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			103 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| FAQ: Contributing code
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| ======================
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| 
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| How can I get started contributing code to Django?
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| --------------------------------------------------
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| 
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| Thanks for asking! We've written an entire document devoted to this question.
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| It's titled :doc:`Contributing to Django </internals/contributing>`.
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| 
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| I submitted a bug fix in the ticket system several weeks ago. Why are you ignoring my patch?
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| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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| 
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| Don't worry: We're not ignoring you!
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| 
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| It's important to understand there is a difference between "a ticket is being
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| ignored" and "a ticket has not been attended to yet." Django's ticket system
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| contains hundreds of open tickets, of various degrees of impact on end-user
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| functionality, and Django's developers have to review and prioritize.
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| 
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| On top of that: the people who work on Django are all volunteers. As a result,
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| the amount of time that we have to work on the framework is limited and will
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| vary from week to week depending on our spare time. If we're busy, we may not
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| be able to spend as much time on Django as we might want.
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| 
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| The best way to make sure tickets do not get hung up on the way to checkin is
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| to make it dead easy, even for someone who may not be intimately familiar with
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| that area of the code, to understand the problem and verify the fix:
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| 
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|     * Are there clear instructions on how to reproduce the bug? If this
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|       touches a dependency (such as PIL), a contrib module, or a specific
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|       database, are those instructions clear enough even for someone not
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|       familiar with it?
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| 
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|     * If there are several patches attached to the ticket, is it clear what
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|       each one does, which ones can be ignored and which matter?
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| 
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|     * Does the patch include a unit test? If not, is there a very clear
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|       explanation why not? A test expresses succinctly what the problem is,
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|       and shows that the patch actually fixes it.
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| 
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| If your patch stands no chance of inclusion in Django, we won't ignore it --
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| we'll just close the ticket. So if your ticket is still open, it doesn't mean
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| we're ignoring you; it just means we haven't had time to look at it yet.
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| 
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| When and how might I remind the core team of a patch I care about?
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| ------------------------------------------------------------------
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| 
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| A polite, well-timed message to the mailing list is one way to get attention.
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| To determine the right time, you need to keep an eye on the schedule. If you
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| post your message when the core developers are trying to hit a feature
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| deadline or manage a planning phase, you're not going to get the sort of
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| attention you require. However, if you draw attention to a ticket when the
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| core developers are paying particular attention to bugs -- just before a bug
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| fixing sprint, or in the lead up to a beta release for example -- you're much
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| more likely to get a productive response.
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| 
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| Gentle IRC reminders can also work -- again, strategically timed if possible.
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| During a bug sprint would be a very good time, for example.
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| 
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| Another way to get traction is to pull several related tickets together. When
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| the core developers sit down to fix a bug in an area they haven't touched for
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| a while, it can take a few minutes to remember all the fine details of how
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| that area of code works. If you collect several minor bug fixes together into
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| a similarly themed group, you make an attractive target, as the cost of coming
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| up to speed on an area of code can be spread over multiple tickets.
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| 
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| Please refrain from emailing core developers personally, or repeatedly raising
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| the same issue over and over. This sort of behavior will not gain you any
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| additional attention -- certainly not the attention that you need in order to
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| get your pet bug addressed.
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| 
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| But I've reminded you several times and you keep ignoring my patch!
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| -------------------------------------------------------------------
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| 
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| Seriously - we're not ignoring you. If your patch stands no chance of
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| inclusion in Django, we'll close the ticket. For all the other tickets, we
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| need to prioritize our efforts, which means that some tickets will be
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| addressed before others.
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| 
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| One of the criteria that is used to prioritize bug fixes is the number of
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| people that will likely be affected by a given bug. Bugs that have the
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| potential to affect many people will generally get priority over those that
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| are edge cases.
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| 
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| Another reason that bugs might be ignored for while is if the bug is a symptom
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| of a larger problem. While we can spend time writing, testing and applying
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| lots of little patches, sometimes the right solution is to rebuild. If a
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| rebuild or refactor of a particular component has been proposed or is
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| underway, you may find that bugs affecting that component will not get as much
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| attention. Again, this is just a matter of prioritizing scarce resources. By
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| concentrating on the rebuild, we can close all the little bugs at once, and
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| hopefully prevent other little bugs from appearing in the future.
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| 
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| Whatever the reason, please keep in mind that while you may hit a particular
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| bug regularly, it doesn't necessarily follow that every single Django user
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| will hit the same bug. Different users use Django in different ways, stressing
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| different parts of the code under different conditions. When we evaluate the
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| relative priorities, we are generally trying to consider the needs of the
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| entire community, not just the severity for one particular user. This doesn't
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| mean that we think your problem is unimportant -- just that in the limited
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| time we have available, we will always err on the side of making 10 people
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| happy rather than making 1 person happy.
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