Home OpenStack-Ansible Developer Documentation
Contributor Guidelines
Reporting Bugs
Bugs should be filed on Bug Launchpad for OpenStack-Ansible.
When submitting a bug, or working on a bug, please ensure the following
criteria are met:
- The description clearly states or describes the original problem or root
cause of the problem.
- Include historical information on how the problem was identified.
- Any relevant logs are included.
- If the issue is a bug that needs fixing in a branch other than master,
please note the associated branch within the launchpad issue.
- The provided information should be totally self-contained. External access
to web services/sites should not be needed.
- Steps to reproduce the problem if possible.
Status
Please leave the status of an issue alone until someone confirms it or
a member of the bugs team triages it. While waiting for the issue to be
confirmed or triaged the status should remain as New.
Importance
Should only be touched if it is a Blocker/Gating issue. If it is, please
set to High, and only use Critical if you have found a bug that
can take down whole infrastructures. Once the importance has been changed
the status should be changed to Triaged by someone other than the bug
creator.
The triaging process is explained on the bug triage documentation page.
General Guidelines for Submitting Code
- Write good commit messages. We follow the OpenStack
“Git Commit Good Practice” guide. if you have any questions regarding how
to write good commit messages please review the upstream OpenStack
documentation.
- Changes to the project should be submitted for review via the Gerrit tool,
following the workflow documented here.
- Pull requests submitted through GitHub will be ignored and closed without
regard.
- Patches should be focused on solving one problem at a time. If the review is
overly complex or generally large the initial commit will receive a “-2”
and the contributor will be asked to split the patch up across multiple
reviews. In the case of complex feature additions the design and
implementation of the feature should be done in such a way that it can be
submitted in multiple patches using dependencies. Using dependent changes
should always aim to result in a working build throughout the dependency
chain. Documentation is available for advanced gerrit usage too.
- All patch sets should adhere to the Ansible Style Guide listed here as
well as adhere to the Ansible best practices when possible.
- All changes should be clearly listed in the commit message, with an
associated bug id/blueprint along with any extra information where
applicable.
- Refactoring work should never include additional “rider” features. Features
that may pertain to something that was re-factored should be raised as an
issue and submitted in prior or subsequent patches.
- New features, breaking changes and other patches of note must include a
release note generated using the reno tool. Please see the
Documentation and Release Note Guidelines for more information.
- All patches including code, documentation and release notes should be built
and tested locally with the appropriate test suite before submitting for
review. See Development and Testing for more information.
Working on Features
- All feature additions/deletions should be accompanied by a blueprint/spec.
e.g. adding additional active agents to neutron, developing a new service
role, etc...
- Before creating blueprint/spec an associated ‘Wishlist Bug’ can be raised on
launchpad. This issue will be triaged and a determination will be made on
how large the change is and whether or not the change warrants a
blueprint/spec. Both features and bug fixes may require the creation of a
blueprint/spec. This requirement will be voted on by core reviewers and will
be based on the size and impact of the change.
- All blueprints/specs should be voted on and approved by core reviewers
before any associated code will be merged. For more information on
blueprints/specs please review the OpenStack documentation regarding
Working on Specifications and Blueprints.
- Once the blueprint work is completed the author(s) can request a backport
of the blueprint work into a stable branch. Each backport will be evaluated
on a case by case basis with cautious consideration based on how the
backport affects any existing deployments. See the Backporting section
for more information.
- Any new OpenStack services implemented which have Tempest tests
available must be implemented along with suitable functional tests enabled
as part of the feature development in order to ensure that any changes
to the code base do not break the service functionality.
- Feature additions must include documentation which provides reference to
OpenStack documentation about what the feature is and how it works. The
documentation should then describe how it is implemented in
OpenStack-Ansible and what configuration options there are.
Backporting
- Backporting is defined as the act of reproducing a change from another
branch. Unclean/squashed/modified cherry-picks and complete
reimplementations are OK.
- Backporting is often done by using the same code (via cherry picking), but
this is not always the case. This method is preferred when the cherry-pick
provides a complete solution for the targeted problem.
- When cherry-picking a commit from one branch to another the commit message
should be amended with any files that may have been in conflict while
performing the cherry-pick operation. Additionally, cherry-pick commit
messages should contain the original commit SHA near the bottom of the new
commit message. This can be done with cherry-pick -x. Here’s more
information on Submitting a change to a branch for review.
- Every backport commit must still only solve one problem, as per the
guidelines in General Guidelines for Submitting Code.
- If a backport is a squashed set of cherry-picked commits, the original SHAs
should be referenced in the commit message and the reason for squashing the
commits should be clearly explained.
- When a cherry-pick is modified in any way, the changes made and the reasons
for them must be explicitly expressed in the commit message.
- Refactoring work must not be backported to a “released” branch.
- Backport reviews should be done with due consideration to the effect of the
patch on any existing environment deployed by OpenStack-Ansible. The general
OpenStack Guidelines for stable branches can be used as a reference.
Documentation and Release Note Guidelines
Documentation is a critical part of ensuring that the deployers of
OpenStack-Ansible are appropriately informed about:
- How to use the project’s tooling effectively to deploy OpenStack.
- How to implement the right configuration to meet the needs of their specific
use-case.
- Changes in the project over time which may affect an existing deployment.
To meet these needs developers must submit code comments, documentation and
release notes with any code submissions. All forms of documentation should
comply with the guidelines provided in the OpenStack Documentation Contributor
Guide, with particular reference to the following sections:
- Writing style
- RST formatting conventions
Documentation
OpenStack-Ansible has multiple forms of documentation with different intent.
Note
The statements below regarding the Install Guide and Role Documentation are
statements of intent. The work to fulfill the intent is ongoing. Any new
documentation submissions should try to help this intent where possible.
The install guide intends to help deployers install
OpenStack-Ansible for the first time. As such, the install guide is somewhat
opinionated, focusing on ensuring that the deployer has to make very few
decisions and implement the least amount of configuration possible to deploy
a running OpenStack environment.
The role documentation (for example, the keystone role documentation)
intends to explain all the options available for the role and how to implement
more advanced requirements. To reduce duplication, the role documentation
directly includes the role’s default variables file which includes the
comments explaining the purpose of the variables. The long hand documentation
for the roles should focus less on explaining variables and more on explaining
how to implement advanced use cases.
Where possible the documentation in OpenStack-Ansible should steer clear of
trying to explain OpenStack concepts. Those explanations belong in the
OpenStack Manuals or service documentation and OpenStack-Ansible documentation
should link to those documents when available, rather than duplicate their
content.
Release Notes
Release notes are generated using the reno tool. Release notes must be
written with the following guidelines in mind:
- Each list item must make sense to read without the context of the patch or
the repository the patch is being submitted into. The reason for this is that
all release notes are consolidated and presented in a long list without
reference to the source patch or the context of the repository.
- Each note should be brief and to the point. Try to avoid multi-paragraph
notes. For features the note should typically refer to documentation for more
details. For bug fixes the note can refer to a registered bug for more
details.
In most cases only the following sections should be used for new release notes
submitted with patches:
- features: This should inform the deployer briefly about a new feature and
should describe how to use it either by referencing the variables to set or
by referring to documentation.
- issues: This should inform the deployer about known issues. This may be
used when fixing an issue and wanting to inform deployers about a workaround
that can be used for versions prior to that which contains the patch that
fixes the issue. Issue notes should specifically make mention of what
versions of OpenStack-Ansible are affected by the issue.
- upgrade: This should inform the deployer about changes which may affect
them when upgrading from a previous major or minor version. Typically, these
notes would describe changes to default variable values or variables that
have been removed.
- deprecations: If a variable has been deprecated (ideally using the
deprecation filter), then it should be communicated through notes in this
section. Note that if a variable has been removed entirely then it has not
been deprecated and the removal should be noted in the upgrade section.
Ansible Style Guide
When creating tasks and other roles for use in Ansible please create them
using the YAML dictionary format.
Example YAML dictionary format:
- name: The name of the tasks
module_name:
thing1: "some-stuff"
thing2: "some-other-stuff"
tags:
- some-tag
- some-other-tag
Example what NOT to do:
- name: The name of the tasks
module_name: thing1="some-stuff" thing2="some-other-stuff"
tags: some-tag
- name: The name of the tasks
module_name: >
thing1="some-stuff"
thing2="some-other-stuff"
tags: some-tag
Usage of the “>” and “|” operators should be limited to Ansible conditionals
and command modules such as the Ansible shell or command.