# asdf `asdf` core contribution guide. ## Initial Setup Fork `asdf` on GitHub and/or Git clone the default branch: ```shell # clone your fork git clone https://github.com//asdf.git # or clone asdf git clone https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf.git ``` The tools for core development are in this repo's `.tool-versions`. If you wish to manage with `asdf` itself, add the plugins: ```shell asdf plugin add bats https://github.com/timgluz/asdf-bats.git asdf plugin add shellcheck https://github.com/luizm/asdf-shellcheck.git asdf plugin add shfmt https://github.com/luizm/asdf-shfmt.git ``` Install the versions to develop `asdf` with: ```shell asdf install ``` It _may_ be useful to not use `asdf` to manage the tools during development on your local machine as you may need to break functionality which would then break your dev tooling. Here's the raw list of tools: - [bats-core](https://github.com/bats-core/bats-core): Bash Automated Testing System, for unit testing Bash or POSIX compliant scripts. - [shellcheck](https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck): Static analysis tool for shell scripts. - [shfmt](https://github.com/mvdan/sh): A shell parser, formatter, and interpreter with bash support; includes shfmt ## Development If you want to try out your changes without making change to your installed `asdf`, you can set the `$ASDF_DIR` variable to the path where you cloned the repository, and temporarily prepend the `bin` and `shims` directory of the directory to your path. It is best to format, lint and test your code locally before you commit or push to the remote. Use the following scripts/commands: ```shell # Lint ./scripts/lint.bash --check # Fix & Format ./scripts/lint.bash --fix # Test: all tests ./scripts/test.bash # Test: for specific command bats test/list_commands.bash ``` ::: tip **Add tests!** - Tests are **required** for new features and speed up review of bug fixes. Please cover new code paths before you create a Pull Request. See [bats-core documentation](https://bats-core.readthedocs.io/en/stable/index.html) ::: ### Gitignore The following is the `.gitignore` file in the `asdf-vm/asdf` repository. We ignore project-specific files. Files specific to your OS, tools or workflows should be ignored in your global `.gitignore` configuration, [see here](http://stratus3d.com/blog/2018/06/03/stop-excluding-editor-temp-files-in-gitignore/) for more details. <<< @/../.gitignore ### `.git-blame-ignore-revs` `asdf` uses a `.git-blame-ignore-revs` to reduce noise when running a blame. See the [git blame documentation](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-blame) for more information. Use the file with `git blame` like so: ```sh git blame --ignore-revs-file .git-blame-ignore-revs ./test/install_command.bats ``` Optionally, configure to use the file on every invocation of `blame` without manually supplying it: ```sh git config blame.ignoreRevsFile .git-blame-ignore-revs ``` It is possible to configure IDEs to use this file. For example, when using VSCode (with [GitLens](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=eamodio.gitlens)), write the following to `.vscode/settings.json`: ```json { "gitlens.advanced.blame.customArguments": [ "--ignore-revs-file", ".git-blame-ignore-revs" ] } ``` ## Bats Testing Execute tests locally with: ```shell ./scripts/test.bash ``` Before writing tests **please read**: - existing tests in `test/` - [bats-core documentation](https://bats-core.readthedocs.io/en/stable/index.html) - existing Bats settings used in `scripts/test.bash` ### Bats Tips Bats debugging can be difficult at times. Using the TAP output with `-t` flag will enable you to print outputs with the special file descriptor `>&3` during test execution, simplifying debugging. As an example: ```shell # test/some_tests.bats printf "%s\n" "Will not be printed during bats test/some_tests.bats" printf "%s\n" "Will be printed during bats -t test/some_tests.bats" >&3 ``` This is further documented in bats-core [Printing to the Terminal](https://bats-core.readthedocs.io/en/stable/writing-tests.html#printing-to-the-terminal). ## Pull Requests, Releases & Conventional Commits `asdf` is using an automated release tool called [Release Please](https://github.com/googleapis/release-please) to automatically bump the [SemVer](https://semver.org/) version and generate the [Changelog](https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md). This information is determined by reading the commit history since the last release. [Conventional Commit messages](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/) define the format of the Pull Request Title which becomes the commit message format on the default branch. This is enforced with GitHub Action [`amannn/action-semantic-pull-request`](https://github.com/amannn/action-semantic-pull-request). Conventional Commit follows this format: ``` [optional scope][optional !]: fix: some fix feat: a new feature docs: some documentation update docs(website): some change for the website feat!: feature with breaking change ``` The full list of `` are: `feat`, `fix`, `docs`, `style`, `refactor`, `perf`, `test`, `build`, `ci`, `chore`, `revert`. - `!`: indicates a breaking change - `fix`: will create a new SemVer `patch` - `feat`: will create a new SemVer `minor` - `!`: will create a new SemVer `major` The Pull Request Title must follow this format. ::: tip Use Conventional Commit message format for your Pull Request Title. ::: ## Docker Images The [asdf-alpine](https://github.com/vic/asdf-alpine) and [asdf-ubuntu](https://github.com/vic/asdf-ubuntu) projects are an ongoing effort to provide Dockerized images of some asdf tools. You can use these docker images as base for your development servers, or for running your production apps.