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https://github.com/ceph/go-ceph
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246 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
246 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
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# go-ceph - Development Guide
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## Preface
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This document is aimed at providing a brief introduction to the structure and
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development processes used by the go-ceph project. It is aimed at people who
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wish to improve go-ceph. We assume familiarity with the Go language and common
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tooling as well as some familiarity with C. We hope this document is useful but
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can't guarantee it's always up to date. It will never be totally comprehensive.
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This document tries to focus on items that may not be obvious by reading the
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code itself. One can go very far by simply reading the code and sticking with
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what has been observed. However, this doc tries to give a bit more of a
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background "philosophy" that hopefully reveals some part of why we do certain
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things we do.
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## Theme
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The primary theme behind go-ceph is one of providing access to Ceph's
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functionality via Go as a library of API functions and types. We desire to
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expose the full power of the Ceph APIs - this means that we generally aim to
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provide a thin layer of code over the APIs provided by Ceph itself. We try to
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do enough to make a user of Go feel like go-ceph is a (mostly) idiomatic Go
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library. We also strive to make someone familiar with the Ceph APIs recognize
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what C functions are being mapped to Go.
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While we may provide some convenience layers we generally plan to provide access
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to all of the Ceph APIs on a near 1:1 basis. When we do provide convenience
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layers we do not mean to make them the exclusive tool-set provided.
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While the focus so far has been accessing APIs in C in Go, the true target of
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go-ceph is to express Ceph functionality in Go. As such, not every feature
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of go-ceph may be found in the C API. A small but growing set of features
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build upon parts of Ceph that make use of the C APIs but do more than just
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that. For example, this includes the `cephfs/admin` package.
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## Library Structure
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Currently, there are three top level sub-packages that reflect three main
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functional areas in Ceph. The `rados` package exposes features related to
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Ceph's RADOS system and the `librados` C library. The `rbd` package exposes
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features related to the RBD subsystem and the `librbd` C library. The `cephfs`
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package exposes features related to CephFS and the `libcephfs` C library.
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In addition the `internal` directory contains packages that have APIs used
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to support the public APIs in rados, rbd, and cephfs but are not exported
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publicly themselves. A large proportion of these helper libraries are intended
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to ease working with C functions from Go. These are placed under the special
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"internal" namespace so that we do not promise outside consumers that these
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APIs are part of go-ceph or stable.
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Under `cephfs/admin` there is a sub-package aimed at managing aspects of CephFS
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such as administering subvolumes, subvolume groups, snapshots, and other facets
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of CephFS that can be also be managed using the `ceph` command line tool but are
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not directly part of the C API.
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## File Structure
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When writing new code or updating go-ceph, keep in mind that a single .go file
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should be related to a single related "sub-topic" within the scope of the
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subsystem. For example, functions related to snapshotting an rbd volume are
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in `snapshot.go`. Following Go convention, tests for those functions will be
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found in `snashot_test.go`. For historical reasons, there are still a few
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"omnibus" .go files in the codebase. Please avoid adding to those files whenever
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possible.
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The go-ceph project uses "build tags" to support multiple versions of Ceph with
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a single version of go-ceph. [Build
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tags](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/customizing-go-binaries-with-build-tags)
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are a feature of Go that we use to conditionally build some files based on Ceph
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release versions. Typically, we use the release code name of Ceph (nautilus,
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octopus, etc) to choose what APIs in Ceph we expect to be available. Because
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some APIs for a topical area may vary across ceph releases we some time name
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files like `snapshot_nautilus.go` to support compiling some APIs only
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conditionally for given versions of Ceph. Depending on the feature, an API
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function in go-ceph may be disabled entirely or if the APIs in Ceph are largely
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compatible one go-ceph function may be written in terms of different C APIs
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functions (that produce the same effect).
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## API Naming
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Generally, the go-ceph project aims to name functions and types similarly to
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the names used in Ceph libraries and documentation. We also follow the standard
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Go naming conventions. This leads us to converting some names from
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`underscore_style` to `CamelCase` style. However, we try to retain the same
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terms used by the Ceph functions. Occasionally, we will tweak the word order
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to fit the object-method approach. For example, if a function in Ceph is called
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`pantry_cheese_get` and we've created a type `Pantry` to encapsulate functions
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related to the pantry topic, we might add a function `func (p *Pantry)
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GetCheese(...)` rather than keeping the word order of the original. When in
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doubt, do what seems reasonable and ask for additional feedback during code
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review.
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## Documentation Conventions
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The project intends to rigorously document the public facing APIs of go-ceph.
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This starts by adding godoc comments to exported functions and types. This
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is currently enforced by tools in our CI. Additionally, we've established a
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"home grown" convention to help map between Ceph APIs and go-ceph ones.
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For functions that have an equivalent C API, add a block at the bottom of
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the doc comment that starts with "Implements:" and is followed by
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the C function definition, indented, like so:
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```
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// GroupImageAdd will add the specified image to the named group.
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// An io context must be supplied for both the group and image.
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//
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// Implements:
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// int rbd_group_image_add(rados_ioctx_t group_p,
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// const char *group_name,
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// rados_ioctx_t image_p,
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// const char *image_name);
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```
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The typical Go-style doc comment goes first, followed by the "Implements" line,
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indicating that what follows is what C function being implemented by the
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go-ceph function, and then the C function. This is indented so that the
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godoc system treats it as a quoted block.
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These lines help readers who are familiar with the C API and may even aid
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search engines. In addition, we have some simplistic tooling that uses these
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comments to help us determine how much of the Ceph APIs we're covering.
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For the `cephfs/admin` package, and any similar cases where there's CLI support
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for something but no Ceph API, we replace "Implements" by "Similar To" and
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record a simplified version of the command it most closely matches. Example:
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```
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// ListSubVolumes returns a list of subvolumes belonging to the volume and
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// optional subvolume group.
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//
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// Similar To:
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// ceph fs subvolume ls <volume> --group-name=<group>
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```
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## Testing
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The go-ceph project makes heavy use of unit and functional tests to ensure it
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matches the behaviors of Ceph as intended. We are not strict about the
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distinction between the types of tests and generally treat the majority of
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tests as functional. Unless you're running a manually specified subset of
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tests we require a running Ceph cluster to ensure the APIs we've implemented
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are correct in terms of the Ceph features we need.
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As of this writing the test automation is preformed using the github actions
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system. The YAML files under `.github/workflows` define the jobs that get
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executed automatically.
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### Running Tests
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For both running tests locally or in our CI jobs we build and run the tests in
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(OCI/docker) containers. This also includes containers to run a self-contained
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"micro" Ceph cluster. The container images can be build by running `make
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ci-image` an optional `CEPH_VERSION` variable can be provided which will be
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used to select the base image for the container. Currently it can be supplied
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as either "nautilus" or "octopus".
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The entire suite of tests can be run via the makefile rule `test-container`.
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For example: `make test-container`. The behavior of the test container is
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controlled by the script `entrypoint.sh`. This script takes a number of command
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line options, and can be used to restrict what tests will be run. For example,
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the command line option `--test-pkg=rados`. Will only test the `rados`
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subpackage. The `--help` option can be provided to view the options the script
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supports.
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### Adding New Tests
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We stress the importance of all new features and code changes having
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corresponding tests. We try not to obsess over having 100% line coverage, but
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do want to see everything that can be tested have a test case. By default, our
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test container enables coverage reports so it is fairly easy to see what parts
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of the library have coverage or not. The CI also captures the generated
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coverage HTML reports and makes them available to download.
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The go-ceph project makes use of the [testify
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library](https://github.com/stretchr/testify). Depending on the circumstances,
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tests use a mix of checks (assert) and requirements (require). If a test
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function must not proceed past a certain point, use require. Otherwise, we
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default to assert calls.
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### Misc
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Code quality and formatting checks can be run via `make check`. These checks
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require `gofmt` as well as [revive](https://github.com/mgechev/revive).
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A custom tool called `implements` is available under `contrib/implements`. This
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tool is designed to help compare what is available in ceph vs. go-ceph. It
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checks both the "Implements" sections in the comments as well as the code
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itself. It requires the [castxml](https://github.com/CastXML/CastXML) CLI tool.
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## Contribution Guidelines
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The go-ceph project makes use of the pull-request workflow provided by github.
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Work should be submitted as a series of patches organized on a git branch and
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then submitted together as a PR. As a general rule, small PRs - both in terms
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of number of patches and lines of code - are processed, reviewed and merged
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faster than larger ones. However, if you have to err on one side or the other,
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a larger number of small patches is preferable to a small number of large
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patches.
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Each patch should have a well formed commit message. The go-ceph project
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prefers the topic-subject-body style, followed by a Signed-off-by line. Example:
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```
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[topic]: [short description]
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[Longer description - multiple lines or paragraphs as needed]
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Signed-off-by: [Your Name] <[your email]>
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```
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The commit message should help others understand the where, what, and why of
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the patch. A topic is a functional area within the go-ceph project. For
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example, `rados` or `cephfs`. When in doubt, let the directory name of files
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changed help be your guide. So if you worked on files in the "cephfs/admin"
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directory, a topic of "cephfs admin" would be appropriate.
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Every new patch should be complete enough that it does not rely on any code
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changes that follow it. In other words, add API A before B if B relies on A.
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Add tests for a feature either in the patch that adds the feature or following
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it. No (submitted) patch should cause a test failure. Keeping patches clean
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this way enables the use of tools like `git bisect` to find real issues in the
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future.
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As noted previously, changes should be accompanied by documentation and tests
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appropriate.
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## Closing Remarks
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When in doubt, feel free to reach out to the project via the github discussions
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feature, IRC chat, etc. This document is part of the go-ceph project and so
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feedback and contributions to this doc are very welcome.
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