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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to Ganache

Getting set up

  • Use Node.js v14.0.0.
    • Why v14.0.0? Because this is the first LTS release of Node.js v14 and is the earliest version Ganache supports.
    • recommendation: use nvm on Linux and macOS, and nvm-windows on Windows, to configure your node version.
      • On Linux and macOS, if you have nvm installed, just run nvm use to switch to Node.js v14.0.0.
  • git clone [email protected]:trufflesuite/ganache.git
  • cd ganache
  • npm install (use npm v6)
  • On Linux and macOS: run source completions.sh to enable autocomplete for npm scripts.

Solving node-gyp issues

If installation fails due to a node-gyp issue you may need to perform some additional system configuration.

on Linux (Ubuntu-based)

  • Determine if you have Python 2.7 installed
    • example: which python2.7
  • If you do not have Python 2.7 installed, you need to install it
    • example: sudo apt update && sudo apt install python2.7
  • Finally, run npm config set python python2.7

on Windows

on macOS

  • I have no idea.

Clean install

  • npm run reinstall

Which just runs these commands for you:

  • npm run clean
  • npm install

This deletes all node_modules folders, as well as all generated lib directories, then reinstalls all modules.

To compile

Compiles the ganache package and its internal dependencies and subdependencies:

  • npm run tsc

To compile a package directly:

  • npx lerna run --scope @ganache/<name> tsc

This can be useful if the package isn't yet in ganache's dependency tree.

To build the ganache package

Creates the bundle that can be published to npm

  • npm run build

To test

Runs all tests:

  • npm test (or the shorthand, npm t)

To start cli

To start the cli run:

  • npm start

To pass options to the cli you must separate the args with --, e.g.:

  • npm start -- --chain.chainId 1 --wallet.totalAccounts 5

To create a new chain/flavor

  • npm run create <name> --location chains

This will create a new folder at src/chains/<name> where <name> should be the flavor name (e.g. ethereum), which you then can create packages under.

To create a new package

  • npm run create <name> --location <location> [--folder <folder>]

This will create a new package with Ganache defaults at src/<location>/<name>.

If you provide the optional --folder option, the package will be created at src/<location>/<folder>.

To add a module to a package:

  • npx lerna add <module>[@version] -E [--dev] [--peer] --scope=<package>

Where <module> is the npm-module you want to add and <package> is where you want to add it. See @lerna/add documentation for more details.

Example:

npx lerna add @ganache/options -E --scope=@ganache/filecoin

will add our local @ganache/options package to the @ganache/filecoin package.

To remove a module from another package:

cd to the package and then run npm uninstall <module>

Editor Integrations

Automated Code Formatting

VSCode On Windows (10)

  • Enable "Developer Mode" by going to Settings -> Developer Settings -> Then select Developer Mode.

To debug tests in VS Code

  • Copy the launch.json file into a folder named .vscode in root of the project.
  • Set breakpoints by clicking the margin to the left of the line numbers (you can set conditional breakpoints or logpoints by right-clicking instead)
  • Press F5 (or select Run 🡺 Start Debugging from the menu bar) to automatically start debugging.

To change which files are debugged update your .vscode/launch.json file glob to match your target files. Here is an example to debug only test files in the @ganache/ethereum package:

diff --git a/.vscode/launch.json b/.vscode/launch.json
index 2a2aa9e..57cbf21 100644
--- a/.vscode/launch.json
+++ b/.vscode/launch.json
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@
         "--colors",
         "--require",
         "ts-node/register",
-        "${workspaceFolder}/src/**/tests/**/*.test.ts"
+        "${workspaceFolder}/src/chains/ethereum/ethereum/tests/**/*.test.ts"
       ],
       "skipFiles": ["<node_internals>/**"],
       "console": "integratedTerminal",

Code Conventions

These are guidelines, not rules. :-)

  • Use Node.js v14.0.0 for most local development.
  • Use bigint literals, e.g., 123n; if the number is externally configurable and/or could exceed Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER.
  • Write tests.
  • Do not use "Optional Chaining" (obj?.prop). I'd love to enable this, but TypeScript makes it hard to use bigint literals and optional chaining together. If you figure it out, delete this rule!
  • Prefer using a single loop to functional chaining.
  • Prefer performant code over your own developer experience.
  • Document complex code. Explain why the code does what it does.
  • Feel free to be clever, just document why you're being clever. If it's hard to read, comment what the code does, too.
  • Add JSDoc comments to public class members where it makes sense.
  • Before adding an external dependency check its code for quality, its # of external dependencies, its node version support, and make sure it's absolutely necessary.
  • Pin all dependencies, even dev dependencies.
  • Use npm; do not use yarn.
  • Don't use web3, ethers, etc in ganache core code. (Tests are fine)
  • Ensure a smooth development experience on Windows, Mac, and Linux.
  • Do not use bash scripts for critical development or configuration.
  • Do not use CLI commands in npm scripts or build scripts that aren't available by default on supported platforms.
  • Push your code often (at least every-other day!), even broken WIP code (to your own branch, of course).

Pull Requests

This section is mostly for the maintainers of Ganache, not individual contributors. You may commit with any messages you find useful.

We always "Squash and Merge" Pull Requests into a single commit message when merging into the develop branch.

The PR title and "Squash and Merge" commit message must be in the conventional commits format. The semantic-prs Github app is enabled for the repo and configured to require a PR title in the conventional commit format. When you "Squash and Merge", the commit message will automatically pull from the PR title, so just don't change this and there shouldn't be any issues. The conventional commit format is as follows:

<type>[optional scope]: <description> (#PR Number)

[optional body]

[optional footer(s)]

Example:

fix: reduce bundle size and check size in CI (#1234)

Co-authored-by: TinusLorvalds <[email protected]>

Notice how the description is in lowercase (except for initialisms/acronyms). The description should be clear and concise. The subject line does not have to be fewer than 50 characters if making it shorter removes useful information.

Co-authors should be preserved.

This format is what drives our automated release process and helps makes releases go smoothly.