Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
121 lines (96 loc) · 6.19 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

121 lines (96 loc) · 6.19 KB

Writing good issue reports

First things first: the issue tracker is NOT for tech support. It is for reporting bugs and requesting features. If your issue amounts to "I can't get YCM to work on my machine" and the reason why is obviously related to your machine configuration and the problem would not be resolved with reasonable changes to the YCM codebase, then the issue is likely to be closed.

A good place to ask questions is the ycm-users Google group. Rule of thumb: if you're not sure whether your problem is a real bug, ask on the group.

YCM compiles just fine; the build bots say so. If the bots are green and YCM doesn't compile on your machine, then your machine is the root cause. Now read the first paragraph again.

Realize that quite literally thousands of people have gotten YCM to work successfully so if you can't, it's probably because you have a peculiar system/Vim configuration or you didn't go through the docs carefully enough. It's very unlikely to be caused by an actual bug in YCM because someone would have already found it and reported it.

This leads us to point #2: make sure you have checked the docs before reporting an issue. The docs are extensive and cover a ton of things; there's also an FAQ at the bottom that quite possibly addresses your problem.

Further, search the issue tracker for similar issues before creating a new one. There's no point in duplication; if an existing issue addresses your problem, please comment there instead of creating a duplicate.

You should also search the archives of the ycm-users mailing list.

Lastly, make sure you are running the latest version of YCM. The issue you have encountered may have already been fixed. Don't forget to recompile ycm_core.so too (usually by just running install.sh again).

OK, so we've reached this far. You need to create an issue. First realize that the time it takes to fix your issue is a multiple of how long it takes the developer to reproduce it. The easier it is to reproduce, the quicker it'll be fixed.

Here are the things you should do when creating an issue:

  1. Write a step-by-step procedure that when performed repeatedly reproduces your issue. If we can't reproduce the issue, then we can't fix it. It's that simple.

  2. Put the following options in your vimrc:

    let g:ycm_server_use_vim_stdout = 1
    let g:ycm_server_log_level = 'debug'

    Then, if possible, start gvim/macvim (not console vim) from the console. As you use Vim, you'll see the ycmd debug output stream in the console. If you can not use gvim/macvim, run :YcmDebugInfo in vim to see what temporary files (listed under "Server logfiles") the debug output streams are written to. Attach the debug output stream to your issue.

  3. Create a test case for your issue. This is critical. Don't talk about how "when I have X in my file" or similar, create a file with X in it and put the contents inside code blocks in your issue description. Try to make this test file as small as possible. Don't just paste a huge, 500 line source file you were editing and present that as a test. Minimize the file so that the problem is reproduced with the smallest possible amount of test data.

  4. Include your OS and OS version.

  5. Include the output of vim --version.

Creating good pull requests

  1. Follow the code style of the existing codebase.

    • The Python code DOES NOT follow PEP 8. This is not an oversight, this is by choice. You can dislike this as much as you want, but you still need to follow the existing style. Look at other Python files to see what the style is.
    • The C++ code has an automated formatter (style_format.sh that runs astyle) but it's not perfect. Again, look at the other C++ files and match the code style you see.
    • Same thing for VimScript. Match the style of the existing code.
  2. Your code needs to be well written and easy to maintain. This is of the utmost importance. Other people will have to maintain your code so don't just throw stuff against the wall until things kinda work.

  3. Split your pull request into several smaller ones if possible. This makes it easier to review your changes, which means they will be merged faster.

  4. Write tests for your code. If you're changing the VimScript code then you don't have to since it's hard to test that code. This is also why you should strive to implement your change in Python if at all possible (and if it makes sense to do so). Python is also much faster than VimScript.

  5. Explain in detail why your pull request makes sense. Ask yourself, would this feature be helpful to others? Not just a few people, but a lot of YCM’s users? See, good features are useful to many. If your feature is only useful to you and maybe a couple of others, then that’s not a good feature. There is such a thing as “feature overload”. When software accumulates so many features of which most are only useful to a handful, then that software has become “bloated”. We don’t want that.

    Requests for features that are obscure or are helpful to but a few, or are not part of YCM's "vision" will be rejected. Yes, even if you provide a patch that completely implements it.

    Please include details on exactly what you would like to see, and why. The why is important - it's not always clear why a feature is really useful. And sometimes what you want can be done in a different way if the reason for the change is known. What goal is your change trying to accomplish?

  6. Sign the Google Contributor License Agreement (you can sign online at the bottom of that page). You must sign this form, otherwise we cannot merge in your changes. Always mention in the pull request that you've signed it, even if you signed it for a previous pull request (you only need to sign the CLA once).