OpenMMLab welcomes everyone who is interested in contributing to our projects and accepts contribution in the form of PR.
PR
is the abbreviation of Pull Request
. Here's the definition of PR
in the official document of Github.
Pull requests let you tell others about changes you have pushed to a branch in a repository on GitHub. Once a pull request is opened, you can discuss and review the potential changes with collaborators and add follow-up commits before your changes are merged into the base branch.
-
Get the most recent codebase
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Checkout a new branch from
dev-1.x
ordev
branch, depending on the version of the codebase you want to contribute to. The main differences betweendev-1.x
anddev
is thatdev-1.x
depends on MMEngine additionally and it's the main branch we maintains. We strongly recommend you pull request based on more advanceddev-1.x
branch. -
Commit your changes (Don't forget to use pre-commit hooks!)
-
Push your changes and create a PR
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Discuss and review your code
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Merge your branch to
dev-1.x
/dev
branch
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When you work on your first PR
Fork the OpenMMLab repository: click the fork button at the top right corner of Github page
Clone forked repository to local
git clone git@github.com:XXX/mmdetection3d.git
Add source repository to upstream
git remote add upstream git@github.com:open-mmlab/mmdetection3d
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After your first PR
Checkout the latest branch of the local repository and pull the latest branch of the source repository. Here we assume that you are working on the
dev-1.x
branch.git checkout dev-1.x git pull upstream dev-1.x
git checkout -b branchname
To make commit history clear, we strongly recommend you checkout the `dev-1.x` branch before creating a new branch.
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If you are a first-time contributor, please install and initialize pre-commit hooks from the repository root directory first.
pip install -U pre-commit pre-commit install
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Commit your changes as usual. Pre-commit hooks will be triggered to stylize your code before each commit.
# coding git add [files] git commit -m 'messages'
Sometimes your code may be changed by pre-commit hooks. In this case, please remember to re-stage the modified files and commit again.
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Push the branch to your forked remote repository
git push origin branchname
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Revise PR message template to describe your motivation and modifications made in this PR. You can also link the related issue to the PR manually in the PR message (For more information, checkout the official guidance).
-
Specifically, if you are contributing to
dev-1.x
, you will have to change the base branch of the PR todev-1.x
in the PR page, since the default base branch ismaster
. -
You can also ask a specific person to review the changes you've proposed.
- Modify your codes according to reviewers' suggestions and then push your changes.
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After the PR is merged by the maintainer, you can delete the branch you created in your forked repository.
git branch -d branchname # delete local branch git push origin --delete branchname # delete remote branch
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Use pre-commit hook to avoid issues of code style
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One short-time branch should be matched with only one PR
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Accomplish a detailed change in one PR. Avoid large PR
- Bad: Support Faster R-CNN
- Acceptable: Add a box head to Faster R-CNN
- Good: Add a parameter to box head to support custom conv-layer number
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Provide clear and significant commit message
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Provide clear and meaningful PR description
- Task name should be clarified in title. The general format is: [Prefix] Short description of the PR (Suffix)
- Prefix: add new feature [Feature], fix bug [Fix], related to documents [Docs], in developing [WIP] (which will not be reviewed temporarily)
- Introduce main changes, results and influences on other modules in short description
- Associate related issues and pull requests with a milestone