Contributing
Asking for Help
Please run a dusty dump
, save the results to a gist,
and include a link to the gist in any bug reports.
Running Tests
Unit tests are pretty simple:
$ nosetests tests/unit
Integration tests are also provided which test against an actual running
Dusty daemon. A script is provided to help run these inside the tests
folder.
WARNING: Integration tests may alter or delete existing Dusty information on your system, including but not limited to your config, Dusty-managed repos, active containers, and Docker VM.
$ ./tests/run_integration_tests.sh # run all tests
$ ./tests/run_integration_tests.sh cli/bundles_test.py # run specific modules inside tests/integration
Building Docs
Docs are built with MkDocs. For development, you can run the following in the root Dusty directory:
$ pip install mkdocs
$ mkdocs serve
Maintaining the Changelog
User-facing changes should be documented in the Changelog as they are merged. Changes are segmented into one of three types:
- Breaking: Changes to the existing Dusty CLI, specs, or runtime environment which are not backwards-compatible
- New: A new user-facing feature, or something that enables a workflow that wasn't possible before.
- Misc: Anything else! Typically bug fixes or notable changes to implementation details.
Release Checklist
-
Update the changelog
- Add a date to the changelog for this version
- Add a new version with
(In Progress)
after it
-
Update Installation to point to the binary for your new version
-
Cut a new release by running the
DustyRelease
Jenkins job with your new version number -
Bump the version number in
dusty/constants.py
to the new, in-progress version -
Go update the release on GitHub to include the new version's notes from the changelog