# Contributing
First, thank you for your interest in contributing to my project. Below is a list of requirements
that everyone should follow.
1. To avoid wasting your time and effort, please ensure all ideas get discussed first. Either visit
[the Ideas discussion board][ideas] and open a thread there. I ask that you do this to avoid the
potential of rejecting work already done in a pull request.
1. **For Markdown changes,** any and all changes must pass configured [markdownlint] rules (see the
`.markdownlint.json` files in this repository for project-specific adjustments to those rules).
1. **For C# changes,** code must conform to the project's style. My day to day coding is done in
Jetbrains Rider. If using that IDE, doing a simple [Code Cleanup] on modified source files should
be enough. Make sure to select the "Recyclarr Cleanup" profile when you do the code cleanup. If
you're using Visual Studio or some other editor, you are on your own. Formatting rules are stored
in `src/.editorconfig` and `src/Recyclarr.sln.DotSettings`.
[ideas]: https://github.com/recyclarr/recyclarr/discussions/categories/ideas
[markdownlint]: https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint
[Code Cleanup]: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/rider/Code_Cleanup__Index.html
## Tooling Requirements
The following tools are required:
- .NET SDK 7.0 and tooling (e.g. `dotnet`)
- Powershell v5.1 or greater
- Docker CLI (Docker Desktop on Windows)
The following tools are *highly recommended* but not strictly required:
- Jetbrains Rider (IDE for editing C# code)
- Visual Studio Code (install workspace-recommended extensions as well)
Other required tooling can be installed via the `Install-Tooling.ps1` powershell script. It's also a
good idea to occasionally run this for upgrade purposes, too.
## Docker Development
The project's `Dockerfile` build requires the Recyclarr build output to be placed in a specific
location in order to succeed. The location is below, relative to the repository root:
```txt
docker/artifacts/${{runtime}}
```
Where `${{runtime}}` is one of the runtimes compatible with `dotnet publish`, such as
`linux-musl-x64`.
There is a convenience script named `docker/BuildAndRun.ps1` that will perform the following steps:
1. Delete the `docker/artifacts` directory, if it exists.
1. Recompile Recyclarr and publish it to `docker/artifacts`.
1. Pull and start the Sonarr & Radarr containers in the `debugging` directory.
1. Build & run the `recyclarr` docker image.
You may also provide runtime arguments to the `BuildAndRun.ps1` script to run it in manual mode
instead of cron mode. Example:
```sh
# Run `recyclarr radarr -h`:
.\BuildAndRun.ps1 -RunArgs radarr,-h
```
If you want to run any part of this process manually, open up the `BuildAndRun.ps1` script to see
what commands you need to run manually.
> ⚠️ **Note** ⚠️
> The runtime defaults to `linux-musl-x64` but you can pass in an override via the `-Runtime`
> option.
### Build Arguments
- `TARGETPLATFORM` (Default: empty)
Required. Specifies the runtime architecture of the image and is used to pull the correct prebuilt
binary from the specified Github Release. See the table in the Platform Support section for a list
of valid values.
### Platform Support
| Docker Platform | Recyclarr Runtime |
| --------------- | ------------------ |
| `linux/arm/v7` | `linux-musl-arm` |
| `linux/arm64` | `linux-musl-arm64` |
| `linux/amd64` | `linux-musl-x64` |
## Conventional Commits
This project uses and enforces [Conventional Commits][commits]. The below official commit types are
used:
- `build`: Update project files, settings, etc.
- `chore`: Anything not code related or that falls into other categories.
- `ci`: Changes to CI/CD scripts or configuration.
- `docs`: Updates to non-code documentation (markdown, readme, etc).
- `feat`: A new feature was implemented.
- `fix`: A defect or security issue was fixed.
- `perf`: Change in code related to improving performance.
- `refactor`: A code change that does not impact the observable functionality or shape of the apps.
- `revert`: Prefix to be used for commits made by the `git revert` command.
- `style`: A whitespace or code cleanup change in code.
- `test`: Updates to unit test code only.
## Release Process
Release numbering follows [Semantic Versioning][semver]. The [GitVersion] package is used in .NET
projects to automatically version the executable according to [Conventional Commits][commits] rules
in conjunction with semantic versioning.
The goal is to allow commit messages to drive the way the semantic version number is advanced during
development. When a feature is implemented, the corresponding commit results in the minor version
number component being advanced by 1. Similarly, the patch portion is advanced by 1 when a bugfix is
committed.
To make a release, follow these steps:
1. Run `Prepare-Release.ps1`. This will do the following:
1. Update the changelog for the release according to [Keep a Changelog][changelog] rules.
1. Commit the changelog updates.
1. Create a tag for the release (using GitVersion).
1. Use Git to push the new tag and commits on `master` upstream where the Github Workflows will take
over.
The Github Workflows manage the release process after the push by doing the following:
1. Compile the .NET projects.
1. Create a [Github Release][release] with the .NET artifacts attached.
1. Build and publish a new Docker image to the [Github Container Registry][ghcr] and [Docker
Hub][dockerhub].
1. Send a release notification to the `#related-announcements` channel in the official [TRaSH Guides
Discord][discord].
[semver]: https://semver.org/
[GitVersion]: https://gitversion.net/
[commits]: https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/
[changelog]: https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.0.0/
[release]: https://github.com/recyclarr/recyclarr/releases
[ghcr]: https://github.com/recyclarr/recyclarr/pkgs/container/recyclarr
[discord]: https://discord.com/invite/Vau8dZ3
## Update `.gitignore`
Execute the `Update-Gitignore.ps1` script using Powershell. The working directory *must* be the root
of the repo. This will pull the latest relevant `.gitignore` patterns from
[gitignore.io](https://gitignore.io) and commit them automatically to your current branch.
## Testing Discord Notifier
Use Postman to make an HTTP `GET` request to the following URL. Note that `v4.0.0` can be any
release.
```txt
https://api.github.com/recyclarr/recyclarr/releases/tags/v4.0.0
```
Copy the resulting response JSON to a file named `ci/notify/release.json`. In the `ci/notify`
directory, run these commands to generate the other files needed:
```bash
jq -r '.assets[].browser_download_url' release.json > assets.txt
jq -r '.body' release.json > changelog.txt
```
Also be sure to grab a discord webhook URL to a personal test server of yours. Then run the command
below (using a Bash terminal)
```bash
python ./discord_notify.py \
--version v4.0.0 \
--repo recyclarr/recyclarr \
--webhook-url https://discord.com/api/webhooks/your_webhook_url \
--changelog ./changelog.txt \
--assets ./assets.txt
```