integration tests are setup to run in eu-west-*
region. If you prefer
to run in a different region you must update the region in each test before running it.
-
Make sure the changes comply with the pull request guidelines in the section on
Contributing Code
. -
Commit and push your changes.
Commit messages should follow these guidelines
Use the following commit message format
[Resolves #issue_number] Short description of change
.e.g.
[Resolves #123] Fix description of resolver syntax in documentation
-
Submit a pull request through the GitHub website.
This document took inspiration from the CONTRIBUTING files of the Atom and Boto3 projects.