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287 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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===========================
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How to contribute to Django
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===========================
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Django is developed 100% by the community, and the more people that are actively
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involved in the code the better Django will be. We recognize that contributing
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to Django can be daunting at first and sometimes confusing even to
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veterans. While we have our official "Contributing to Django" documentation
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which spells out the technical details of triaging tickets and submitting
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patches, it leaves a lot of room for interpretation. This guide aims to offer
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more general advice on issues such as how to interpret the various stages and
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flags in Trac, and how new contributors can get started.
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.. seealso::
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This guide is meant to answer the most common questions about
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contributing to Django, however it is no substitute for the
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:doc:`/internals/contributing` reference. Please make sure to
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read that document to understand the specific details
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involved in reporting issues and submitting patches.
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.. _the-spirit-of-contributing:
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"The Spirit of Contributing"
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============================
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Django uses Trac_ for managing our progress, and Trac is a community-tended
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garden of the bugs people have found and the features people would like to see
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added. As in any garden, sometimes there are weeds to be pulled and sometimes
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there are flowers and vegetables that need picking. We need your help to sort
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out one from the other, and in the end we all benefit together.
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Like all gardens, we can aspire to perfection but in reality there's no such
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thing. Even in the most pristine garden there are still snails and insects. In a
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community garden there are also helpful people who--with the best of
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intentions--fertilize the weeds and poison the roses. It's the job of the
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community as a whole to self-manage, keep the problems to a minimum, and educate
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those coming into the community so that they can become valuable contributing
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members.
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Similarly, while we aim for Trac to be a perfect representation of the state of
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Django's progress, we acknowledge that this simply will not happen. By
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distributing the load of Trac maintenance to the community, we accept that there
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will be mistakes. Trac is "mostly accurate", and we give allowances for the fact
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that sometimes it will be wrong. That's okay. We're perfectionists with
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deadlines.
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We rely on the community to keep participating, keep tickets as accurate as
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possible, and raise issues for discussion on our mailing lists when there is
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confusion or disagreement.
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Django is a community project, and every contribution helps. We can't do this
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without YOU!
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.. _Trac: http://code.djangoproject.com/
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Understanding Trac
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==================
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Trac is Django's sole official issue tracker. All known bugs, desired features
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and ideas for changes are logged there.
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However, Trac can be quite confusing even to veteran contributors. Having to
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look at both flags and triage stages isn't immediately obvious, and the stages
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themselves can be misinterpreted.
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What Django's triage stages "really mean"
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-----------------------------------------
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Unreviewed
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~~~~~~~~~~
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The ticket has not been reviewed by anyone who felt qualified to make a judgment
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about whether the ticket contained a valid issue, a viable feature, or ought to
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be closed for any of the various reasons.
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Accepted
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~~~~~~~~
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The big grey area! The absolute meaning of "accepted" is that the issue
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described in the ticket is valid and is in some stage of being worked on. Beyond
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that there are several considerations
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* **Accepted + No Flags**
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The ticket is valid, but no one has submitted a patch for it yet. Often this
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means you could safely start writing a patch for it.
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* **Accepted + Has Patch**
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The ticket is waiting for people to review the supplied patch. This means
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downloading the patch and trying it out, verifying that it contains tests and
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docs, running the test suite with the included patch, and leaving feedback on
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the ticket.
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* **Accepted + Has Patch + (any other flag)**
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This means the ticket has been reviewed, and has been found to need further
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work. "Needs tests" and "Needs documentation" are self-explanatory. "Patch
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needs improvement" will generally be accompanied by a comment on the ticket
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explaining what is needed to improve the code.
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Design Decision Needed
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This stage is for issues which may be contentious, may be backwards
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incompatible, or otherwise involve high-level design decisions. These decisions
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are generally made by the core committers, however that is not a
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requirement. See the FAQ below for "My ticket has been in DDN forever! What
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should I do?"
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Ready For Checkin
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ticket was reviewed by any member of the community other than the person who
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supplied the patch and found to meet all the requirements for a commit-ready
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patch. A core committer now needs to give the patch a final review prior to
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being committed. See the FAQ below for "My ticket has been in RFC forever! What
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should I do?"
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Someday/Maybe?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Generally only used for vague/high-level features or design ideas. These tickets
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are uncommon and overall less useful since they don't describe concrete
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actionable issues.
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Fixed on a branch
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Used to indicate that a ticket is resolved as part of a major body of work that
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will eventually be merged to trunk. Tickets in this stage generally don't need
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further work. This may happen in the case of major features/refactors in each
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release cycle, or as part of the annual Google Summer of Code efforts.
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Example Trac workflow
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---------------------
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Here we see the life-cycle of an average ticket:
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* Alice creates a ticket, and uploads an incomplete patch (no tests, incorrect
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implementation).
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* Bob reviews the patch, marks it "Accepted", "needs tests", and "patch needs
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improvement", and leaves a comment telling Alice how the patch could be
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improved.
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* Alice updates the patch, adding tests (but not changing the
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implementation). She removes the two flags.
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* Charlie reviews the patch and resets the "patch needs improvement" flag with
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another comment about improving the implementation.
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* Alice updates the patch, fixing the implementation. She removes the "patch
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needs improvement" flag.
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* Daisy reviews the patch, and marks it RFC.
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* Jacob reviews the RFC patch, applies it to his checkout, and commits it.
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Some tickets require much less feedback than this, but then again some tickets
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require much much more.
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Advice for new contributors
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===========================
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New contributor and not sure what to do? Want to help but just don't know how to
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get started? This is the section for you.
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* **Pick a subject area that you care about, that you are familiar with, or that
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you want to learn about.**
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You don't already have to be an expert on the area you want to work on; you
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become an expert through your ongoing contributions to the code.
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* **Triage tickets.**
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If a ticket is unreviewed and reports a bug, try and duplicate it. If you can
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duplicate it and it seems valid, make a note that you confirmed the bug and
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accept the ticket. Make sure the ticket is filed under the correct component
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area. Consider writing a patch that adds a test for the bug's behavior, even
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if you don't fix the bug itself.
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* **Look for tickets that are accepted and review patches to build familiarity
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with the codebase and the process.**
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Mark the appropriate flags if a patch needs docs or tests. Look through the
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changes a patch makes, and keep an eye out for syntax that is incompatible
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with older but still supported versions of Python. Run the tests and make sure
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they pass on your system. Where possible and relevant, try them out on a
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database other than SQLite. Leave comments and feedback!
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* **Keep old patches up to date.**
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Oftentimes the codebase will change between a patch being submitted and the
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time it gets reviewed. Make sure it still applies cleanly and functions as
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expected. Simply updating a patch is both useful and important!
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* **Trac isn't an absolute; the context is just as important as the words.**
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When reading Trac, you need to take into account who says things, and when
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they were said. Support for an idea two years ago doesn't necessarily mean
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that the idea will still have support. You also need to pay attention to who
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*hasn't* spoken -- for example, if a core team member hasn't been recently
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involved in a discussion, then a ticket may not have the support required to
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get into trunk.
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* **Start small.**
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It's easier to get feedback on a little issue than on a big one.
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* **If you're going to engage in a big task, make sure that your idea has
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support first.**
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This means getting someone else to confirm that a bug is real before you fix
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the issue, and ensuring that the core team supports a proposed feature before
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you go implementing it.
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* **Be bold! Leave feedback!**
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Sometimes it can be scary to put your opinion out to the world and say "this
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ticket is correct" or "this patch needs work", but it's the only way the
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project moves forward. The contributions of the broad Django community
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ultimately have a much greater impact than that of the core developers. We
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can't do it without YOU!
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* **Err on the side of caution when marking things Ready For Check-in.**
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If you're really not certain if a ticket is ready, don't mark it as
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such. Leave a comment instead, letting others know your thoughts. If you're
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mostly certain, but not completely certain, you might also try asking on IRC
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to see if someone else can confirm your suspicions.
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* **Wait for feedback, and respond to feedback that you receive.**
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Focus on one or two tickets, see them through from start to finish, and
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repeat. The shotgun approach of taking on lots of tickets and letting some
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fall by the wayside ends up doing more harm than good.
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* **Be rigorous.**
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When we say ":pep:`8`, and must have docs and tests", we mean it. If a patch
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doesn't have docs and tests, there had better be a good reason. Arguments like
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"I couldn't find any existing tests of this feature" don't carry much
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weight--while it may be true, that means you have the extra-important job of
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writing the very first tests for that feature, not that you get a pass from
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writing tests altogether.
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.. note::
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The `Reports page`_ contains links to many useful Trac queries, including
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several that are useful for triaging tickets and reviewing patches as
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suggested above.
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.. _Reports page: http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/Reports
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FAQs
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====
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**This ticket I care about has been ignored for days/weeks/months! What can I do
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to get it committed?**
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* First off, it's not personal. Django is entirely developed by volunteers (even
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the core devs), and sometimes folks just don't have time. The best thing to do
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is to send a gentle reminder to the Django Developers mailing list asking for
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review on the ticket, or to bring it up in the #django-dev IRC channel.
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**I'm sure my ticket is absolutely 100% perfect, can I mark it as RFC myself?**
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* Short answer: No. It's always better to get another set of eyes on a
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ticket. If you're having trouble getting that second set of eyes, see question
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1, above.
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**My ticket has been in DDN forever! What should I do?**
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* Design Decision Needed requires consensus about the right solution. At the
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very least it needs consensus among the core developers, and ideally it has
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consensus from the community as well. The best way to accomplish this is to
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start a thread on the Django Developers mailing list, and for very complex
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issues to start a wiki page summarizing the problem and the possible
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solutions.
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