Testing a pull request
When submitting a pull request to a Sourcegraph-maintained extension repository, there are a few tests you'll need to pass before the request can be reviewed. These tests run logical tests that we author to make sure our code runs as expected.
What are the tests?
- Prettier is responsible for mostly visual choices like if we have a line of code that's longer than 70 characters, it will fail. This has nothing to do with the correctness of the code, more of a stylistic choice we make as a team to make sure we all use the same standard.
- eslint is similar but more so focused on the logic aspect of the code. We use eslint to avoid bad patterns which otherwise stylistically make sense but lead to potentially buggy code
- Husky (link) and Semantic Pull Requests (link) ensure your commit messages have enough semantic information to be able to trigger a release. For example,
feat:
tag is for new features. - Update README.md and manifest accordingly
Run the following commands before submitting your Pull Request:
npm run prettier
: applies prettier to your codenpm run prettier-check
: checks if your code is passing the prettier checksnpm run eslint
: checks if your code is passing the eslint checks
After the Pull Request has been submitted:
- Add
team/extensibility
to label - Edit the PR title by adding a semantic prefix like
fix:
orfeat:
to the front. See more examples on our GitHub Pull Requests page.