Hi there! We're excited to have you as a contributor.
Have questions about this document or anything not covered here? Come chat with us at #ansible-awx
on webchat.freenode.net, or submit your question to the mailing list.
- Things to know prior to submitting code
- Setting up your development environment
- What should I work on?
- Submitting Pull Requests
- PR Checks run by Zuul
- Reporting Issues
- All code submissions are done through pull requests against the
devel
branch. - You must use
git commit --signoff
for any commit to be merged, and agree that usage of --signoff constitutes agreement with the terms of DCO 1.1. - Take care to make sure no merge commits are in the submission, and use
git rebase
vsgit merge
for this reason.- If collaborating with someone else on the same branch, consider using
--force-with-lease
instead of--force
. This will prevent you from accidentally overwriting commits pushed by someone else. For more information, see https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push#git-push---force-with-leaseltrefnamegt
- If collaborating with someone else on the same branch, consider using
- If submitting a large code change, it's a good idea to join the
#ansible-awx
channel on webchat.freenode.net, and talk about what you would like to do or add first. This not only helps everyone know what's going on, it also helps save time and effort, if the community decides some changes are needed. - We ask all of our community members and contributors to adhere to the Ansible code of conduct. If you have questions, or need assistance, please reach out to our community team at codeofconduct@ansible.com
The AWX development environment workflow and toolchain uses Docker and the docker-compose tool, to provide dependencies, services, and databases necessary to run all of the components. It also bind-mounts the local source tree into the development container, making it possible to observe and test changes in real time.
Prior to starting the development services, you'll need docker
and docker-compose
. On Linux, you can generally find these in your distro's packaging, but you may find that Docker themselves maintain a separate repo that tracks more closely to the latest releases.
For macOS and Windows, we recommend Docker for Mac and Docker for Windows respectively.
For Linux platforms, refer to the following from Docker:
-
Fedora - https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/docker-ce/fedora/
-
CentOS - https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/docker-ce/centos/
-
Ubuntu - https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/docker-ce/ubuntu/
-
Debian - https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/docker-ce/debian/
If you're not using Docker for Mac, or Docker for Windows, you may need, or choose to, install the docker-compose
Python module separately.
(host)$ pip3 install docker-compose
See the ui development documentation.
If you have not done so already, you'll need to fork the AWX repo on GitHub. For more on how to do this, see Fork a Repo.
See the README.md for docs on how to build the awx_devel image and run the development environment.
AWX includes support for building Swagger/OpenAPI documentation. To build the documentation locally, run:
(container)/awx_devel$ make swagger
This will write a file named swagger.json
that contains the API specification
in OpenAPI format. A variety of online tools are available for translating
this data into more consumable formats (such as HTML). http://editor.swagger.io
is an example of one such service.
You can now log into the AWX web interface at https://localhost:8043, and access the API directly at https://localhost:8043/api/.
Create an admin user if needed.
When necessary, remove any AWX containers and images by running the following:
(host)$ make docker-clean
For feature work, take a look at the current Enhancements.
If it has someone assigned to it then that person is the person responsible for working the enhancement. If you feel like you could contribute then reach out to that person.
Fixing bugs, adding translations, and updating the documentation are always appreciated, so reviewing the backlog of issues is always a good place to start. For extra information on debugging tools, see Debugging.
NOTE
If you work in a part of the codebase that is going through active development, your changes may be rejected, or you may be asked to
rebase
. A good idea before starting work is to have a discussion with us in the#ansible-awx
channel on webchat.freenode.net, or on the mailing list.
NOTE
If you're planning to develop features or fixes for the UI, please review the UI Developer doc.
Fixes and Features for AWX will go through the Github pull request process. Submit your pull request (PR) against the devel
branch.
Here are a few things you can do to help the visibility of your change, and increase the likelihood that it will be accepted:
- No issues when running linters/code checkers
- Python: black:
(container)/awx_devel$ make black
- Javascript: JsHint:
(container)/awx_devel$ make jshint
- Python: black:
- No issues from unit tests
- Python: py.test:
(container)/awx_devel$ make test
- JavaScript: Jasmine:
(container)/awx_devel$ make ui-test-ci
- Python: py.test:
- Write tests for new functionality, update/add tests for bug fixes
- Make the smallest change possible
- Write good commit messages. See How to write a Git commit message.
It's generally a good idea to discuss features with us first by engaging us in the #ansible-awx
channel on webchat.freenode.net, or on the mailing list.
We like to keep our commit history clean, and will require resubmission of pull requests that contain merge commits. Use git pull --rebase
, rather than
git pull
, and git rebase
, rather than git merge
.
Sometimes it might take us a while to fully review your PR. We try to keep the devel
branch in good working order, and so we review requests carefully. Please be patient.
All submitted PRs will have the linter and unit tests run against them via Zuul, and the status reported in the PR.
Zuul jobs for awx are defined in the zuul-jobs repo.
Zuul runs the following checks that must pass:
tox-awx-api-lint
tox-awx-ui-lint
tox-awx-api
tox-awx-ui
tox-awx-swagger
Zuul runs the following checks that are non-voting (can not pass but serve to inform PR reviewers):
tox-awx-detect-schema-change
This check generates the schema and diffs it against a reference copy of thedevel
version of the schema. Reviewers should inspect thejob-output.txt.gz
related to the check if their is a failure (grep fordiff -u -b
to find beginning of diff). If the schema change is expected and makes sense in relation to the changes made by the PR, then you are good to go! If not, the schema changes should be fixed, but this decision must be enforced by reviewers.
We welcome your feedback, and encourage you to file an issue when you run into a problem. But before opening a new issues, we ask that you please view our Issues guide.