Welcome and thank you for your interest in contributing to the QuantConnect Lean open source project. This document aims to describe the preferred workflow contributors should follow when contributing new source code to the project. This Git workflow is inspired greatly by the irON-Parsers Contributors Guide.
A collaborator is someone with write access to the QuantConnect Lean repository. Collaborators merge pull requests from contributors.
A contributor can be anyone! It could be you. Continue reading this section if you wish to get involved and contribute back to the QuantConnect Lean open source project!
Code reviewers will be expecting to see code that follows Microsoft's C# guidelines. There are a few resources available here and here.
As a point of consistency, we use soft tabs of four spaces to ensure files render correctly in everyone's environment/diff tools.
All pull requests must be accompanied by units tests. If it is a new feature, the tests should highlight expected use cases as well as edge cases, if applicable. If it is a bugfix, there should be tests that expose the bug in question.
Contributions of Algorithm Framework Modules needs to follow certain extra patterns, since QuantConnect users can use them in their algorithms.
Generally modules should do one focused, specific role well. For example, combining risk control logic with notifications or placing orders outside execution models violates the general programming rule 'separation of concerns'. Keep each module doing one specific task and if you want to consider additional functionality add event handlers that users can bind to from their Algorithm instance.
By default production code should be silent unless there is a fatal exception. Because of this, logging or debugging is not allowed inside LEAN framework modules. Additional charting inside the module consumes the resources and should not be included in a module as well.
- Setup a GitHub account
- Fork the repository of the project
- Clone your fork locally
$ git clone https://github.com/username/Lean.git
- Navigate to the QuantConnect Lean directory and add the upstream remote
$ cd Lean
$ git remote add upstream https://github.com/QuantConnect/Lean.git
The remote upstream branch links your fork of Lean with our master copy, so when you perform a git pull --rebase
you'll be getting updates from our repository.
Now that you've defined the remote upstream branch
, you can refresh your local copy of master with the following commands:
$ git checkout master
$ git pull --rebase
This will checkout your local master branch and then merge changes in from the remote upstream branch. We use rebase to reduce noise from merge commits.
If unfamiliar with git branches, please read this short guide on branches.
The following names will be used to differentiate between the different repositories:
- upstream - The 'official' QuantConnect Lean repository (what is on QuantConnect's GitHub account)
- origin - Your fork of the official repository on GitHub (what is on your GitHub account)
- local - This will be your local clone of origin (what is on your computer)
As a contributor you will push your completed local topic branch to origin. As a contributor you will pull your updates from upstream. As a collaborator (write-access) you will merge branches from contributors into upstream.
The upstream repository holds a single primary branch that we maintain:
- upstream/master - This is the where main development takes place
Topic branches are for contributors to develop bug fixes and new features so that they can be easily merged to master. They must follow a few simple rules for consistency:
- Must branch off from master
- Must be meged back into master
- Consider using the GitHub issue number in the branch name
Topic branches should exist in your local and origin repositories only. Submitting a pull request will request a merge from your topic branch to our upstream/master branch.
First create a new branch for the work you'd like to perform. When naming your branch, please use the following convention: bug-<issue#>-<description>
or feature-<issue#>-<description>
:
$ git checkout -b bug-123-short-issue-description
Switched to a new branch 'bug-123-short-issue-description'
Now perform some work and commit changes. Always review your changes before committing
$ git status
$ git diff
$ git add --all
$ git commit
You can push your changes to your fork's master branch using:
$ git push origin master
When committing, be sure to follow best practices writing good commit descriptions.
After performing some work you'll want to merge in changes from the upstream/master. You can use the following two commands in order to assist upstream merging:
$ git fetch upstream
$ git rebase upstream/master bug-123-short-issue-description
The git fetch upstream
command will download the upstream repository to your computer but not merge it. The rebase upstream/master bug-123-short-issue-description
command will rebase your changes on top of upstream/master. This will make the review process easier for collaborators.
CAUTION Please note that once you have pushed your branch remotely you MUST NOT rebase!
If you need to merge changes in after pushing your branch to origin, use the following:
$ git pull upstream/master
When topic branches are finished and ready for review, they should be pushed back to origin.
$ git push origin bug-123-short-issue-description
To [email protected]:username/Lean.git
* [new branch] bug-123-short-issue-description -> bug-123-short-issue-description
Now you're ready to send a pull request from this branch to upstream/master and update the GitHub issue tracker to let a collaborator know that your branch is ready to be reviewed and merged. If extra changes are required as part of the review process, make those changes on the topic branch and re-push. First re-checkout the topic branch you made your original changes on:
$ git checkout bug-123-short-issue-description
Now make responses to the review comments, commit, and re-push your changes:
$ git add --all
$ git commit
$ git push