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CONTRIBUTING.md

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CONTRIBUTING

Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.

Bug Reports

  • Try to reproduce the issue against the latest revision. There might be unrealeased work that fixes your problem!
  • Ensure that your issue has not already been reported.
  • Include the steps you carried out to produce the problem. If we can't reproduce it, we can't fix it.
  • Include the behavior you observed along with the behavior you expected, and why you expected it.

Development dependencies

  • Byebug depends on Ruby's TracePoint API provided by ruby-core. This is a young API and a lot of bugs have been recently corrected, so make sure you always have the lastest patch level release installed.
  • The recommended tool to manage development dependencies is bundler. Run gem install bundler to install it.
  • Running bundle install inside a local clone of byebug will get development dependencies installed.

Running the test suite

  • Make sure you compile the C-extension using bin/rake compile. Otherwise you won't be able to use byebug.
  • Run the test suite using the default rake task (bin/rake). This task is composed of 3 subtasks: bin/rake compile, bin/rake test & bin/rake lint.
  • If you want to run specific tests, use the provided test runner, like so:
    • Specific test files. For example, bin/minitest test/commands/break_test.rb
    • Specific test classes. For example, bin/minitest BreakAtLinesTest
    • Specific tests. For example, bin/minitest test_catch_removes_specific_catchpoint
    • Specific fully qualified tests. For example, bin/minitest BreakAtLinesTest#test_setting_breakpoint_sets_correct_fields
    • You can combine any of them and you will get the union of all filters. For example: bin/minitest BreakAtLinesTest test_catch_removes_specific_catchpoint

Code style

  • Byebug uses several style checks to check code style consistent. You can run those using bin/rake lint.

Byebug as a C-extension

Byebug is a gem developed as a C-extension. The debugger internal's functionality is implemented in C (the interaction with the TracePoint API). The rest of the gem is implemented in Ruby. Normally you won't need to touch the C-extension, but it will obviously depended on the bug you're trying to fix or the feature you are willing to add. You can learn more about C-extensions here or here.