Web Site Project Page

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Revision as of 00:39, 18 January 2009 by Handrews (talk | contribs) (Fix long-obsolete date.)
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GCD Web Site Project Master Page

The GCD is currently implementing a new web site to reflect the growth of the project and changes in available technology. This page summarizes the project status and provides links to information on various aspects of the work.

We welcome assistance from programmers and non-programmers alike (yes, we have tasks for non-technical people!).

Releases and Status

Projected releases are named after comic books, and are planned in detail on their own pages. Release numbering is tentative as intermediate releases may be added or removed as plans and features are revised.

GCD Site Releases by Code Name
Name # Purpose Status Next Milestone Next Date Comments
New Fun 1.0 First functional, production-ready release. Will contain the minimum functionality needed to migrate from the old site. Planning Detailed Requirements 2009-02-14 Named for the first U.S. comic book with all-new content.
More Fun 1.1 Minor release for small items that are not critical for inclusion in New Fun, or that require us to already have control of the database. Planning As the comic "New Fun" became "More Fun", this release is just a small next step.
The Dandy TBD First release to include major steps towards the new schema. There may be one or more small releases between More Fun and The Dandy Named for the very long-running British Weekly comic. Also, this release should be quite dandy :-)

Development Environment

Note that the first Review Board documentation page tells you (buried in the text) how to get post-review, and the second tells you how to use it. But they're not linked. The docs need a bit of work, so we might put some tips here soon.

How to set up a development environment:

Please join the mailing list and email us if you would like to help out!

3rd-party Documentation

Standards and Best Practices

Code submitted to the project should follow these standards. Review Board has been set up for code reviews, and all changes must go through code review and be approved before being checked in. Some of these guidelines are covered in places such as the Django documentation, but the ones restated below are items we feel are important enough to be called out here.

Using Review Board

Download the post-review script as explained in the User Basics documentation. You should already be running Python 2.4 or higher. You may need an additional library or two- the documentation should explain where to get it (probably through [1]).

To Submit a Review Request

When you are ready to submit code for review, if you have two files, apps/gcd/views/foo.py and templates/gcd/bar.html then you would run the command:

   post-review --server=http://maelstrom.walton.uark.edu/reviewboard/ apps/gcd/views/foo.py templates/gcd/bar.html

If those two files are the only files in your tree that have changed, you don't have to specify them individually- the script should find them automatically. But if you have multiple files edited, added or deleted, and don't want to submit all of them, you must tell the script which ones to look at.

Once you've done this, login to review board on maelstrom and you should see that you have a review marked as an "Outgoing Review" in your dashboard (there will be a '1' next to those words on the left side). You must fill in some extra information and publish the review before others can see it.

Currently, the review board developers are working to fix a number of usability problems before their upcoming 1.0 release. Hopefully things will be more obvious then. For now, the UI is sometimes a bit counter-intuitive. Here's what you have to do in the page where you edit the review:

  • Edit fields by clicking on the pencil icons next to them. When you are done with the fields, hit enter [return] to save the field.
    • Fields that are multi-line text boxes will have an OK button.
    • Summary, Description, and Groups are required. You should not use the People field, but should instead always set Groups to "gcd" (without the quotes).
    • You should put the bug number (from [2]) in the Bugs field whenever there is a relevant bug. Even if the change does not completely fix the bug.
    • Filling out Testing Done is strongly encouraged.
    • When proposing a significant change to the visual layout of the site, a screenshot is often useful. There is an "Attach Screenshot" link at the bottom right-hand corner of the panel for this purpose.

You can also click View Diff in the upper right-hand corner to make sure the changes being shown are the ones you intended.

Once you've filled out the fields, click Publish. You may need to click more than once if the system thought you were still editing one of the other fields (but wait and see if the first click worked for a bit- it should send email to the gcd-tech mailing list).

To Review Someone Else's Code

Click on the link in the email. Click View Diffs in the upper right-hand corner to look at the changes. Click on any line number to make notes about the code, and write your comments in the Comments tab, clicking Save Comment when you are done with the comments for that line. You will see your saved comments appear in the Reivew tab.

You may view existing comments (noted by a speech bubble next to a line number) by clicking that line number and looking in the Discussion tab.

When you have finished adding comments and responding to the discussion, click "Review" (which is a small link at the bottom right of the top panel of the review, above the diffs, or click any line number and go to the "Review" tab. If you want to send your comments without approving the code (because you are asking for changes or explanations), click Publish. If you approve of the review request, click Ship It.

(Note: "Ship it!" has long been the traditional approval response at VMware, from which this tool originates. It is amusing to watch the Review Board authors defend this phrasing on mailing lists and bug reports instead of just changing it to "Approve" or something else more obvious to non-VMware people. It's important to note that the Ship It button does not check the code in. The developer who submitted the code must do that).

This review process repeats each time the author modifies the change in response to comments until the reviewer(s) are satisfied and approve the review. Unresolvable disputes may be appealed to the Head Programmer, or if the Head Programmer is one of the parties, to the Technical Coordinator.

To Make Changes to a Review Request

If you are asked to make changes to a review you submitted (and agree to make the changes), then after you have finished your changes, re-run post-review, but with the -r argument giving the existing review number for your request. This will cause the tool to update the diff of your review instead of creating a new one. For instance, following the original example (and assuming no new files were added to the diff, or old ones deleted from it), and assuming the review is number 42, the command would be:

   post-review --server=http://maelstrom.walton.uark.edu/reviewboard/ -r 42 apps/gcd/views/foo.py templates/gcd/bar.html

Once you've done that, you once again go to the review, make any additional comments or respond to discussions in the same way you would if you were reviewing the code yourself, and then click Publish again. You may also make comments and change fields without submitting a new diff. Be sure to hit return if you are changing any of the fields to save your edits before you click Publish.

Committing the Code

Once a reviewer has approved the change, you should check in using svn the same way you always have. After that, you should go back to Review Board, go to the review screen, and click the "Set Submitted" link in the bottom right-hand corner of the main review panel (do not click View Diffs first, as the Set Submitted link does not appear on that page). This will remove the review request from the active list of reviews in everyone's dashboard.

Abandoning a Change

If, based on feedback or your own reconsiderations, you decide not to check in a change, then instead of checking in and clicking "Set Submitted", go to the same location and click "Discard Review". This also removes the request from the list of active reviews.

Standards For Python Code

Write Python 2.4 compatible code.
This is in part because of compatibility problems with a dependent package on Mac OS 10.4. But also because hosting environments might not all be up to 2.5 yet (although that is less of a concern as time goes on). Your code should be compatible with Python 2.4-2.6.
Follow the Python Style Guide. Read the whole thing, as it is full of useful advice.
This saves us from arguing over which of our personal styles should be used. Code that does not meet these guidelines will not be allowed through code review. If you find existing code that does not comply, please consider cleaning it up. Do not consider it an excuse to write more non-compliant code.
Read Python Idioms and Anti-Idioms
And do what it says :-)
Read the Docstring Guide
And do what it says :-)
Always place one space after each comma separating function arguments.
Unless of course there's a newline. For some reason this is not mentioned in the style guide, although all examples there follow it.
When breaking a statement across two lines, if there is no obvious way to indent it, indent two characters more than the start of the statement.
This makes it clear that the continued statement is not another indented block. When possible, line up continued statements by lining up arguments vertically, or the continued operand in an expression with the operand on the previous line. But when no such rule applies, use two extra spaces. Examples:

Breaking with an "obvious" indentations scheme of lining up operands vertically:

   foo = (bar.some_numeric_thingy +
          some_other_number)

Breaking when there is no obvious indentations scheme (so two spaces are used):

   SomeClass.some_list_of_things[indexy_bit].big_long_method_call(
     some_long_variable_name)

Note that it's often better to just break things up into multiple statements by using a few local varaibles in these situations:

   thingy = SomeClass.some_list_of_things[indexy_bit]
   thingy.big_long_method_call(some_long_variable_name)

Do not use global variables. Ever.
If for some reason you feel you must do this, you must get approval from the Head Programmer first. The current acting Head Programmer is unlikely to approve such a thing. If 3rd-party libraries or frameworks rely on global variables, you may of course use them as required.
Make everything portable, and especially use os.path when working with files and directories.
The project currently has only three active developers and a shared test are, but already needs to run on MacOS, Windows and Linux. We also do not yet know what our hosting environment will be. So don't do anything that will limit us.
When capturing from regular expressions, use named capture groups, not positional groups.
This make regular expressions more robust if the string ever changes and capture groups get reorderd. Additionally, while the regexp itself is a bit more cluttered, the intention of the capture groups is much more clear. Examples:

Bad:

   m = re.search(r'foo:\s*(\w*), (\w*)', target)
   foo = m.groups()[1]
   bar = m.groups()[2]

Good:

   m = re.search(r'foo:\s*(?P<foo>\w*), (?P<bar>\w*)', target)
   foo = m.group('foo')
   bar = m.group('bar')

For Django Models

Do not refer to Views, Templates or site URLs.
Models are pure data representation. They should present what is in the database, and sometimes expose methods that make that data easier to work with. But they should essentially be unaware of the higher layers of the application. Note that model fields that contain URLs because the database contains URLs are OK. These are generally external links anyway (like the URL field for publishers).

For Django Views

Use named groups in the URL conf for argument passing.
This makes view invocation more robust.
Use named URLs to disambiguate reverse mappings.
This supports better abstraction when code needs to look up URLs.

For Django Templates

We need a style guide for templates!
Suggestions appreciated. For now, stick with the following rules:
Please try to keep content within 80 columns, but do not go through confusing contortions in the process.
In other words, if you've got long URLs or if you need to string things together due to the vagaries of how Django's template engine performs substitutions, go ahead and let the line be as long as it needs to be. However, don't put

For HTML

Use 2-character indentation for each nesting level.

For CSS

All CSS goes in external style sheets.
When modifying styles dynamically, it is better to modify the element's class(es) than set styles directly.
Classes and IDs are always lower_case_separated_by_underscores.
Colors are always associated with class names that define an elements role in the color scheme.
i.e. background, foreground, hilight, etc. Actual list TBD.

For JavaScript

We have not yet determined how and to what extend we want to use JavaScript. Please discuss any ideas with the Head Programmer first. Input on this topic is welcome.