Thank you for your interest in contributing to the Planet SDK for Python! This document explains how to contribute successfully.
The default branch is always main
and should be always considered in-development. Feature enhancements, bug fixes, and other maintenance should be performed in a development branch, starting with the appropriate base branch and merged back into that branch:
git checkout main
git pull
git checkout -b new-branch-name
Branch names should describe the work performed within the branch, and include a ticket number if applicable. For example, a branch that corrects typos in documentation and is not ticketed could be named fix-documentation-typos
, and a branch that adds a new feature and is ticketed could be named new-feature-123
(where 'new-feature' is the name of the feature and '-123' is the ticket number).
NOTE: Make sure to set the appropriate base branch for PRs. See Development Branch above for appropriate branch.
The Pull Request requirements are included in the pull request template as a list of checkboxes.
Not listed in the PR template, but enforced by the system, are the additional requirements that the PR pass Continuous Integration (CI) checks and that the PR have at least one approval by a project maintainer.
The CI checks:
- all tests on all supported versions of Python
- test coverage
- linting / formatting
- type annotation
- docs build successfully
To minimize the feedback loop, we have configured Nox so that it can be used to run all of the CI checks on the local machine. See the Development Tools section for information on running CI checks locally with Nox.
The release process is outlined in RELEASE.md.
This repository uses two primary tools for development:
Install Nox in your local dev environment:
$ pip install nox
Install YAPF in your local dev environment:
$ pip install yapf
In this repository, Nox is used to automate testing, linting, and to build documentation. Nox manages virtual environments for you, specifying Python versions and installing the the local, dynamic version of the Plant SDK for Python and required development packages.
To run nox with the default sessions (same checks as CI: lint, analyze, test, coverage, docs) type "nox".
$ nox
If no changes have been made to the Nox environment since it was last run, speed up the run by reusing the environment:
$ nox -r
If only one test is desired, specify it with -s
. To only run linting:
$ nox -s lint
To determine which tests are available:
$ nox --list
The configuration for Nox is given in noxfile.py
. See the Nox link above for
advanced usage.
Nox is the recommended way to manage local testing. With Nox it is not necessary to install the Planet SDK for Python on the local machine for testing. However, Nox is not necessary for local testing. Where Nox is not used, a virtual environment is highly recommended. pyenvwrapper manages virtual environments and works well with pyenv. To install the local, dynamic version of the Planet SDK for Python and required development packages into the virtual environment use:
$ pip install -e .'[dev]'
Code in this repository follows the PEP8 style guide and uses YAPF to enforce and automate formatting. Linting in Nox will fail if YAPF would reformat a portion of the code. Helpfully, YAPF can be used to automatically reformat the code for you so you don't have to worry about formatting issues. WIN!
To see how YAPF would reformat a file:
$ yapf --diff [file]
To reformat the file:
$ yapf --in-place [file]
These commands can be performed on the entire repository, when run from the repository root directory, with:
$ yapf --diff -r .
and
$ yapf --in-place -r .
The configuration for YAPF is given in setup.cfg
and .yapfignore
.
See the YAPF link above for advanced usage.
YAPF is not required to follow the style and formatting guidelines. You can perform all formatting on your own using the linting output as a guide. Painful, maybe, but possible!
Installing all supported Python versions locally is recommended. This allows Nox to fully reproduce the CI tests. One way of achieving this is with pyenv. If a specific Python version isn't available on your development machine, Nox will just skip that version in the local tests.
Testing is performed with pytest and
pytest-cov. The configuration for these
packages is given in setup.cfg
.
Command-line arguments can be passed to pytest within Nox. For example, to only run the tests on a certain file, use:
$ nox -- [file]
By default, Nox runs tests on all supported Python versions along with other CI checks. However, Nox can run a test on a single Python version.
To run tests on python 3.13:
$ nox -s test-3.13
Configuration can be passed onto pytest through Nox.
To only run tests in a specific file:
$ nox -s test3.13 -- tests/unit/test_http.py
Or to only run tests filtered by keyword:
$ nox -s test3.13 -- -k test__Limiter
To measure code coverage and see a report:
$ nox -s coverage
Linting is performed using flake8 and YAPF (mentioned above). By default, Nox runs the lint check along with all other CI checks. However, Nox can run just the linting check.
To run lint check:
$ nox -s lint
The project uses mypy for static analysis of code. Mypy checks for correctness of type hints and can find other type-related bugs. The nox session that calls mypy is named analyze.
$ nox -s analyze
Documentation is built from Markdown files in the docs
directory using
MkDocs according to mkdocs.yml
. The API reference
is auto-populated from code docstrings. These docstrings must be in the
google format
(note: we use Parameters
in our docstrings).
By default, Nox builds the docs along with other CI checks. However, Nox can also be used to only build the docs or to build and serve the docs locally to assist documentation development.
To build the documentation:
$ nox -s docs
To build and host an automatically-updated local version of the documentation:
$ nox -s watch
Copy the local url from the console output and paste it into your browser to view the live rendered docs.
In addition to verifying that the documentation renders correctly locally, the accuracy of the code examples must be verified. See Testing Documentation below.
NOTE: Doc tests need to be reworked and are failing. See #275.
There are many code examples written into the documentation that need to be tested to ensure they are accurate. These tests are not run by default because they communicate with the Planet services, and thus are slower and also could incur usages.
To test the documentation, run the Nox docs_test
session:
$ nox -s docs_test
This will test all code examples in Markdown documents. To only test one document:
$ nox -s docs_test -- <document_name>.md
The examples
directory is populated with many helpful examples of how to
use the Planet SDK for Python in real use cases. These examples also need to
be tested to ensure they are accurate. These tests are not run by default
because they are long and communicate with the Planet services; and thus are
very slow and also could incur usages.
To test the examples, run the Nox examples
session:
$ nox -s examples
This will test all scripts within the examples
directory.
To only test one script:
$ nox -s examples -- <script_name>.py
For more information on developing examples, see the examples README.md