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Pull requests
Samuel edited this page Apr 12, 2022
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Before making a pull request, it is useful to check that the following points are met (if applicable):
- Only changes related to issue have been made - additional changes should be contained within separate issues to ensure changes are as focused and relevant to the associated issue as possible.
- The README.md file has been updated to reflect changes made if usage/underlying functionality has been altered.
- You have performed pylint checks locally. This will ensure your changes do not raise pylint warnings/errors and amendments to python styling can be made before turning into a PR. This keeps the PR commit history as short as possible.
- All unit tests pass.
The pull request should contain:
- A summary of the work completed
- A specification of how to validate that the pull request resolves the issue.
- If the issue contains this then link the issue instead
-
Fixes #issue-number
so that the pull request is linked to the issue - Any other comments such as
I'm not sure this is the best way of doing X, Y, and Z can someone advise?
The pull request should be added to the relevant project associated with the issue. This will mean that Pull request should belong to exactly 2 projects.
Pull requests should have the same labels as their associated issue with the exception of the status labels (these may differ between the issue and pull request).
- Once a pull request has been opened and the build servers are happy (e.g. the checks have come back green) a pull request should be reviewed.
- To do this assign yourself as the reviewer
- Try to review a pull request for every one that you open
- When a pull request is submitted, GitHub Actions will automatically run the unit tests and static analysis on the fully code base.
- This process takes about 5 minutes and the reports will be added to the pull request.
- All tests must pass in order to consider merging the code.
- Review the code for quality.
- Check that everything is syntactically correct
- Ask questions if you are not sure what something does or why it is there
- Try to the test the pull request using the instructions given by the developer.
- If there are no instructions or the instruction do not work report this to the developer
- Try to test around the issue by attempting to break the changes in some way
- If you do find any problems then report them to the developer
- Ensure the changes are covered by tests if appropriate