.. developers: RDFLib developers guide ======================= Introduction ------------ This document describes the process and conventions to follow when developing RDFLib code. Please be as Pythonic as possible (:pep:`8`). Code will occasionally be auto-formatted using ``autopep8`` - you can also do this yourself. Any new functionality being added to RDFLib should have doc tests and unit tests. Tests should be added for any functionality being changed that currently does not have any doc tests or unit tests. And all the tests should be run before committing changes to make sure the changes did not break anything. If you add a new cool feature, consider also adding an example in ``./examples`` Running tests ------------- Run tests with `nose `_: .. code-block: bash $ pip install nose $ python run_tests.py $ python run_tests.py --attr known_issue # override attr in setup.cfg to run only tests marked with "known_issue" $ python run_tests.py --attr \!known_issue # runs all tests (including "slow" and "non_core") except those with known issues $ python run_tests.py --attr slow,!known_issue # comma separate if you want to specify more than one attr $ python run_tests.py --attr known_issue=None # use =None instead of \! if you keep forgetting to escape the ! in shell commands ;) Specific tests can either be run by module name or file name. For example:: $ python run_tests.py --tests rdflib.graph $ python run_tests.py --tests test/test_graph.py Writing documentation --------------------- We use sphinx for generating HTML docs, see :ref:`docs` Continous Integration --------------------- We used Travis for CI, see: https://travis-ci.org/RDFLib/rdflib If you make a pull-request to RDFLib on GitHub, travis will automatically test you code. Compatibility ------------- RDFLib>=5.0.0 tries to be compatible with python versions 2.7, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7. Releasing --------- Set to-be-released version number in :file:`rdflib/__init__.py` and :file:`README.md`. Check date in :file:`LICENSE`. Add :file:`CHANGELOG.md` entry. Commit this change. It's preferable make the release tag via https://github.com/RDFLib/rdflib/releases/new :: Our Tag versions aren't started with 'v', so just use a plain 5.0.0 like version. Release title is like "RDFLib 5.0.0", the description a copy of your :file:`CHANGELOG.md` entry. This gives us a nice release page like this:: https://github.com/RDFLib/rdflib/releases/tag/4.2.2 If for whatever reason you don't want to take this approach, the old one is:: Tagging the release commit with:: git tag -a -m 'tagged version' X.X.X When pushing, remember to do:: git push --tags No matter how you create the release tag, remember to upload tarball to pypi with:: rm -r dist/X.X.X[.-]* # delete all previous builds for this release, just in case rm -r build python setup.py sdist python setup.py bdist_wheel ls dist # upload with twine # WARNING: once uploaded can never be modified, only deleted! twine upload dist/rdflib-X.X.X[.-]* Set new dev version number in the above locations, i.e. next release `-dev`: ``5.0.1-dev`` and commit again. Tweet, email mailing list and update the topic of #rdflib on freenode irc:: /msg ChanServ topic #rdflib https://github.com/RDFLib/rdflib | latest stable version: 4.2.0 | docs: http://rdflib.readthedocs.org