There are three ways to contribute to Concrete ML:
You can open issues to report bugs and typos and to suggest ideas.
You can become an official contributor but you need to sign our Contributor License Agreement (CLA) on your first contribution. Our CLA-bot will guide you through the process when you will open a Pull Request on Github.
You can also provide new tutorials or use-cases, showing what can be done with the library. The more examples we have, the better and clearer it is for the other users.
To create your branch, you have to use the issue ID somewhere in the branch name:
For example:
Each commit to Concrete ML should conform to the standards of the project. You can let the development tools fix some issues automatically with the following command:
Conformance can be checked using the following command:
Your code must be well documented, containing tests and not breaking other tests:
You need to make sure you get 100% code coverage. The make pytest
command checks that by default and will fail with a coverage report at the end should some lines of your code not be executed during testing.
If your coverage is below 100%, you should write more tests and then create the pull request. If you ignore this warning and create the PR, GitHub actions will fail and your PR will not be merged.
There may be cases where covering your code is not possible (an exception that cannot be triggered in normal execution circumstances). In those cases, you may be allowed to disable coverage for some specific lines. This should be the exception rather than the rule, and reviewers will ask why some lines are not covered. If it appears they can be covered, then the PR won't be accepted in that state.
Concrete ML uses a consistent commit naming scheme, and you are expected to follow it as well (the CI will make sure you do). The accepted format can be printed to your terminal by running:
For example:
Just a reminder that commit messages are checked in the conformance step and are rejected if they don't follow the rules. To learn more about conventional commits, check this page.
You should rebase on top of the main
branch before you create your pull request. Merge commits are not allowed, so rebasing on main
before pushing gives you the best chance of to avoid rewriting parts of your PR later if conflicts arise with other PRs being merged. After you commit changes to your new branch, you can use the following commands to rebase:
You can learn more about rebasing here.