Contribute to Akeneo PIM

#How to submit a patch to the PIM?

As Akeneo PIM is an open-source project, all contributions are very welcome!

Note that documentation has been largely inspired from the Sylius documentation. Thank them for the great work.

If you don’t know how to start, you can pick an issue here: https://github.com/akeneo/pim-community-dev/labels/wanna-contribute

#Step 0: Sign the Contributor Agreement

To be able to merge your contribution, we need you to read and sign the following contributor agreement https://www.akeneo.com/contributor-license-agreement/

#Step 1: Set up your Environment

#Install the Software Stack

Before working on Akeneo PIM, set up a Symfony 4 friendly environment with the following software:

#Configure Git

Set your user information up with your real name and a working email address:

$ git config --global user.name "Your Name"
$ git config --global user.email "you@example.com"

If you are new to Git, you are highly recommended to read the excellent and free ProGit book.

If your IDE creates configuration files inside the directory of the project, you can use global .gitignore file (for all projects) or .git/info/exclude file (per project) to ignore them. See Github documentation.

Windows users: when installing Git, the installer will ask what to do with line endings, and will suggest replacing all LF with CRLF. This is the wrong setting if you wish to contribute to Akeneo PIM. Selecting the as-is method is your best choice, as Git will convert your line feeds to the ones in the repository. If you have already installed Git, you can check the value of this setting by typing:

$ git config core.autocrlf

This will return either “false”, “input” or “true”; “true” and “false” being the wrong values. Change it to “input” by typing:

$ git config --global core.autocrlf input

Replace –global by –local if you want to set it only for the active repository

#Get the Akeneo PIM Source Code

Get the Akeneo PIM source code:

  • Create a GitHub account and sign in;
  • Fork the Akeneo PIM repository (click on the “Fork” button);
  • After the “forking action” has completed, clone your fork locally (this will create a pim-community-dev directory):
$ git clone git@github.com:USERNAME/pim-community-dev.git
  • Add the upstream repository as a remote:
$ cd pim-community-dev
$ git remote add upstream git://github.com/akeneo/pim-community-dev.git

#Step 2: Work on your Patch

#The License

Before you start, you must know that all patches you are going to submit must be released under the OSL-3.0 license.

#Create a Topic Branch

Each time you want to work on a patch for a bug or on an enhancement, create a topic branch:

$ git checkout -b BRANCH_NAME master

Use a descriptive name for your branch (issue_XXX where XXX is the GitHub issue number is a good convention for bug fixes).

The checkout command above automatically switches the code to the newly created branch (you can check the branch you are working on with git branch).

#Work on your Patch

Before working on a contribution for an Akeneo repository, please read the following Code Conventions and coding standards to make sure you respect all our standards.

When you work on a patch, please keep in mind:

  • For a bug fix contribution, please avoid any BC breaks. If a BC break can’t be avoided add a comment and detail why.

  • For all contributions, tests are as important as business code.

    • Behavior of the application has to be tested with Behat.
    • Behavior of the business code has to be tested with PHPSpec.

We wrote a guide to setup behat in Akeneo PIM and you can check the behat quick intro on their documentation.

Here is the documentation to begin with PHPSpec and Prophecy documentation.

#Commit your code

Begin by adding file content to your index

$ git add -p

This will run a git add command with an interactive mode. You’ll be able to choose which chunk of code you want to add.

Then you have to create one or several commits of your code

$ git commit
  • Create atomic and logical commits with a relevant message.
  • Squash irrelevant commits that are just about fixing coding standards or fixing typos in your own code.
  • Never fix coding standards in some existing code as it makes the code review more difficult (submit CS fixes as a separate patch).

It will help us to:

  • Speed up the reviewing process
  • Revert a single commit if needed
  • Cherry pick a commit if needed

Example of a well formed commit message (from Git documentation).

Short (50 chars or less) summary of changes

More detailed explanatory text, if necessary. Wrap it to about 72 characters or so. In some contexts, the first line is treated as the subject of an email and the rest of the text as the body. The blank line separating the summary from the body is critical (unless you omit the body entirely); tools like rebase can get confused if you run the two together.

Further paragraphs come after blank lines.

  • Bullet points are okay, too
  • Typically a hyphen or asterisk is used for the bullet, preceded by a single space, with blank lines in between, but conventions vary here

#Prepare your Patch for Submission

When your patch is about a bug fix and we give you a reference to a ticket PIM-xxxx. You have to add to the CHANGELOG-x.y.md file (x.y is the version of the PIM you want to contribute, no version if you want to contribute on master) under the BUG FIXES step of the next version the reference to the ticket and a description of the bug fix.

Then, if you introduced BC Breaks in namespaces for example (but you should/must not), under the BC BREAK step add a description of the BC Break. Moreover, you have to add in UPGRADE.md a way to fix this BC Break in files. To finish, if you introduced database BC Break, you have to add migration files in upgrades/schema/. In most of the cases using php bin/console doctrine:migrations:diff is enough to create a database migration class (see Doctrine migration documentation) but sometimes you will have to do it manually.

When your patch is not about a bug fix (when you add a new feature or change an existing one for instance), it must also include the following:

  • A short explanation of the new feature in the relevant CHANGELOG file
  • Same rule as bug fixes for the BC Break concern.
  • An explanation on how to upgrade an existing application in the relevant UPGRADE file(s) if the changes break backward compatibility or if you deprecate something that will ultimately break backward compatibility.

#Step 3: Submit your Patch

Whenever you feel that your patch is ready for submission, follow the following steps.

#Rebase your Patch

Before submitting your patch, update your branch (needed if it takes you a while to finish your changes):

$ git checkout master
$ git fetch upstream
$ git merge upstream/master
$ git checkout BRANCH_NAME
$ git rebase master

When doing the rebase command, you might have to fix merge conflicts. git status will show you the unmerged files. Resolve all the conflicts, then continue the rebase:

$ git add ... # add resolved files
$ git rebase --continue

Push your branch remotely:

$ git push --force origin BRANCH_NAME

#Make a Pull Request

You can now make a pull request on the Akeneo/pim-community-dev GitHub repository.

The pull request description must include the following checklist at the top to ensure that contributions may be reviewed without needless feedback loops and that your contributions can be included into Akeneo PIM as quickly as possible:

| Q                                 | A
| --------------------------------- | ---
| Added Specs                       | [yes|no]
| Added acceptance tests            | [yes|no]
| Added integration tests           | [yes|no]
| Added legacy Behats               | [yes|no]
| Changelog updated                 | [yes|no]
| Review and 2 GTM                  | [yes|no]
| Migration script                  | [yes|no]
| Tech Doc                          | [yes|no]

Some explanation for this Definition of Done :

  • “Added Specs” means phpspec have been written, every class has its own PHPSpec or the existing one has been updated except controllers, form types, commands, doctrine entity (POPO), symfony semantic config.
  • “Added acceptance tests” means that tests evaluating the proper business adequation of the code have been written. You can use Behat but not necessarily by using end to end tests.
  • “Added integration tests” means that tests checking that different components work well together have been added. We usually use phpUnit for this purpose.
  • “Added legacy Behats” means scenario have been written using the legacy Behat stack. We recommend not adding this kind of tests, and instead work on real acceptance tests.
  • “Changelog updated” means the bug fix line has been added (in case of bug) via an explicit sentence, all the BC breaks (with the last minor version) have been listed and, in case of improvement (functional or technical), a short description (prefixed by the issue number).
  • “Review and 2 GTM” means the technical review has been done, comments have been fixed and at least two teammates have given a Good To Merge (GTM). Update it just before you merge.
  • “Migration scripts” means you changed the data model and you provided migration script allowing to migrate data from previous minor version to the upcoming one.
  • “Tech Doc” means cookbook and reference doc has been written if needed.

If you just submitted your PR for a typo, an example could now look as follows:

| Q                                 | A
| --------------------------------- | ---
| Added Specs                       | no
| Added Behats                      | no
| Changelog updated                 | yes
| Review and 2 GTM                  | no
| Migration script                  | no
| Tech Doc                          | no

If you just submitted your PR for a bug fix with some BC Breaks in database, an example could now look as follows:

| Q                                 | A
| --------------------------------- | ---
| Added Specs                       | yes
| Added Behats                      | yes
| Changelog updated                 | yes
| Review and 2 GTM                  | no
| Migration script                  | yes
| Tech Doc                          | no

If some of the previous requirements are not met, create a todo-list and add relevant items:

- [ ] Fix the specs as they have not been updated yet
- [ ] Submit changes to the documentation
- [ ] Document the BC breaks

If the code is not finished yet because you don’t have time to finish it or because you want early feedback on your work, add an item to todo-list:

- [ ] Finish the feature
- [ ] Gather feedback for my changes

As long as you have items in the todo-list, please prefix the pull request title with “[WIP]”.

In the pull request description, give as much details as possible about your changes (don’t hesitate to give code examples to illustrate your points). If your pull request is about adding a new feature or modifying an existing one, explain the rationale for the changes. The pull request description helps the code review.

In addition to this “code” pull request, you must also send a pull request to the documentation repository to update the documentation when appropriate.

#Rework your Patch

Based on the feedback on the pull request, you might need to rework your patch. Before re-submitting the patch, rebase with upstream/master, don’t merge; and force the push to the origin:

$ git rebase -f upstream/master
$ git push --force origin BRANCH_NAME

When doing a push --force, always specify the branch name explicitly to avoid messing other branches in the repo (--force tells Git that you really want to mess with things so do it carefully).

Often, Akeneo team members will ask you to “squash” your commits. This means you will convert many commits to one commit. To do this, use the rebase command:

$ git rebase -i upstream/master
$ git push --force origin BRANCH_NAME

After you type this command, an editor will popup showing a list of commits:

pick 1a31be6 first commit
pick 7fc64b4 second commit
pick 7d33018 third commit

To squash all commits into the first one, remove the word pick before the second and the last commits, and replace it by the word squash or just s. When you save, Git will start rebasing, and if successful, will ask you to edit the commit message, which by default is a listing of the commit messages of all the commits. When you are finished, execute the push command.

#Step 4: Is my pull request merged?

Once your Pull Request is merged, don’t hesitate to claim your badge “Core contributor” on Badger platform.


Found a typo or a hole in the documentation and feel like contributing?
Join us on Github!