Contributing ------------ Thank you for your interest in contributing! We welcome all contributions no matter their size. Please read along to learn how to get started. If you get stuck, feel free to ask for help in `Libp2p Discover Server `_. Setting the stage ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To get started, fork the repository to your own GitHub account, then clone it to your development machine: .. code:: sh git clone git@github.com:your-github-username/py-libp2p.git Next, install the development dependencies and set up the project. We recommend using a virtual environment, such as `virtualenv `_ or Python's built-in ``venv`` module. Instructions vary by platform: Linux Setup ^^^^^^^^^^^ Prerequisites """"""""""""" On Debian Linux, you need to install the following dependencies: - `GNU Multiprecision Arithmetic Library `_ - `CMake `_ - `freedesktop.org pkg-config `_ Install them with: .. code:: sh sudo apt-get install cmake pkg-config libgmp-dev Setup Steps """"""""""" Install the development dependencies using a virtual environment: .. code:: sh cd py-libp2p python3 -m venv ./venv . venv/bin/activate python3 -m pip install -e ".[dev]" pre-commit install An alternative using ``virtualenv``: .. code:: sh cd py-libp2p virtualenv -p python venv . venv/bin/activate python -m pip install -e ".[dev]" pre-commit install macOS Setup ^^^^^^^^^^^ Prerequisites """"""""""""" On macOS, you need to install the following dependencies: - `GNU Multiprecision Arithmetic Library `_ - `CMake `_ - `freedesktop.org pkg-config `_ Install them with: .. code:: sh brew install cmake pkgconfig gmp Setup Steps """"""""""" Install the development dependencies using a virtual environment: .. code:: sh cd py-libp2p python3 -m venv ./venv . venv/bin/activate python3 -m pip install -e ".[dev]" pre-commit install On macOS, help the build command find and link against the ``gmp`` library: .. code:: sh CFLAGS="`pkg-config --cflags gmp`" LDFLAGS="`pkg-config --libs gmp`" python3 -m pip install -e ".[dev]" An alternative using ``virtualenv``: .. code:: sh cd py-libp2p virtualenv -p python venv . venv/bin/activate python -m pip install -e ".[dev]" pre-commit install Windows Development Setup ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Prerequisites """"""""""""" 1. **Python 3.11+** - Download and install Python from `python.org `_ or the Microsoft Store. - Verify installation: .. code:: powershell python --version 2. **Git** - Install Git using Windows Package Manager (``winget``) or download from `git-scm.com `_. - Verify: .. code:: powershell winget install --id Git.Git -e git --version 3. **CMake** - Install CMake with ``winget`` or download from `cmake.org `_. - Add CMake to your PATH during installation, then verify: .. code:: powershell winget install --id Kitware.CMake -e cmake --version 4. **Make** - Option 1: Use Git Bash (included with Git) as a shell. - Option 2: Install ``make`` via Chocolatey (install Chocolatey first if needed: `choco.io `_). - Verify installation: .. code:: powershell choco install make make --version Setup Steps """"""""""" 1. **Clone the Repository** - Open PowerShell or Git Bash and run: .. code:: powershell git clone git@github.com:your-github-username/py-libp2p.git cd py-libp2p 2. **Create a Virtual Environment** - In PowerShell: .. code:: powershell python -m venv venv .\venv\Scripts\activate 3. **Install Dependencies** - Install the project and dev dependencies: .. code:: powershell pip install -e ".[dev]" 4. **Verify Setup** - Run the tests to ensure everything works: .. code:: powershell pytest -v - If using ``make test`` with Git Bash: .. code:: bash make test Notes """"" - Use PowerShell, Command Prompt, or Git Bash as your shell. - Ensure all tools (Python, Git, CMake) are in your system PATH. Requirements ^^^^^^^^^^^^ The protobuf description in this repository was generated by ``protoc`` at version ``30.1``. Running the tests ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A great way to explore the code base is to run the tests. We can run all tests with: .. code:: sh make test Code Style ~~~~~~~~~~ We use `pre-commit `_ to enforce a consistent code style across the library. This tool runs automatically with every commit, but you can also run it manually with: .. code:: sh make lint If you need to make a commit that skips the ``pre-commit`` checks, you can do so with ``git commit --no-verify``. This library uses type hints, which are enforced by the ``mypy`` tool (part of the ``pre-commit`` checks). All new code is required to land with type hints, with the exception of code within the ``tests`` directory. Documentation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Good documentation will lead to quicker adoption and happier users. Please check out our guide on `how to create documentation for the Python Ethereum ecosystem `_. Adding Examples ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To add a new example (e.g., identify): 1. Create a directory in ``examples/identify`` 2. Create a file ``examples/identify/identify.py`` with the example code 3. Add ``__init__.py`` to make it a proper Python package (automatically discovered by find_packages() in ``setup.py``) 4. Add the example in the example list ``docs/examples.rst`` 5. Add example tests in ``tests/core/examples/test_examples.py`` 6. Add the example documentation in ``docs/examples.identify.rst`` 7. Add a news fragment for the new release in file ``newsfragments/536.feature.rst`` (fix-id.type.rst) 8. Generate doc files with ``make docs`` or ``make linux-docs`` in linux (generates files ``libp2p.identity.identify.rst libp2p.identity.rst libp2p.identity.identify.pb.rst``) 9. Add the example to ``setup.py``: .. code:: python entry_points={ "console_scripts": [ "chat-demo=examples.chat.chat:main", "echo-demo=examples.echo.echo:main", "ping-demo=examples.ping.ping:main", "identify-demo=examples.identify.identify:main", ], } 10. Run ``make package-test`` to test the release: .. code:: sh ..... Activate with `source /tmp/tmpb9ybjgtg/package-smoke-test/bin/activate` Press enter when the test has completed. The directory will be deleted. Then test the example: .. code:: sh source /tmp/tmpb9ybjgtg/package-smoke-test/bin/activate (package-smoke-test) $ identify-demo Pull Requests ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It's a good idea to make pull requests early on. A pull request represents the start of a discussion, and doesn't necessarily need to be the final, finished submission. GitHub's documentation for working on pull requests is `available here `_. Once you've made a pull request, take a look at the Circle CI build status in the GitHub interface and make sure all tests are passing. In general pull requests that do not pass the CI build yet won't get reviewed unless explicitly requested. If the pull request introduces changes that should be reflected in the release notes, please add a newsfragment file as explained `here `_. If possible, the change to the release notes file should be included in the commit that introduces the feature or bugfix. Releasing ~~~~~~~~~ Releases are typically done from the ``main`` branch, except when releasing a beta (in which case the beta is released from ``main``, and the previous stable branch is released from said branch). Final test before each release ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Before releasing a new version, build and test the package that will be released: .. code:: sh git checkout main && git pull make package-test This will build the package and install it in a temporary virtual environment. Follow the instructions to activate the venv and test whatever you think is important. You can also preview the release notes: .. code:: sh towncrier --draft Build the release notes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Before bumping the version number, build the release notes. You must include the part of the version to bump (see below), which changes how the version number will show in the release notes. .. code:: sh make notes bump=$$VERSION_PART_TO_BUMP$$ If there are any errors, be sure to re-run make notes until it works. Push the release to github & pypi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ After confirming that the release package looks okay, release a new version: .. code:: sh make release bump=$$VERSION_PART_TO_BUMP$$ This command will: - Bump the version number as specified in ``.pyproject.toml`` and ``setup.py``. - Create a git commit and tag for the new version. - Build the package. - Push the commit and tag to github. - Push the new package files to pypi. Which version part to bump ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ``$$VERSION_PART_TO_BUMP$$`` must be one of: ``major``, ``minor``, ``patch``, ``stage``, or ``devnum``. The version format for this repo is ``{major}.{minor}.{patch}`` for stable, and ``{major}.{minor}.{patch}-{stage}.{devnum}`` for unstable (``stage`` can be alpha or beta). If you are in a beta version, ``make release bump=stage`` will switch to a stable. To issue an unstable version when the current version is stable, specify the new version explicitly, like ``make release bump="--new-version 4.0.0-alpha.1"`` You can see what the result of bumping any particular version part would be with ``bump-my-version show-bump``