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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to Backstage

Our vision for Backstage is for it to become the trusted standard toolbox (read: UX layer) for the open source infrastructure landscape. Think of it like Kubernetes for developer experience. We realize this is an ambitious goal. We can’t do it alone.

Therefore we want to create a strong community of contributors -- all working together to create the kind of delightful experience that our developers deserve.

Contributions are welcome, and they are greatly appreciated! Every little bit helps, and credit will always be given. ❤️

Backstage is released under the Apache 2.0 License, and original creations contributed to this repo are accepted under the same license.

You can find out more about the types of contributions over at getting involved!

If you need help, just jump into our Discord chatroom.

Table of Contents

Code of Conduct

This project adheres to the CNCF Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to honor this code.

Security Issues?

See SECURITY.

Accessibility

We encourage you to catch any accessibility issues already in the development phase of new features to Backstage, see our Accessibility documentation for more details.

Get Started!

So...feel ready to jump in? Let's do this. 👏🏻💯

Cloning the Repository

Ok. So you're gonna want some code right? Go ahead and fork the repository into your own GitHub account and clone that code to your local machine. GitHub's Fork a repo documentation has a great step by step guide if you are not sure how to do this.

If you cloned a fork, you can add the upstream dependency like so:

git remote add upstream git@github.com:backstage/backstage
git pull upstream master

After you have cloned the Backstage repository, you should run the following commands once to set things up for development:

cd backstage  # change to root directory of project

yarn install  # fetch dependency packages - may take a while
yarn tsc      # does a first run of type generation and checks

Serving the Example App

Open a terminal window and start the web app by using the following command from the project root. Make sure you have run the above mentioned commands first.

yarn dev

This is going to start two things, the frontend (:3000) and the backend (:7007).

This should open a local instance of Backstage in your browser, otherwise open one of the URLs printed in the terminal.

By default, Backstage will start on port 3000, however you can override this by setting an environment variable PORT on your local machine. e.g. export PORT=8080 then running yarn start. Or PORT=8080 yarn start.

Once successfully started, you should see the following message in your terminal window:

$ concurrently "yarn start" "yarn start-backend"
$ yarn workspace example-app start
$ yarn workspace example-backend start
$ backstage-cli app:serve
$ backstage-cli backend:dev
[0] Loaded config from app-config.yaml
[1] Build succeeded
[0] ℹ 「wds」: Project is running at http://localhost:3000/
[0] ℹ 「wds」: webpack output is served from /
[0] ℹ 「wds」: Content not from webpack is served from $BACKSTAGE_DIR/packages/app/public
[0] ℹ 「wds」: 404s will fallback to /index.html
[0] ℹ 「wdm」: wait until bundle finished: /
[1] 2021-02-12T20:58:17.614Z backstage info Loaded config from app-config.yaml

You'll see how you get both logs for the frontend webpack-dev-server which serves the react app ([0]) and the backend ([1]);

Visit http://localhost:3000 and you should see the bleeding edge of Backstage ready for contributions!

If you want to get a better understanding of the layout of the repo not that you have a local copy running feel free to review the Backstage Project Structure documentation.

Coding Guidelines

All code is formatted with prettier using the configuration in the repo. If possible we recommend configuring your editor to format automatically, but you can also use the yarn prettier --write <file> command to format files.

A consistent coding style is included via EditorConfig with the file .editorconfig at the root of the repo. Depending on your editor of choice, it will either support it out of the box or you can download a plugin for the config to be applied.

If you're contributing to the backend or CLI tooling, be mindful of cross-platform support. This blog post is a good guide of what to keep in mind when writing cross-platform NodeJS.

Also be sure to skim through our ADRs to see if they cover what you're working on. In particular ADR006: Avoid React.FC and React.SFC is one to look out for.

If there are any updates in markdown file please make sure to run yarn run lint:docs. Though it is checked on lint-staged. It is required to install vale separately and make sure it is accessed by global command.

Editor

The Backstage development environment does not require any specific editor, but it is intended to be used with one that has built-in linting and type-checking. The development server does not include any checks by default, but they can be enabled using the --check flag. Note that using the flag may consume more system resources and slow things down.

Package Scripts

There are many commands to be found in the root package.json, here are some useful ones:

yarn start # Start serving the example app, use --check to include type checks and linting

yarn storybook # Start local storybook, useful for working on components in @backstage/core-components

yarn workspace @backstage/plugin-api-docs start # Serve api-docs plugin only, also supports --check

yarn tsc # Run typecheck, use --watch for watch mode
yarn tsc:full # Run full type checking, for example without skipLibCheck, use in CI

yarn build:backend # Build the backend package, depends on tsc
yarn build:all # Build published versions of packages, depends on tsc
yarn build:api-reports # Build API Reports used for documentation

yarn lint # lint packages that have changed since later commit on origin/master
yarn lint:all # lint all packages
yarn lind:docs # lint all the Markdown files
yarn lint:type-deps # verify that @types/* dependencies are placed correctly in packages

yarn test # test packages that have changed since later commit on origin/master
yarn test:all # test all packages

yarn clean # Remove all output folders and @backstage/cli cache

yarn diff # Make sure all plugins are up to date with the latest plugin template

yarn new # Create a new module

See package.json for other yarn commands/options.

Local configuration

Backstage allows you to specify the configuration used while running the application on your computer. Local configuration is read from app-config.local.yaml. This file is ignored by Git, which means that you can safely use it to reference secrets like GitHub tokens without worrying about these secrets, inadvertently ending up in the Git repository. You do not need to copy everything from the default config to the local config. The app-config.local.yaml file will be merged with app-config.yaml and overwrite the default app configs.

NOTE: If you want to add your own configuration values to access in the frontend you also need to mark those values as visible using configuration schema, either in the app or in your own plugin. For more information, see Defining Configuration.

You can learn more about the local configuration in the Static Configuration in Backstage section.

Creating Changesets

We use changesets to help us prepare releases. They help us make sure that every package affected by a change gets a proper version number and an entry in its CHANGELOG.md. To make the process of generating releases easy, it helps when contributors include changesets with their pull requests.

When to use a changeset?

Any time a patch, minor, or major change aligning to Semantic Versioning is made to any published package in packages/ or plugins/, a changeset should be used. It helps to align your change to the Backstage package versioning policy for the package you are changing, for example, when to provide additional clarity on deprecation or impacting changes which will then be included into CHANGELOGs.

In general, changesets are only needed for changes to packages within packages/ or plugins/ directories, and only for the packages that are not marked as private. Changesets are also not needed for changes that do not affect the published version of each package, for example changes to tests or in-line source code comments.

Changesets are needed for new packages, as that is what triggers the package to be part of the next release. They are also needed for changes to README.md files so that the updates are reflected on the NPM page for the changed package.

How to create a changeset

  1. Run yarn changeset from the root of the repo
  2. Select which packages you want to include a changeset for
  3. Select impact of the change you're introducing. If the package you are changing is at version 0.x, use minor for breaking changes and patch otherwise. If the package is at 1.0.0 or higher, use major for breaking changes, minor for backwards compatible API changes, and patch otherwise. See the Semantic Versioning specification for more details.
  4. Explain your changes in the generated changeset. See examples of well written changesets.
  5. Add generated changeset to Git
  6. Push the commit with your changeset to the branch associated with your PR
  7. Accept our gratitude for making the release process easier on the maintainers

Writing changesets

Changesets are an important part of the development process. They are used to generate Changelog entries for all changes to the project. Ultimately they are read by the end users to learn about important changes and fixes to the project. Some of these fixes might require manual intervention from users so it's important to write changesets that users understand and can take action on.

Here are some important do's and don'ts when writing changesets:

Changeset should give a clear description to what has changed

Bad

---
'@backstage/catalog': patch
---

Fixed table layout

Good

---
'@backstage/catalog': patch
---

Fixed bug in EntityTable component where table layout did not readjust properly below 1080x768 pixels.

Breaking changes not caught by the type checker should be clearly marked with bold BREAKING text

Bad

---
'@backstage/catalog': minor
---

getEntity is now a function that returns a Promise.

Good

---
'@backstage/catalog': minor
---

**BREAKING** The getEntity function now returns a Promise and **must** be awaited from now on.

Changes to code should include a diff of the files that need updating

Bad

---
'@backstage/catalog': patch
---

**BREAKING** The catalogEngine now requires a flux capacitor to be passed.

Good

---
'@backstage/catalog': patch
---

**BREAKING** The catalog createRouter now requires that a `FluxCapacitor` is
passed to the router.

These changes are **required** to `packages/backend/src/plugins/catalog.ts`

```diff
+ import { FluxCapacitor } from '@backstage/time';
+ const fluxCapacitor = new FluxCapacitor();
  return await createRouter({
    entitiesCatalog,
    locationAnalyzer,
    locationService,
+   fluxCapacitor,
    logger: env.logger,
    config: env.config,
  });
```

Developer Certificate of Origin

As with other CNCF projects, Backstage has adopted a Developers Certificate of Origin (DCO). A DCO is a lightweight way for a developer to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit code or documentation to a project.

To certify the code you submit to the repository you'll need to add a Signed-off-by line to your commits.

$ git commit -s -m 'Awesome commit message'

Which will look something like the following in the repo;

Awesome commit message

Signed-off-by: Jane Smith <jane.smith@example.com>

Note: this assumes you have setup your git name and email, if you have not you can use these commands to set that up:

git config --global user.name "Your Name"
git config --global user.email "youremail@example.com"
  • In case you forgot to add it to the most recent commit, use git commit --amend --signoff
  • In case you forgot to add it to the last N commits in your branch, use git rebase --signoff HEAD~N and replace N with the number of new commits you created in your branch.
  • If you have a very deep branch with a lot of commits, run git rebase -i --signoff $(git merge-base -a master HEAD), double check to make sense of the commits (keep all lines as pick) and save and close the editor. This should bulk sign all the commits in your PR. Do be careful though. If you have a complex flow with a lot of branching and re-merging of work branches and stuff, merge-base may not be the right solution for you.

Note: If you have already pushed your branch to a remote, you might have to force push: git push -f after the rebase.

Using GitHub Desktop?

If you are using the GitHub Desktop client, you need to manually add the Signed-off-by line to the Description field on the Changes tab before committing:

Awesome description (commit message)

Signed-off-by: Jane Smith <jane.smith@example.com>

In case you forgot to add the line to your most recent commit, you can amend the commit message from the History tab before pushing your branch (GitHub Desktop 2.9 or later).

Using VS Code?

If you are using VS Code you can enable always signing your commits by setting the following in your settings.json file:

"git.alwaysSignOff": true,

Or from the Settings UI look for the "Git: Always Sign Off" setting and check the "Controls the signoff flag for all commits" box.

API Reports

Backstage uses API Extractor and TSDoc comments to generate API Reports in Markdown format. These reports are what drive the API Reference documentation. What this means is that if you are making changes to the API or adding a new plugin then you will need either generate a new API Report or update an existing API Report. If you don't do this the CI build will fail when you create your Pull Request.

There are two ways you can do this:

  1. You can run yarn build:api-reports from the root of the project and it will go through all of the existing API Reports and update them or create new ones as needed. This may take a while but is generally the best method if you are new to this.
  2. You can run yarn build:api-reports plugins/<your-plugin-with-changes> from the root and it will update the existing API Report or create a new one.

Note: the above commands assume you've run yarn install before hand or recently

Each plugin/package has its own API Report which means you might see more then one file updated or created depending on your changes. These changes will then need to be committed as well.

Submitting a Pull Request

When you've got your contribution working, tested, and committed to your branch it's time to create a Pull Request (PR). If you are unsure how to do this GitHub's Creating a pull request from a fork documentation will help you with that. Once you create your PR you will be presented with a template in the PR's description that looks like this:

## Hey, I just made a Pull Request!

<!-- Please describe what you added, and add a screenshot if possible.
     That makes it easier to understand the change so we can :shipit: faster. -->

#### :heavy_check_mark: Checklist

<!--- Please include the following in your Pull Request when applicable: -->

- [ ] A changeset describing the change and affected packages. ([more info](https://github.com/backstage/backstage/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#creating-changesets))
- [ ] Added or updated documentation
- [ ] Tests for new functionality and regression tests for bug fixes
- [ ] Screenshots attached (for UI changes)
- [ ] All your commits have a `Signed-off-by` line in the message. ([more info](https://github.com/backstage/backstage/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#developer-certificate-of-origin))

From here all you need to do is fill in the information as requested by the template. Please do not remove this as it helps both you and the reviewers confirm that the various tasks have been completed.

Here are some examples of good PR descriptions:

Review Process

Once you've submitted a Pull Request (PR) the various bots will come out and do their work:

  • assigning reviewers from the various areas impacted by changes in your PR
  • adding labels to help make reviewing PRs easier
  • checking for missing changesets or confirming them
  • checking for commits for their DCO (Developer Certificate of Origin)
  • kick of the various CI builds

Once these have been completed it's just a matter of being patient as the reviewers have time they will begin to review your PR. When the review begins there may be a few layers to this but the general rule is that you need approval from one of the core maintainers and one from the specific area impacted by your PR. You may also have someone from the community review your changes, this can really help speed things up as they may catch some early items making the review for the maintainers simpler. Once you have the two (2) approvals it's ready to be merged, this task is also done by the maintainers.

Review Tips

Here are a few things that can help as you go through the review process:

  • You'll want to make sure all the automated checks are passing as generally the PR won't get a review if something like the CI build is failing
  • PRs get automatically assigned so you don't need to ping people, they will be notified and have a process of their own for this
  • If you are waiting for a review or mid-review and your PR goes stale one of the easiest ways to clear the stale bot is by simply rebasing your PR
  • There are times where you might run into conflict with the yarn.lock during a rebase, to help with that make sure your master branch is up to date and then in your branch run git checkout master yarn.lock and then run yarn install, this will get you a conflict free yarn.lock file you can commit
  • If Vale finds issues with your documentation but it's a code reference you can fix it by putting backticks (`) around it. Now if it is a special word or maybe a name there are two ways you can fix that by adding it to the list of accepted words in the accept.txt file and them committing that change

Merging to Master

For those contributors who have earned write access to the repository, when a pull request is approved, in general we prefer the author of the PR to perform the merge themselves. This allows them to own accountability for the change and they likely know best how or when to address pending fixes or additional follow-ups. In this way, we all help contribute to the project's successful outcomes.