podman-compose/CONTRIBUTING.md

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# Contributing to podman-compose
## Who can contribute?
- Users that found a bug
- Users that wants to propose new functionalities or enhancements
- Users that want to help other users to troubleshoot their environments
- Developers that want to fix bugs
- Developers that want to implement new functionalities or enhancements
## Branches
Please request your PR to be merged into the `devel` branch.
Changes to the `stable` branch are managed by the repository maintainers.
## Development environment setup
Note: Some steps are OPTIONAL but all are RECOMMENDED.
1. Fork the project repo and clone it
```shell
$ git clone https://github.com/USERNAME/podman-compose.git
$ cd podman-compose
```
1. (OPTIONAL) Create a python virtual environment. Example using [virtualenv wrapper](https://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.io/en/latest/):
```shell
mkvirtualenv podman-compose
```
2. Install the project runtime and development requirements
```shell
$ pip install '.[devel]'
```
3. (OPTIONAL) Install `pre-commit` git hook scripts (https://pre-commit.com/#3-install-the-git-hook-scripts)
```shell
$ pre-commit install
```
4. Create a new branch, develop and add tests when possible
5. Run linting & testing before commiting code. Ensure all the hooks are passing.
```shell
$ pre-commit run --all-files
```
6. Commit your code to your fork's branch.
- Make sure you include a `Signed-off-by` message in your commits. Read [this guide](https://docs.github.com/en/authentication/managing-commit-signature-verification/signing-commits) to learn how to sign your commits
- In the commit message reference the Issue ID that your code fixes and a brief description of the changes. Example: `Fixes #516: allow empty network`
7. Open a PR to `containers/podman-compose:devel` and wait for a maintainer to review your work.
## Adding new commands
To add a command you need to add a function that is decorated
with `@cmd_run` passing the compose instance, command name and
description. the wrapped function should accept two arguments
the compose instance and the command-specific arguments (resulted
from python's `argparse` package) inside that command you can
run PodMan like this `compose.podman.run(['inspect', 'something'])`
and inside that function you can access `compose.pods`
and `compose.containers` ...etc.
Here is an example
```
@cmd_run(podman_compose, 'build', 'build images defined in the stack')
def compose_build(compose, args):
compose.podman.run(['build', 'something'])
```
## Command arguments parsing
Add a function that accept `parser` which is an instance from `argparse`.
In side that function you can call `parser.add_argument()`.
The function decorated with `@cmd_parse` accepting the compose instance,
and command names (as a list or as a string).
You can do this multiple times.
Here is an example
```
@cmd_parse(podman_compose, 'build')
def compose_build_parse(parser):
parser.add_argument("--pull",
help="attempt to pull a newer version of the image", action='store_true')
parser.add_argument("--pull-always",
help="attempt to pull a newer version of the image, Raise an error even if the image is present locally.", action='store_true')
```
NOTE: `@cmd_parse` should be after `@cmd_run`
## Calling a command from inside another
If you need to call `podman-compose down` from inside `podman-compose up`
do something like:
```
@cmd_run(podman_compose, 'up', 'up desc')
def compose_up(compose, args):
compose.commands['down'](compose, args)
# or
compose.commands['down'](argparse.Namespace(foo=123))
```
## Missing Commands (help needed)
```
bundle Generate a Docker bundle from the Compose file
config Validate and view the Compose file
create Create services
events Receive real time events from containers
images List images
logs View output from containers
port Print the public port for a port binding
ps List containers
rm Remove stopped containers
run Run a one-off command
scale Set number of containers for a service
top Display the running processes
```