8.9 KiB
Contributing to Bitcore
We're working hard to make bitcore the easier and most powerful javascript library for working with bitcoin. Our goal is to have bitcore be a library that can be used by anyone interested on bitcoin, and level the expertise differences with a great design and documentation.
We have a pretty strict set of guidelines for contributing.
Quick checklist
Make sure:
gulp lint
doesn't complain about your changesgulp test
passes all the testsgulp coverage
covers 100% of the branches of your code
Design Guidelines
These are some global design goals in bitcore that any change must adhere to.
D1 - Naming Matters
We take our time with picking names. Code is going to be written once, and read hundreds of times.
We were inspired to name this rule first due to Uncle Bob's great work Clean Code, which has a whole chapter on this subject.
In particular, you may notice that some names in this library are quite long for the average javascript user. That's because we better have a long but comprehensible name rather than an abbreviation that might confuse new users.
D2 - Tests
Write a test for all your code. We encourage Test Driven Development so we know when our code is right. We migrated from our original code base with a 80% test coverage and are targeting 100% as we move towards our 1.0 release.
D3 - Robustness Principle
Be conservative in what you send, be liberal in what you accept.
Interfaces accept as much types of arguments as possible, so there's no mental tax on using them: we want to avoid questions such as "should I use a string here or a buffer?", "what happens if I'm not sure if the type of this variable is an Address instance or a string with it encoded in base-58?" or "what kind of object will I receive after calling this function?".
Accept a wide variety of usages and arguments, always return an internal kind
of object. For example, the class PublicKey
can accept strings or buffers
with a DER encoded public key (either compressed or uncompressed), another
PublicKey, a PrivateKey, or a Point, an instance of the elliptic.js
library
with the point in bitcoin's elliptic curve that represents the public key.
D4 - Consistency Everywhere
Consistency on the way classes are used is paramount to allow an easier understanding of the library.
Style Guidelines
The design guidelines have quite a high abstraction level. These style guidelines are easier to detect and apply, and also more opinionated (the design guidelines mentioned above are the way we think about general software development and we believe they should be present on any software project).
G1 - General: No Magic Numbers
Avoid constants in the code as much as possible. Magic strings are also magic numbers.
G2 - General: Internal Objects should be Instances
If a class has a publicKey
member, for instance, that should be a PublicKey
instance.
G3 - General: Internal amounts must be integers representing Satoshis
Avoid representation errors by always dealing with satoshis. For conversion for
frontends, use the Unit
class.
G4 - General: Internal network references must be Network instances
A special case for G2 all
network references must be Network
instances (see lib/network.js
), but when
returned to the user, its .name
property should be used.
G5 - General: Objects should display nicely in the console
Write a .inspect()
method so an instance can be easily debugged in the
console.
G6 - General: Naming Utility Namespaces
Name them in CamelCase, as they are namespaces.
DO:
var BufferUtil = require('./util/buffer');
DON'T:
var bufferUtil = require('./util/buffer');
E1 - Errors: Use bitcore.Errors
We've designed a structure for Errors to follow and are slowly migrating to it.
Usage:
- Errors are generated in the file
lib/errors/index.js
by invokinggulp errors
. - The specification for errors is written in the
lib/errors/spec.js
file. - Whenever a new class is created, add a generic error for that class in
lib/errors/spec.js
. - Specific errors for that class should subclass that error. Take a look at the
structure in
lib/errors/spec.js
, it should be clear how subclasses are generated from that file.
E2 - Errors: Provide a getValidationError static method for classes
I1 - Interface: Make Code that Fails Early
In order to deal with javascript's weak typing and confusing errors, we ask our code to fail as soon as possible when an unexpected input was provided.
There's a module called util/preconditions
, loosely based on
preconditions.js
, based on guava
, that we use for state and argument
checking. It should be trivial to use. We recommend using it on all methods, in
order to improve robustness and consistency.
$.checkState(something === anotherthing, 'Expected something to be anotherthing');
$.checkArgument(something < 100, 'something', 'must be less than 100');
$.checkArgumentType(something, PrivateKey, 'something'); // The third argument is a helper to mention the name of the argument
$.checkArgumentType(something, PrivateKey); // but it's optional (will show up as "(unknown argument)")
I2 - Interface: Permissive Constructors
Most classes have static methods named fromBuffer
, fromString
, fromJSON
.
Whenever one of those methods is provided, the constructor for that class
should also be able to detect the type of the arguments and call the
appropriate method.
I3 - Interface: Method Chaining
For classes that have a mutable state, most of the methods that can be chained SHOULD be chained, allowing for interfaces that read well, like:
var transaction = new Transaction()
.from(utxo)
.to(address, amount)
.change(address)
.sign(privkey);
I4 - Interface: Copy Constructors
Constructors, when provided an instance of the same class, should:
- Return the same object, if the instances of this class are immutable
- Return a deep copy of the object, if the instances are mutable
Examples:
function MyMutableClass(arg) {
if (arg instanceof MyMutableClass) {
return MyMutableClass._deepCopy(arg);
}
// ...
}
function ImmutableClass(arg) {
if (arg instanceof ImmutableClass) {
return arg;
}
// ...
}
I5 - Interface: No new keyword for Constructors
Constructors should not require to be called with new
. This rule is not
heavily enforced, but is a "nice to have".
function NoNewRequired(args) {
if (!(this instanceof NoNewRequired)) {
return new NoNewRequired(args);
}
// ...
}
T1 - Testing: Tests Must be Written Elegantly
Style guidelines are not relaxed for tests. Tests are a good way to show how to use the library, and maintaining them is extremely necessary.
Don't write long tests, write helper functions to make them be as short and concise as possible (they should take just a few lines each), and use good variable names.
T2 - Testing: Tests Must not be Random
Inputs for tests should not be generated randomly. Also, the type and structure of outputs should be checked.
T3 - Testing: Require 'bitcore' and look up classes from there
This helps to make tests more useful as examples, and more independent of where they are placed. This also helps prevent forgetting to include all submodules in the bitcore object.
DO:
var bitcore = require('../');
var PublicKey = bitcore.PublicKey;
DON'T:
var PublicKey = require('../lib/publickey');
Pull Request Workflow
Our workflow is based on GitHub's pull requests. We use feature branches,
prepended with: test
, feature
, fix
, refactor
, or remove
according to
the change the branch introduces. Some examples for such branches are:
git checkout -b test/some-module
git checkout -b feature/some-new-stuff
git checkout -b fix/some-bug
git checkout -b remove/some-file
We expect pull requests to be rebased to the master branch before merging:
git remote add bitpay git@github.com:bitpay/bitcore.git
git pull --rebase bitpay master
Note that we require rebasing your branch instead of mergeing it, for commit readability reasons.
After that, you can push the changes to your fork, by doing:
git push origin your_branch_name
git push origin feature/some-new-stuff
git push origin fix/some-bug
Finally go to github.com/bitpay/bitcore in your web browser and issue a new pull request.
Main contributors will review your code and possibly ask for changes before your code is pulled in to the main repository. We'll check that all tests pass, review the coding style, and check for general code correctness. If everything is OK, we'll merge your pull request and your code will be part of bitcore.
If you have any questions feel free to post them to github.com/bitpay/bitcore/issues.
Thanks for your time and code!