Contributing code to Briefcase#

If you experience problems with Briefcase, log them on GitHub. If you want to contribute code, please fork the code and submit a pull request.

tl;dr#

Set up the dev environment by running:

$ git clone https://github.com/beeware/briefcase.git
$ cd briefcase
$ python3 -m venv venv
$ . venv/bin/activate
(venv) $ python -m pip install -Ue ".[dev]"
(venv) $ pre-commit install

Invoke CI checks and tests by running:

(venv) $ tox p -m ci

Setting up your development environment#

The recommended way of setting up your development environment for Briefcase is to use a virtual environment, and then install the development version of Briefcase and its dependencies:

Clone Briefcase and create virtual environment#

$ git clone https://github.com/beeware/briefcase.git
$ cd briefcase
$ python3 -m venv venv
$ . venv/bin/activate
(venv) $ python -m pip install -Ue ".[dev]"

Install pre-commit#

Briefcase uses a tool called pre-commit to identify simple issues and standardize code formatting. It does this by installing a git hook that automatically runs a series of code linters prior to finalizing any git commit. To enable pre-commit, run:

(venv) $ pre-commit install
pre-commit installed at .git/hooks/pre-commit

Pre-commit automatically runs during the commit#

With pre-commit installed as a git hook for verifying commits, the pre-commit hooks configured in .pre-commit-config.yaml for Briefcase must all pass before the commit is successful. If there are any issues found with the commit, this will cause your commit to fail. Where possible, pre-commit will make the changes needed to correct the problems it has found:

(venv) $ git add some/interesting_file.py
(venv) $ git commit -m "Minor change"
check toml...........................................(no files to check)Skipped
check yaml...........................................(no files to check)Skipped
check for case conflicts.................................................Passed
check docstring is first.................................................Passed
fix end of files.........................................................Passed
trim trailing whitespace.................................................Passed
isort....................................................................Passed
pyupgrade................................................................Passed
docformatter.............................................................Passed
black....................................................................Failed
- hook id: black
- files were modified by this hook

reformatted some/interesting_file.py

All done! ✨ 🍰 ✨
1 file reformatted.

flake8...................................................................Passed

You can then re-add any files that were modified as a result of the pre-commit checks, and re-commit the change.

(venv) $ git add some/interesting_file.py
(venv) $ git commit -m "Minor change"
check toml...........................................(no files to check)Skipped
check yaml...........................................(no files to check)Skipped
check for case conflicts.................................................Passed
check docstring is first.................................................Passed
fix end of files.........................................................Passed
trim trailing whitespace.................................................Passed
isort....................................................................Passed
pyupgrade................................................................Passed
docformatter.............................................................Passed
black....................................................................Passed
flake8...................................................................Passed
[bugfix daedd37a] Minor change
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 some/interesting_file.py

Create a new branch in git#

When you clone Briefcase, it will default to checking out the default branch, main. However, your changes should be committed to a new branch instead of being committed directly in to main. The branch name should be succinct but relate to what’s being changed; for instance, if you’re fixing a bug in Windows code signing, you might use the branch name fix-windows-signing. To create a new branch, run:

(venv) $ git checkout -b fix-windows-signing

Running tests and coverage#

Briefcase uses tox to manage the testing process and pytest for its own test suite.

The default tox command includes running:
  • pre-commit hooks

  • towncrier release note check

  • documentation linting

  • test suite for available Python versions

  • code coverage reporting

To run the full test suite, run:

(venv) $ tox

The full test suite can take a while to run. You can speed it up considerably by running tox in parallel, by running tox p (or tox run-parallel). When you run the test suite in parallel, you’ll get less feedback on the progress of the test suite as it runs, but you’ll still get a summary of any problems found at the end of the test run.

Run tests for multiple versions of Python#

By default, many of the tox commands will attempt to run the test suite multiple times, once for each Python version supported by Briefcase. To do this, though, each of the Python versions must be installed on your machine and available to tox’s Python discovery process. In general, if a version of Python is available via PATH, then tox should be able to find and use it.

Run only the test suite#

If you’re rapidly iterating on a new feature, you don’t need to run the full test suite; you can run just the unit tests. To do this, run:

(venv) $ tox -e py

Run a subset of tests#

By default, tox will run all tests in the unit test suite. To restrict the test run to a subset of tests, you can pass in any pytest specifier as an argument to tox. For example, to run only the tests in a single file, run:

(venv) $ tox -e py -- tests/path/to/test_some_test.py

Run the test suite for a specific Python version#

By default tox -e py will run using whatever interpreter resolves as python3 on your machine. If you have multiple Python versions installed, and want to test a specific Python version, you can specify a specific python version to use. For example, to run the test suite on Python 3.10, run:

(venv) $ tox -e py310

A subset of tests can be run by adding -- and a test specification to the command line.

Run the test suite without coverage (fast)#

By default, tox will run the pytest suite in single threaded mode. You can speed up the execution of the test suite by running the test suite in parallel. This mode does not produce coverage files due to complexities in capturing coverage within spawned processes. To run a single python version in “fast” mode, run:

(venv) $ tox -e py-fast

A subset of tests can be run by adding -- and a test specification to the command line; a specific Python version can be used by adding the version to the test target (e.g., py310-fast to run fast on Python 3.10).

Code coverage#

Briefcase maintains 100% branch coverage in its codebase. When you add or modify code in the project, you must add test code to ensure coverage of any changes you make.

However, Briefcase targets macOS, Linux, and Windows, as well as multiple versions of Python, so full coverage cannot be verified on a single platform and Python version. To accommodate this, several conditional coverage rules are defined in the tool.coverage.coverage_conditional_plugin.rules section of pyproject.toml (e.g., no-cover-if-is-windows can be used to flag a block of code that won’t be executed when running the test suite on Windows). These rules are used to identify sections of code that are only covered on particular platforms or Python versions.

Of note, coverage reporting across Python versions can be a bit quirky. For instance, if coverage files are produced using one version of Python but coverage reporting is done on another, the report may include false positives for missed branches. Because of this, coverage reporting should always use the oldest version Python used to produce the coverage files.

Coverage report for host platform and Python version#

You can generate a coverage report for your platform and version of Python. For example, to run the test suite and generate a coverage report on Python3.11, run:

(venv) $ tox -m test311

Coverage report for host platform#

If all supported versions of Python are available to tox, then coverage for the host platform can be reported by running:

(venv) $ tox p -m test-platform

Coverage reporting in HTML#

A HTML coverage report can be generated by appending -html to any of the coverage tox environment names, for instance:

(venv) $ tox -e coverage-platform-html

Add change information for release notes#

Briefcase uses towncrier to automate building release notes. To support this, every pull request needs to have a corresponding file in the changes/ directory that provides a short description of the change implemented by the pull request.

This description should be a high level summary of the change from the perspective of the user, not a deep technical description or implementation detail. It should also be written in past tense (i.e., “Added an option to enable X” or “Fixed handling of Y”).

See News Fragments for more details on the types of news fragments you can add. You can also see existing examples of news fragments in the changes/ folder.

Simulating GitHub CI checks locally#

To run the same checks that run in CI for the platform, run:

(venv) $ tox p -m ci

Now you are ready to start hacking! Have fun!