# Contributing First of all, thanks for considering contributing to this project. All contributions are welcome, whether they are bug reports, documentation improvements, feature requests, or pull requests. Please make sure to read and follow our [Code of Conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) to ensure a positive experience for everyone involved. If you're not sure where to start, take a look at the [Hot Topics](#hot-topics) section for some ideas on what you could work on. ## Table of Contents - [Getting started](#getting-started) - [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) - [Forking the repository and setting up the project](#forking-the-repository-and-setting-up-the-project) - [Building the project](#building-the-project) - [Project structure](#project-structure) - [Contributing a new channel](#contributing-a-new-channel) - [Hot Topics](#hot-topics) ## Getting started ### Prerequisites These are pretty much the only things you need to have installed on your machine to get started with contributing to this project: - the [Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install) toolchain installed on your machine - any working version of [Git](https://git-scm.com/downloads) - the [just](https://github.com/casey/just) command runner ### Forking the repository and setting up the project 1. Click on the `Fork` button at the top right corner of the repository page to create a copy of the repository to your GitHub account. 2. Clone the forked repository to your local machine by running the following command in your terminal: ```shell git clone https://github.com//television.git ``` 3. Navigate to the project directory and set up the upstream remote by running the following commands: ```shell cd television git remote add upstream https://github.com/alexpasmantier/television.git ``` 4. Install the project dependencies by running the following command: ```shell just setup ``` 5. Create a new branch for your feature or bug fix: ```shell git checkout -b ``` 6. Make your changes and test them locally. Predefined commands are available to make your life simpler, using them spares some time and effort: ```shell just --list ``` 7. Once you're all set, commit them to your branch: ```shell git add . git commit -m "Your commit message" ``` 7. Push your changes to your forked repository: ```shell git push origin ``` 8. If not done automatically, create a pull request by navigating to the original repository and clicking on the `New pull request` button. ### Developing locally Before anything else (if not done already): ```shell just setup ``` To run the application in debug mode while developing, with the ability to see logs and debug information: ```shell just run ``` **Accessing the Logs:** The logs are written to a file called `television.log` in a directory that depends on your operating system / configuration: | Platform | Location | |----------|----------| | Linux | `$XDG_DATA_HOME/television/television.log` or `$HOME/.local/share/television/television.log` | | macOS | `$XDG_DATA_HOME/television/television.log` or `$HOME/Library/Application\ Support/television/television.log` | | Windows | `{FOLDERID_LocalAppData}\television\television.log` | To check for linting and formatting issues (and fix them automatically), run: ```shell just fix ``` To get a sense of the real thing and test how your patch would behave in production, run: ```shell just b release # or `just br` # or `just build release` ``` Running the tests can be done with: ```shell just test ``` ### Project structure The project is laid out in several rust crates that are organized in the following way: - `television`: the main binary crate that contains the CLI application - `television_derive`: a library crate that contains the derive macros used in the project ### Contributing a new channel `television` is built around the concept of _channels_. From a technical standpoint, channels are structs that implement the `OnAir` trait defined in `television/channels/mod.rs`. They can be anything that can respond to a user query and return a result under the form of a list of entries. This means channels can be anything from conventional data sources you might want to search through (like files, git repositories, remote filesystems, environment variables etc.) to more exotic implementations that might include a REPL, a calculator, a web browser, search through your spotify library, your email, etc. As mentioned in [Project structure](#project-structure) `television` uses [crates](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch07-01-packages-and-crates.html) for its different subcomponents ( _previewers_, _channels_, _utils_, etc). When contributing a new channel, you should create a new module in the `crate::channels` crate with a new struct for your channel and ensure that it implements the `OnAir` trait defined in [crates/television-channels/src/channels.rs](crates/television-channels/src/channels.rs) ```rust // crates/television-channels/src/channels/my_new_channel.rs use crate::channels::OnAir; pub struct MyNewChannel; impl OnAir for MyNewChannel { // Implement the OnAir trait for your channel here } ``` You should also add your channel to the `TelevisionChannel` enum in the `crate::channels` crate. ```rust // crates/television-channels/src/mod #[derive(ToUnitChannel, ToCliChannel, Broadcast)] pub enum TelevisionChannel { // Other channels MyNewChannel, } ``` ☝️ There are built-in channels in `television` that you might want to draw inspiration from if need be, they're located at [crates/television-channels/src/channels](crates/television-channels/src/channels). **TODO**: document transitions between channels and previewers ## Hot Topics ### Current hot topics: - shell integration (autocomplete, keybindings) - packaging for various linux package managers (apt, dnf, ...) - configuring custom actions for each channel ### Other ideas: See the [todo list](./TODO.md) for ideas. - `Customization`: - allow users to further customize the behavior of the application (e.g. the default channel, fuzzy matching constants, channel heuristics, etc.) - `Channels`: - new channel ideas (builtin or cable): - shell history - directories - git (commits, branches, status, diff, ...) - remote filesystems (s3, ...) - kubernetes resources (jobs, pods, deployments, services, ...) - recent directories - makefile commands - etc. - add more tests for existing channels - `Previewers`: - new previewer ideas: - previewing text in documents (pdfs, archives, ...) - previewing images (actually already implemented but commented out) - remote files (s3, ...) - etc. - more tests for existing previewers - `Documentation`: - add more technical documentation to the project - general design of the TUI application - design of channels, previewers, transitions, etc. - how to contribute a new channel, previewer, etc. - more docstrings - `Performance/Refactoring`: - working on reducing coupling between the different crates in the project - working on reducing the number of allocations and copies in the code - writing benchmarks for different parts of the application - `Project`: - polish project configuration: - CI/CD