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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Thanks for taking the time to contribute to drift!

Reporting issues

Feel free to post any questions, bug reports or feature requests by creating an issue. In any case, taking the time to provide some context on

  • what you were trying to do
  • what you would have expected to happen
  • what actually happened

most certainly helps to resolve the issue quickly.

Contributing code

All kinds of pull requests are absolutely appreciated! Before working on bigger changes, it can be helpful to create an issue describing your plans to help coordination.

When working on drift, its recommended to fork the develop branch and also target that branch for PRs. When possible, we only use the latest_release branch to reflect the state that's been released to pub.

If you have any question about drift internals that you feel are not explained well enough, you're most welcome to create an issue or chat via gitter.

Project structure

The project is divided into multiple modules:

  • drift/: Contains common APIs that will run on all platforms.
    • backends: Common helper classes to make implementing backends easier. The idea is that a backend only needs to know how to run prepared statements. This lets us port the library to different database libraries without much trouble.
    • web.dart: Experimental web implementation, built with sql.js.
    • native.dart: FFI-based implementation around the sqlite3 package.
    • This is the biggest package, see the concepts section below on how drift works and what it contains.
  • moor_flutter/: Contains a Flutter implementation for the database.
  • drift_dev/: Creates table, database and dao classes from the table structure and compiled queries.
  • sqlparser/: Contains an SQL parser and analyzer that is mostly independent of drift, but used by the generator for compiled custom queries.

Concepts

For each user-defined class that inherits from Table and appears in a @UseMoor or @UseDao annotation, we generate three classes:

  1. A class that inherits from TableInfo (we call this the "table class"). It contains a structural representation of the table, which includes columns (including name, type, constraints...), the primary key and so on. The idea is that, if we have a TableInfo instance, we can create all kinds of SQL statements.
  2. A class to represent a fully loaded row of a table. We call this a "data class" and it inherits from DataClass.
  3. A class to represent partial data (e.g. for inserts or updates, where not all columns are set). This class was introduced in moor 1.5 and is called a "companion".

This approach lets us write a higher-level api that uses the generated TableInfo classes to know what columns to write. For instance, the Migrator can write CREATE TABLE statements from these classes, an UpdateStatement will write UPDATE statements and so on. To write the query, we construct a GenerationContext, which contains a string buffer to write the query, keeps track of the introduced variables and so on. The idea is that everything that can appear anywhere in an SQL statement inherits from Component (for instance, Query, Expression, Variable, Where, OrderBy). We can then recursively create the query by calling Component.writeInto for all subparts of a component. This query is then sent to a QueryExecutor, which is responsible for executing it and returning its result. The QueryExecutor is the only part that is platform specific, everything else is pure Dart that doesn't import any restricted libraries.

Important classes

A DatabaseConnectionUser is the central piece of a drift database instance. It contains an SqlTypeSystem (responsible for mapping simple Dart objects from and to SQL), the QueryExecutor discussed above and a StreamQueryStore (responsible for keeping active queries and re-running them when a table updates). It is also the super class of GeneratedDatabase and DatabaseAccessor, which are the classes a @UseMoor and @UseDao class inherits from. Finally, the QueryEngine is a mixin in DatabaseConnectionUser that provides the select, update, delete methods used to construct common queries.

Workflows

Debugging the analyzer plugin

We have an analyzer plugin to support IDE features like auto-complete, navigation, syntax highlighting, outline and folding to users. Normally, analyzer plugins are discovered and loaded by the analysis server, which makes them very annoying to debug.

However, we found a way to run the plugin in isolation, which makes debugging much easier. Note: Port 9999 has to be free for this to work, but you can change the port defined in the two files below.

To debug the plugin, do the following:

  1. In drift/tools/analyzer_plugin/bin/plugin.dart, set useDebuggingVariant to true.
  2. Run drift_dev/tool/debug_plugin.dart as a regular Dart VM app (this can be debugged when started from an IDE).
  3. (optional) Make sure the analysis server picks up the updated version of the analysis plugin by deleting the ~/.dartServer/.plugin_manager folder.
  4. Open a project that uses the plugin, for instance via code extras/plugin_example.

More details are available under extras/plugin_example/README.md.

Debugging the builder

To debug the builder, run pub run build_runner generate-build-script in the drift subdirectory (or any other directory you want to use as an input). This will generate a .dart_tool/build/entrypoint/build.dart. That file can be run and debugged as a regular Dart VM app. Be sure to pass something like build -v as program arguments and use the input package as a working directory.

Releasing to pub

Minor changes will be published directly, no special steps are necessary. For major updates that span multiple versions, we should follow these steps

  1. Changelogs: The changelog of drift_dev should only mention changes to the generator, most changes shuold be in drift/CHANGELOG.md. Generator changes should also be copied into that file.
  2. Make sure each package has the correct dependencies: drift_dev version 1.x should depend on drift 1.x as well to ensure users will always pub get drift packages that are compatible with each other.
  3. Comment out the dependency_overrides section in drift, drift/tool/analyzer_plugin, moor_flutter, drift_dev and sqlparser. Make sure that useDebuggingVariant is false in the analyzer plugin.
  4. Create an annotated tag and a GitHub release for each package published. drift and drift_dev can be merged into a single GitHub release.
  5. Publish packages in this order to avoid scoring penalties caused by versions not existing:
    1. drift
    2. drift_dev
    3. (optional) moor_flutter

The sqlparser library can be published independently of drift.

Building the documentation

We use build_runner to build the documentation. The readme contains everything you need to know go get started.