Want to contribute? Great! First, read this page (including the small print at the end).
Before we can use your code, you must sign the Google Individual Contributor License Agreement (CLA), which you can do online.
The CLA is necessary mainly because you own the copyright to your changes, even after your contribution becomes part of our codebase, so we need your permission to use and distribute your code. We also need to be sure of various other things — for instance that you'll tell us if you know that your code infringes on other people's patents. You don't have to sign the CLA until after you've submitted your code for review and a member has approved it, but you must do it before we can put your code into our codebase.
Contributions made by corporations are covered by a different agreement than the one above, the Software Grant and Corporate Contributor License Agreement.
Explain your idea and discuss your plan with members of the team. The best way to do this is to create an issue or comment on an existing issue.
Prepare a git commit with your change. Don't forget to add tests. Run the existing tests with bazel test //.... Update README.md if appropriate.
Create a pull request. This will start the code review process. All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review.
You may be asked to make some changes. You'll also need to sign the CLA at this point, if you haven't done so already. Our continuous integration bots will test your change automatically on supported platforms. Once everything looks good, your change will be merged.
Starlark files should be formatted by buildifier. We suggest using a pre-commit hook to automate this. First install pre-commit, then run
pre-commit install
Otherwise, the Buildkite CI will yell at you about formatting/linting violations.
The release process for rules_kotlin is a bit more involved than packaging and shipping an archive. This is for a few reasons:
- Reduce download size
- Support versioned rules, necessary due to api churn of the koltin compiler.
Steps performed in generating a release:
- Assemble a tgz that contains the source defined by release_archive
1.
release_archive
allows renaming files in the archive. By convention, any source with<name>.release.<ext>
should be renamed in the release archive as<name>.<ext>
- Test against example projects
- Generate documentation
All of these steps are tested by scripts/release.sh. Contributors are highly encouraged to run the script before opening prs. Cleaning up warnings is especially welcomed.
To ease development, pains should be taken to keep the packages in the archive the same as the location in the source.
The rules_kotlin
runtime is comprised of multiple repositories. The end user will interact with a single repository, that repository delegates to
versioned feature sub-repositories. Currently, the delegation is managed by using well known names (e.g. core lives in @rules_kotlin_configured
),
a necessity while the initial repository can be named arbitrarily. Future development intends to remove this restriction.
To cope with API churn, the release archive can configure different rule attributes for depending on the chosen kotlin version.
Each major release of kotlin (1.4, 1.5) has a specific sub-repository under src/main/starlark. The naming convention for these
is rkt_<major>_<minor>
([r]elease [k]o[t]lin).
The version is selected by the kotlin_repositories rule during initialization.
New versions of kotlin that change the API should be added to versions.bzl, under CORE
following the
existing naming convention.
Multiple versions of kotlin are not currently handled.(help wanted)
TBD
TBD
- New starlark should be placed under
src/main/starlark
:core
of therules_kotlin
module, limited to generic structureslegacy
is deprecated, handling options for pre 1.4 kotlin versionrkt_<version>
all version specific kotlin related pieces should live here. This of it as versioned core.<feature>
new features likektlint
,android
, etc. etc. should live here.
- Tests. As much as possible all new starlark features should have tests. PRs that extend coverage a very welcome.
- Prefer toolchain to implicit dependencies on rules. Toolchains are handled lazily and offer more versatility.
- Avoid wrapping rule in macros.
rules_kotlin
should be considered a building block for an organization specific DSL, as such macros should be used sparingly. - Restrict, then Open new rule apis. It's much better to add features based on feedback than to try and remove them.