druid/CONTRIBUTING.md

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# How to Contribute
When submitting a pull request (PR), please use the following guidelines:
- Try to keep pull requests short and submit separate ones for unrelated
features, but feel free to combine simple bugfixes/tests into one pull request.
- Keep the number of commits small and combine commits for related changes.
Each commit should compile on its own and ideally pass tests.
- If you are introducing a new feature you may want to first submit your idea
for feedback to the [mailing list](mailto:druid-development@googlegroups.com).
- Bugfixes should include a unit test or integration test reproducing the issue.
- Non-trivial features should include unit tests covering the new functionality.
- Make sure your code respects existing formatting conventions. We don't have a
formal style guide yet, but use your own judgement. If you are using
IntelliJ, you can import our code style settings jar:
[intellij_formatting.jar](https://github.com/druid-io/druid/raw/master/intellij_formatting.jar).
- Keep formatting changes in separate commits to make code reviews easier and
distinguish them from actual code changes.
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## GitHub Workflow
1. Fork the druid-io/druid repository into your GitHub account
https://github.com/druid-io/druid/fork
1. Clone your fork of the GitHub repository
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```sh
git clone git@github.com:<username>/druid.git
```
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replace `<username>` with your GitHub username.
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1. Add a remote to keep up with upstream changes
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```
git remote add upstream https://github.com/druid-io/druid.git
```
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If you already have a copy, fetch upstream changes
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```
git fetch upstream
```
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1. Create a feature branch to work in
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```
git checkout -b feature-xxx remotes/upstream/master
```
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1. Work in your feature branch
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```
git commit -a
```
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1. Periodically rebase your changes
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```
git pull --rebase
```
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1. When done, combine ("squash") related commits into a single one
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```
git rebase -i upstream/master
```
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This will open your editor and allow you to re-order commits and merge them:
- Re-order the lines to change commit order (to the extent possible without creating conflicts)
- Prefix commits using `s` (squash) or `f` (fixup) to merge extraneous commits.
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1. Submit a pull-request
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```
git push origin feature-xxx
```
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Go to your Druid fork main page
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```
https://github.com/<username>/druid
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```
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If you recently pushed your changes GitHub will automatically pop up a
`Compare & pull request` button for any branches you recently pushed to. If you
click that button it will automatically offer you to submit your pull-request
to the druid-io/druid repository.
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- Give your pull-request a meaningful title.
- In the description, explain your changes and the problem they are solving.
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1. Addressing code review comments
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Repeat steps 5. through 7. to address any code review comments and
rebase your changes if necessary.
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Push your updated changes to update the pull request
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```
git push origin [--force] feature-xxx
```
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`--force` may be necessary to overwrite your existing pull request in case your
commit history was changed when performing the rebase.
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Note: Be careful when using `--force` since you may lose data if you are not careful.
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```
git push origin --force feature-xxx
```
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# FAQ
### Help! I merged changes from upstream and cannot figure out how to resolve conflicts when rebasing!
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Never fear! If you occasionally merged upstream/master, here is another way to squash your changes into a single commit:
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1. First, rename your existing branch to something else, e.g. `feature-xxx-unclean`
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```
git branch -m feature-xxx-unclean
```
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1. Checkout a new branch with the original name `feature-xxx` from upstream. This branch will supercede our old one.
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```
git checkout -b feature-xxx upstream/master
```
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1. Then merge your changes in your original feature branch `feature-xxx-unclean` and create a single commit.
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```
git merge --squash feature-xxx-unclean
git commit
```
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1. You can now submit this new branch and create or replace your existing pull request.
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```
git push origin [--force] feature-xxx:feature-xxx
```