# Contribute Code We sincerely appreciate your contributions. You can use fork and pull request workflow to merge your code. ## Code Requirements - Your code must be fully documented by [doxygen](http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen/) style. - Make sure the compiler option WITH\_STYLE\_CHECK is on and the compiler passes the code style check. - All code must have unit test. - Pass all unit tests. The following tutorial guides you into submitting your contibution. ## [Creating a Fork](https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo/) Just head over to the GitHub page and click the "Fork" button. It's just that simple. ## Clone Paddle is currently using [git-flow branching model](http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/). The **develop** is the main branch, and other user's branches are feature branches. Once you've created a fork, you can use your favorite git client to clone your repo or just head straight to the command line: ```shell # Clone your fork to your local machine git clone --branch develop https://github.com/USERNAME/Paddle.git ``` If your repository doesn't contain **develop** branch, just create it by your own. ```shell git clone https://github.com/USERNAME/Paddle.git Paddle cd Paddle git checkout -b develop # create develop branch. git remote add upstream https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle.git # add upstream to baidu/Paddle git pull upstream develop # update to upstream ``` Then you can start to develop by making a local developement branch ```shell git checkout -b MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH ``` ## Using `pre-commit` hook Paddle developers use [pre-commit](http://pre-commit.com/) tool to manage git pre-commit hooks. It can help us format source codes (cpp, python), check some basic thing before commit (only one EOL for each file, do not add a huge file in git). `pre-commit` tests is a part of unit tests in Travis-CI now, every PR doesn't fit hook can not be merged into Paddle. To use [pre-commit](http://pre-commit.com/), you should install it by `pip install pre-commit`, and currently, Paddle uses `clang-format` to format c/cpp sources. Please make sure clang-format 3.8+ installed. Then just run `pre-commit install` in your Paddle clone directory. When you commit your code, the pre-commit hook will check the local code if there is anything not suitable to commit, and so on. ## Commit Commit your changes by following command lines: ```shell # show the working tree status git status # add modified files git add xx env EDITOR=vim git commit # You can write your comments by vim/nano/emacs. ``` The first line of commit infomation is the title. The second and later lines are the details if any. ## Keeping Fork Up to Date Before pull your request, you should sync your code from the latest PaddlePaddle. To do this, you'll need to add a remote at first: ```shell # see the current configured remote repository git remote -v # add upstream repository git remote add upstream https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle.git # verify the new upstream git remote -v ``` Update your fork with the latest upstream changes: ```shell git pull --rebase upstream develop ``` If there are no unique commits locally, git will simply perform a fast-forward. However, if you have been making changes (in the vast majority of cases you probably shouldn't be), you may have to deal with conflicts. Now, your local master branch is up-to-date with everything modified upstream. ## Push to GitHub ```shell # push to your repository in Github git push -u origin MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH # create remote branch MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH to origin. ``` ## Pull Request Go to the page for your fork on GitHub, select your development branch, and click the **pull request button**. ## Update your pull request with the lastest version During the code review, your pull request may become stale because new commits in baidu/Paddle. GitHub allows autmotic update if there is no conflict. You can do this by clicking the "Update Branch" button in your pull request page. However, in the case of conflict, you need to do the update manually. You need to do the following on your local repository: ```shell git checkout MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH git pull upstream develop # You may need to resolve the conflict according to the git prompt. # Make and test your code. git push origin MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH ``` Now your Pull Request is updated with the latest version. ## Revise your pull request When you revise your pull request according to reviewer's comments, please use 'git commit' instead of 'git commit --amend' to commit your changes so that the reviewers can see the difference between the new pull requrest and the old pull request. The possible commands are ```shell git checkout MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH git pull upstream develop # update local to newest code base. # May be some conflicts will occured. # And develop your cool stuff env EDITOR=vim git commit # add your revise log git push origin MY_COOL_STUFF_BRANCH ```