Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
99 lines (71 loc) · 5.48 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

99 lines (71 loc) · 5.48 KB

Contributing to Homebrew

First time contributing to Homebrew? Read our Code of Conduct.

Ensure your commits follow the commit style guide.

Thanks for contributing!

To report a bug

To submit a version upgrade for the foo formula

  • check if the same upgrade has been already submitted by searching the open pull requests for foo.
  • brew tap homebrew/core
  • brew bump-formula-pr --strict foo with one of the following:
    • --url=... and --sha256=...
    • --tag=... and --revision=...
    • --version=...

To add a new formula for foo version 2.3.4 from $URL

  • read the Formula Cookbook or: brew create $URL and make edits
  • HOMEBREW_NO_INSTALL_FROM_API=1 brew install --build-from-source foo
  • brew audit --new foo
  • git commit with message formatted foo 2.3.4 (new formula)
  • open a pull request and fix any failing tests

Once you've addressed any potential feedback and a member of the Homebrew org has approved your pull request, the BrewTestBot will automatically merge it a couple of minutes later.

To contribute a fix to the foo formula

If you are already well-versed in the use of git, then you can work with the local copy of the homebrew-core repository as you are used to. You may need to run brew tap homebrew/core to clone it, if you haven't done so already; the repository will then be located in the directory $(brew --repository homebrew/core). Modify the formula there using brew edit foo, leaving the section bottle do ... end unchanged, and prepare a pull request as you usually do. Before submitting your pull request, be sure to test it with these commands:

brew uninstall --force foo
HOMEBREW_NO_INSTALL_FROM_API=1 brew install --build-from-source foo
brew test foo
brew audit --strict foo
brew style foo

After testing, if you think it is needed to force the corresponding bottles to be rebuilt and redistributed, add a line of the form revision 1 to the formula, or add 1 to the revision number already present.

If you are not already well versed in the use of git, then you may learn about it from the introduction at https://docs.brew.sh/How-To-Open-a-Homebrew-Pull-Request and then proceed as follows:

  • run brew tap homebrew/core --force, if you haven't done so previously
  • run brew edit foo and make edits
  • leave the section bottle do ... end unchanged
  • test your changes using the commands listed above
  • run git commit with message formatted foo <insert new version number> or foo: <insert details>
  • open a pull request as described in the introduction linked to above, wait for the automated test results, and fix any failing tests

Once you've addressed any potential feedback and a member of the Homebrew org has approved your pull request, the BrewTestBot will automatically merge it a couple of minutes later.

Dealing with CI failures

Pull requests with failing CI should not be merged, so the failures will need to be fixed. Start by looking for errors in the CI log. Some errors will show up as annotations in the "Files changed" tab of your pull request. If there are no annotations, or the annotations do not contain the relevant errors, then the complete build log can be found in the "Checks" tab of your pull request.

Once you've identified the error(s), check whether you can reproduce them locally. You should be able to do this with one or more of HOMEBREW_NO_INSTALL_FROM_API=1 brew install --build-from-source, brew audit --strict --online, and brew test. Don't forget to checkout your PR branch before trying this! If you can reproduce the failure(s), then it is likely that the formula needs to be fixed. Read the error messages carefully. Many errors provide hints on how to fix them. Failing that: looking up the error message is often a fruitful source of hints for what to do next.

If you can't reproduce an error, then you need to identify what makes your local environment different from the build environment in CI. It is likely that one of those differences is driving the CI failure. It may help to try to make your local environment as similar to CI as possible to try to reproduce the failure. If the CI failure occurs on Linux, you can use the Homebrew Docker container to emulate the CI environment. See the next section for a guide on how to do this.

If you're still stuck: don't fret. Leave a comment on your PR describing what you've done to try to diagnose and fix the CI failure and we'll do our best to help you resolve them.

Homebrew Docker container

Linux CI runs on a Docker container running Ubuntu 22.04. If you have Docker installed, you can use our container with:

docker run --interactive --tty --rm --pull always homebrew/ubuntu22.04:latest /bin/bash

If you don't have Docker installed:

brew install --formula docker lima
limactl start template://docker
docker context create lima --docker "host=unix://${HOME}/.lima/docker/sock/docker.sock"
docker context use lima

You should now be able to run the docker command shown above.