dbt-extractor
processes the most common jinja value templates in dbt model files.
- About this document
- Getting the code
- Setting up an environment
- Running in development
- Testing
- Debugging
- Adding or modifying a changelog entry
- Submitting a Pull Request
- Troubleshooting Tips
There are many ways to contribute to the ongoing development of dbt-extractor
, such as by participating in discussions and issues. We encourage you to first read our higher-level document: "Expectations for Open Source Contributors".
The rest of this document serves as a more granular guide for contributing code changes to dbt-extractor
(this repository). It is not intended as a guide for using dbt-extractor
, and some pieces assume a level of familiarity with Rust development. Specific code snippets in this guide assume you are using macOS or Linux and are comfortable with the command line.
- CLA: Please note that anyone contributing code to
dbt-extractor
must sign the Contributor License Agreement. If you are unable to sign the CLA, thedbt-extractor
maintainers will unfortunately be unable to merge any of your Pull Requests. We welcome you to participate in discussions, open issues, and comment on existing ones. - Branches: All pull requests from community contributors should target the
main
branch (default). - Releases: This repository is not released on a cadence. Releases occur as needed.
You will need git
in order to download and modify the source code.
If you are not a member of the dbt-labs
GitHub organization, you can contribute to dbt-extractor
by forking the dbt-extractor
repository. For a detailed overview on forking, check out the GitHub docs on forking. In short, you will need to:
- Fork the
dbt-extractor
repository - Clone your fork locally
- Check out a new branch for your proposed changes
- Push changes to your fork
- Open a pull request against
dbt-labs/dbt-extractor
from your forked repository
If you are a member of the dbt-labs
GitHub organization, you will have push access to the dbt-extractor
repo. Rather than forking dbt-extractor
to make your changes, just clone the repository, check out a new branch, and push directly to that branch.
After ensuring you have Python and Rust installed.
If you do not want to install dbt-extractor in your global enviornment, create and enter a Python virtual environment. Next, in the repo root directory, run the command pip install -e.
. This will compile the Rust source code, and use maturin to create and install a Python wrapper package for the compiled machine code.
To see the full implementation extract dbt values live as you type in a browser, run:
make demo
It may take a moment for the demo to compile an optimized version of itself.
Kill the server with ctrl+c to end the demo.
Once you're able to manually test that your code change is working as expected, it's important to run existing automated tests, as well as adding some new ones. These tests will ensure that:
- Your code changes do not unexpectedly break other established functionality
- Your code changes can handle all known edge cases
- The functionality you're adding will keep working in the future
make test
The Python portions of dbt-extractor can be debugged just like any other Python program. In order to debug portions of the library written in Rust, you will need to attach a Rust-compatible debugger at run time. Consult the documentation for Rust and your IDE for details.
Code can be merged into the current development branch main
by opening a pull request. A dbt-extractor
maintainer will review your PR. They may suggest code revision for style or clarity, or request that you add unit or integration test(s). These are good things! We believe that, with a little bit of help, anyone can contribute high-quality code.
Automated tests run via GitHub Actions. If you're a first-time contributor, all tests (including code checks and unit tests) will require a maintainer to approve. Changes in the dbt-extractor
repository trigger integration tests against Postgres. dbt Labs also provides CI environments in which to test changes to other adapters, triggered by PRs in those adapters' repositories, as well as periodic maintenance checks of each adapter in concert with the latest dbt-extractor
code changes.
Once all tests are passing and your PR has been approved, a dbt-extractor
maintainer will merge your changes into the active development branch. And that's it! Happy developing 🎉
- Sometimes, the content license agreement auto-check bot doesn't find a user's entry in its roster. If you need to force a rerun, add
@cla-bot check
in a comment on the pull request.