Version 13 (modified by coke, 13 years ago) |
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Newcomers Welcome!
We're going to do our best to document the experiences of newcomers to Perl, Parrot and Open Source software development. Hopefully this will evolve into a road map for those who wish to contribute but are having trouble getting started.
Before you start
Before you download and compile Parrot, you may want to check you system to make sure you have the following packages installed.
- Perl
- perldoc (provided by package perl-doc on Debian/Ubuntu).
- subversion
- diffstat
Getting Parrot
If your going to become part of the development team, you'll need to check out a local copy of the source code. You can visit the download page on the main Parrot web site for full details.
Assuming you've got Perl, perldoc and Subversion installed you'll be doing something like this.
~$ svn co https://svn.parrot.org/parrot/trunk parrot ~$ cd parrot ~$ perl Configure.pl ~$ make ~$ make test ~$ make html
One make target to avoid right now is install. Running make install is not currently recommended.
Running Parrot
Make compiled a binary in the parrot build directory.
~$ ./parrot --version
You may want to create a symbolic link to this binary, somewhere in your path, so that you can run parrot from anywhere.
~$ ln -s ~/parrot/parrot /usr/bin/parrot ~$ parrot --version
Learning Parrot
You've downloaded, configured, compiled, tested and created the html documentation for Parrot. Now it's time to start reading. Parrot's source documentation is stored in POD format. If you ran make html you can the view the documentation in any HTML browser. The file docs/html/index.html is the place to start. An alternative and more flexible method for viewing the documentation is to use perldoc to view the actual pod files, formatted as man pages. It cannot be stressed enough how important it is to read the documentation for this project.
The bare minimum reading needed to get you off the ground is:
- docs/intro.pod
- docs/gettingstarted.pod
The directory docs/book/ contains a book on Parrot. This book has a finer details of various aspects of Parrot. However be aware that the book in not up to date.
After you read those, you'll want to run through all of the tutorials in examples/tutorial.
Next on your reading list should be the PDDs (Parrot Design Documents) in docs/ppds. You will learn much by reading these, so don't skimp.
Contributing
By now you've read the introductory documentation and reviewed the example/tutorial files. Now you have to decide what area of the project you'd like to contribute to.
Test Suite
Original Parrot tests were written in Perl. Those Perl tests can be ported to PIR test. This is a good place to earn your feathers and learn more PIR at the same time. Converting existing tests to Parrot covers what you'll need to know about the format of a PIR test. If you're not familiar with the test suite functions, you'll want to review parrot/runtime/library/Test/More.pir. The functions section gives a description of the different testing functions, mainly: plan, diag, ok, nok, is, is_deeply, like, isa_ok, skip, isnt and todo. This is a good time to point out that POD can and usually is embedded in PIR files. So if you're in the root build directory, you can run the following to view the module documentation:
~$ perldoc runtime/parrot/library/Test/More.pir
You already know that make test runs the test suite, but when working on individual tests you'll want to run only the test you're concerned with. You can do this using Perl's prove for a Perl test, or either prove or Parrot itself for PIR tests.
~$ prove t/oo/names.t t/oo/names....ok All tests successful. Files=1, Tests=2, 0 wallclock secs ( 0.05 cusr + 0.01 csys = 0.06 CPU) or ~$ parrot t/oo/names.t 1..2 ok 1 - HLL obj w/ name different than parrot obj created ok 2 - HLL obj w/ same name as parrot obj not created
Test Conversion
Here is the original Perl test.
Here is the same test after being converted to PIR:
Submitting your work
Once again there is a POD covering this topic. Read doc/submissions.pod for specific details on how to submit your work. In general you'll need to create a patch and then email that patch to perlbug.
~$ svn status ~$ svn diff > names_test_rewrite.patch ~$ diffstat names_test_rewrite.patch names.t | 63 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------------ 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 30 deletions(-)
This section is outdated, and refers to our old RT system; it should be updated to refer to trac. (Or just removed in favor of updating the POD in the repo.
Then you'll need to send an email, with the patch as an attachment, to Parrotbug. It should look something like this.
from Your Name <your.name at gmail.com> to parrotbug at parrotcode.org subject [PATCH] rewrite of names.t to PIR This is a rewrite of t/oo/names.t from a perl test to a PIR test names.t | 63 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------------ 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 30 deletions(-) --
Parrotbug will autoreply to your submission with an RT Ticket Id. Here's an example of a typical response.
Greetings, This message has been automatically generated in response to the creation of a parrotbug regarding: "[PATCH] rewrite of names.t to PIR" There is no need to reply to this message right now. Your ticket has been assigned an ID of [perl #60512]. Please include the string: [perl #60512] In the subject line of all future correspondence about this issue. To do so, you may reply to this message. Thank you, parrotbug http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Ticket/Display.html?id=60512
It's that simple.
Attachments
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new parrot.png
(5.4 KB) - added by Austin_Hastings
13 years ago.
New parrot image