Hacking on Pyramid ================== Here are some guidelines about hacking on Pyramid. Using a Development Checkout ---------------------------- Below is a quick start on creating a development environment using a Pyramid checkout. - Create a new directory somewhere and ``cd`` to it:: $ mkdir ~/hack-on-pyramid $ cd ~/hack-on-pyramid - Check out a read-only copy of the Pyramid source:: $ git clone git://github.com/Pylons/pyramid.git (alternately, create a writeable fork on GitHub and check that out). - Create a virtualenv in which to install Pyramid:: $ virtualenv2.6 --no-site-packages env - Install ``setuptools-git`` into the virtualenv (for good measure, as we're using git to do version control):: $ env/bin/easy_install setuptools-git - Install Pyramid from the checkout into the virtualenv using ``setup.py develop`` (running ``setup.py develop`` *must* be done while the current working directory is the ``pyramid`` checkout directory):: $ cd pyramid $ ../env/bin/python setup.py develop - At that point, you should be able to create new Pyramid projects by using ``paster create``:: $ cd ../env $ bin/paster create -t pyramid_starter starter - And install those projects (also using ``setup.py develop``) into the virtualenv:: $ cd starter $ ../bin/python setup.py develop Adding Features --------------- In order to add a feature to Pyramid: - The feature must be documented in both the API and narrative documentation (in ``docs/``). - The feature must work fully on the following CPython versions: 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, and 2.7 on both UNIX and Windows. - The feature must not cause installation or runtime failure on Jython or App Engine. If it doesn't cause installation or runtime failure, but doesn't actually *work* on these platforms, that caveat should be spelled out in the documentation. - The feature must not depend on any particular persistence layer (filesystem, SQL, etc). - The feature must not add unnecessary dependencies (where "unnecessary" is of course subjective, but new dependencies should be discussed). The above requirements are relaxed for paster template dependencies. If a paster template has an install-time dependency on something that doesn't work on a particular platform, that caveat should be spelled out clearly in *its* documentation (within its ``docs/`` directory). Coding Style ------------ - PEP8 compliance. Whitespace rules are relaxed: not necessary to put 2 newlines between classes. But 80-column lines, in particular, are mandatory. Test Coverage ------------- - The codebase *must* have 100% test statement coverage after each commit. You can test coverage via ``python setup.py nosetests --with-coverage`` (requires the ``nose`` and ``coverage`` packages). Documentation Coverage ---------------------- - If you fix a bug, and the bug requires an API or behavior modification, all documentation in this package which references that API or behavior must change to reflect the bug fix, ideally in the same commit that fixes the bug or adds the feature. Change Log ---------- - Feature additions and bugfixes must be added to the ``CHANGES.txt`` file in the prevailing style. Changelog entries should be long and descriptive, not cryptic. Other developers should be able to know what your changelog entry means.