mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
136 lines
6.5 KiB
Markdown
136 lines
6.5 KiB
Markdown
# Reviewing Zulip server code
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This document is a brief discussion of what we look for when reviewing
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contributions to Zulip. It's meant partially for developers who want
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to get their code merged faster, and partially for developers who have
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made successful pull requests already and would like to start
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participating in code review.
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## Things to look for
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* *The Travis CI build.* The tests need to pass. One can investigate
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any failures and figure out what to fix by clicking on a red X next
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to the commit hash or the Detail links on a pull request. (Example:
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in [#1219](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/1219), click the red
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X next to `f1f474e` to see the build jobs for that commit, at least
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one of which has failed. Click on the link for Travis continuous
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integrations details to see [the tests Travis ran on that
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commit](https://travis-ci.org/zulip/zulip/builds/144300899), at
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least one of which failed, and go to [one of the failing
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tests](https://travis-ci.org/zulip/zulip/jobs/144300901) to see the
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error.)
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* *Technical design.* There are a lot of considerations here:
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security, migration paths/backwards compatibility, cost of new
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dependencies, interactions with features, speed of performance, API
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changes. Security is especially important and worth thinking about
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carefully with any changes to security-sensitive code like views.
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* *User interface and visual design.* If frontend changes are
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involved, the reviewer will check out the code, play with the new
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UI, and verify it for both quality and consistency with the rest of
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the Zulip UI. We highly encourage posting screenshots to save
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reviewers time in getting a feel for what the feature looks like --
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you'll get a quicker response that way.
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* *Error handling.* The code should always check for invalid user
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input. User-facing error messages should be clear and when possible
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be actionable (it should be obvious to the user what they need to do
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in order to correct the problem).
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* *Testing.* The tests should validate that the feature works
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correctly, and specifically test for common error conditions, bad
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user input, and potential bugs that are likely for the type of
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change being made. Tests that exclude whole classes of potential
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bugs are preferred when possible (e.g., the common test suite
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`test_bugdown.py` between the [frontend and backend Markdown
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processors](markdown.html) or the `GetEventsTest` test for buggy
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race condition handling).
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Backend: we are trying to maintain ~100% test coverage on the
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backend, so backend changes should have negative tests for the
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various error conditions. Frontend: If the feature involves frontend
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changes, there should be frontend tests. See the [test
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writing][test-writing] documentation for more details.
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* *mypy annotations.* New functions should be annotated using [mypy]
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and existing annotations should be updated. Use of `Any`, `ignore`,
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and unparameterized containser should be limited to cases where a
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more precise type cannot be specified.
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* *Translation.* Make sure that the strings are marked for
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[translation].
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* *Clear function, argument, variable, and test names.* Every new
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piece of Zulip code will be read many times by other developers, and
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future developers will grep for relevant terms when researching a
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problem, so it's important that variable names communicate clearly
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the purpose of each piece of the codebase.
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* *Duplicated code.* Code duplication is a huge source of bugs in
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large projects and makes the codebase difficult to understand, so we
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avoid significant code duplication wherever possible. Sometimes
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avoiding code duplication involves some refactoring of existing
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code; if so, that should usually be done as its own series of
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commits (not squashed into other changes or left as a thing to do
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later). That series of commits can be in the same pull request as
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the feature that they support, and we recommend ordering the history
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of commits so that the refactoring comes *before* the feature. That
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way, it's easy to merge the refactoring (and minimize risk of merge
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conflicts) if there are still user experience issues under
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discussion for the feature itself.
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* *Completeness.* For refactorings, verify that the changes are
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complete. Usually one can check that efficiently using `git grep`,
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and it's worth it, as we very frequently find issues by doing so.
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* *Documentation updates.* If this changes how something works, does it
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update the documentation in a corresponding way? If it's a new
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feature, is it documented, and documented in the right place?
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* *Good comments.* It's often worth thinking about whether explanation
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in a commit message or pull request discussion should be included in
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a comment, `/docs`, or other documentation. But it's better yet if
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verbose explanation isn't needed. We prefer writing code that is
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readable without explanation over a heavily commented codebase using
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lots of clever tricks.
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* *Coding style.* See the Zulip [code-style] documentation for
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details. Our goal is to have as much of this as possible verified
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via the linters and tests, but there's always going to be unusual
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forms of Python/JavaScript style that our tools don't check for.
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* *Clear commit messages.* See the [Zulip version
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control][commit-messages] documentation for details on what we look
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for.
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## Tooling
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To make it easier to review pull requests, use our [git tool]
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`tools/fetch-rebase-pull-request` to check out a pull request locally
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and rebase it against master. If a pull request just needs a little
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fixing to make it mergeable, feel free to do that in a new commit,
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then push your branch to GitHub and mention the branch in a comment on
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the pull request. That'll save the maintainer time and get the PR
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merged quicker.
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## Additional Resources
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We also strongly recommend reviewers to go through the following resources.
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* [The Gentle Art of Patch Review](http://sarah.thesharps.us/2014/09/01/the-gentle-art-of-patch-review/)
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article by Sarah Sharp
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* [Zulip & Good Code Review](https://www.harihareswara.net/sumana/2016/05/17/0)
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article by Sumana Harihareswara
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* [Code Review - A consolidation of advice and stuff from the
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sinternet](https://gist.github.com/porterjamesj/002fb27dd70df003646df46f15e898de)
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article by James J. Porter
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* [Zulip Code of Conduct](https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/code-of-conduct.html)
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[code-style]: code-style.html
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[commit-messages]: version-control.html#commit-messages
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[test-writing]: testing.html
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[mypy]: mypy.html
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[git tool]: git-guide.html#fetch-a-pull-request-and-rebase
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[translation]: translating.html
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