mistykey/CONTRIBUTING.Sharkey.md
dakkar 3d067303c7 split our contribution guidelines in their own file
this is mostly @bunnybeam's work! see !838

* reset `CONTRIBUTING.md` to Misskey's version
* add a link at the top of that file, pointing to ours
* create `CONTRIBUTING.Sharkey.md` with all Sharkey-specific
  details (plus some clearer bits on dev / testing that are a bit
	messy in upstream's docs)
2025-06-29 12:19:21 +01:00

18 KiB

Contribution guide

We're glad you're interested in contributing to Sharkey! In this document you will find the information you need to contribute to the project. We assume you've also read Misskey's contribution guide, CONTRIBUTING.md.

Issues

Before creating an issue, please check the following:

  • To avoid duplication, please search for similar issues before creating a new issue.

  • Do not use Issues to ask questions or troubleshooting.

    • Issues should only be used to feature requests, suggestions, and bug tracking.
    • Please ask questions or troubleshooting in Discord.

Warning

Do not close issues that are about to be resolved. It should remain open until a commit that actually resolves it is merged.

Well-known branches

  • stable branch is tracking the latest release and used for production purposes.

  • develop branch is where we work for the next release.

    • When you create an MR, basically target it to this branch.

Creating an MR

Thank you for your MR! Before creating an MR, please check the following:

  • If possible, prefix the title with a keyword that identifies the type of this MR, like fix / refactor / feat / enhance / perf / chore etc

  • Also, make sure that the granularity of this MR is appropriate. Please do not include more than one type of change or interest in a single MR.

  • If there is an Issue which will be resolved by this MR, please include a reference to the Issue in the text.

  • Check if there are any documents that need to be created or updated due to this change.

  • If you have added a feature or fixed a bug, please add a test case if possible.

  • Please make sure that tests and Lint are passed in advance. You can run it with pnpm test and pnpm lint. See more info

  • If this MR includes UI changes, please attach a screenshot in the text.

Release process

(see also the wiki)

Prerequisites:

  • develop contains exactly the code we want to release

  • we have tested it enough to be confident we can release it to the world

  • the CI pipeline (build, test, lint) passes

  • the backend end-to-end tests (pnpm --filter=backend test:e2e) pass on your machine

  • package.json and packages/misskey-js/package.json on develop have a "version": "2027.12.0-dev" or something similarly non-prod-looking

  • the changelogs contain all the changes we want to announce

To release:

  • create a new Branch based on develop to change the version to a prod-looking one(e.g. 2027.12.1)

    • try to avoid using the same version as Misskey, both to reduce confusion, and because (unlike branches) tags are not scoped by remote and will confuse multi-remote clones
  • create a MR to merge the new Branch into stable

  • once that is merged, go to https://activitypub.software/TransFem-org/Sharkey/-/releases and create a new release

    • for the tag, use the same version you just set on stable (e.g. 2027.12.1)

    • make sure the tag will be created on stable

      • for the release name, again use the version (e.g. 2027.12.1)

      • for the release notes, copy the changelogs

  • wait for all the pipelines to complete

    • in the container regirstry you should get (of course with the right version):

      • latest
        • 2027.12.1-amd64
        • 2027.12.1-arm64
  • announce the release on the official account!

Post release:

  • branch off develop, merge stable into that, change the version to the next number (e.g. 2028.1.0-dev), create a MR for this branch, get it merged

Hotfixes / security releases

Sometimes we need to release changes to the latest stable release, without whatever has been merged into develop. For example, a security fix.

In these cases:

  • create a branch off stable, let's call it hotfix/2027.12.2, and change the version number on this branch

  • create branches off stable, one per fix (like normal feature / bugfix branches, but starting from the released code), and send MRs targeting hotfix/2027.12.2

  • once all the fixes have been merged into hotfix/2027.12.2, create a MR targeting stable

  • now carry on through the normal release process (third step, the one starting "once that is merged…")

Icon Font (Shark Font)

Sharkey has its own Icon Font called Shark Font which can be found at https://activitypub.software/TransFem-org/shark-font

Build instructions can all be found over there in the README.

If you have an icon suggestion or want to add an Icon please open an issue/merge request over at that repo.

When updating the font make sure to copy all generated files from the dest folder into packages/backend/assets/fonts/sharkey-icons

For the CSS, copy the file content and replace the old content in style.css and for the WOFF, TTF and SVG simply replace them.

Development

Accessing source code

In order to submit code changes, you will need to create a fork of the main repository. This can be done via the GitLab UI, by pressing the "Fork" button while signed into an activitypub.software GitLab account.

Once you have created a fork, you should clone it locally and update submodules using Git. For example, to clone using SSH, use the following commands, replacing "<YOUR_USERNAME>" with your GitLab username:

git clone git@activitypub.software:<YOUR_USERNAME>/Sharkey.git
git submodule update --init

Environment setup

Before developing, you should set up a testing environment. You can do this using Docker via the Docker Compose plugin. You will also need to have pnpm installed.

(You may wish to perform this setup using system-wide software installed separately, e.g. via a package manager, or using Devcontainer. Both are possible, but they will require manual setup that will not be covered in this document.)

First, you will need to copy .config/docker_example.env to .config/docker.env. This file will contain configurations for the PostgreSQL database, such as username and password. You may set these as you wish. You will also need to copy .config/example.yml to .config/default.yml. This file will contain configurations for Sharkey. Ensure that the username and password in the db: section match the ones set in docker.env.

Now, use the following command to start a local database container:

docker compose -f compose.local-db.yml up -d

This will run a local PostgreSQL database server in the background. (To stop the database, run docker compose -f compose.local-db.yml down.)

Once the database is active, run the following commands:

pnpm build
pnpm migrate

This will build Sharkey and perform database migrations. After finishing the migration, the database will be ready for use.

Start developing

After making code changes, you can run Sharkey using the following command:

pnpm dev
  • Checks server-side source files and automatically builds them if they are modified. Automatically starts the server process(es).

  • Vite HMR (just the vite command) is available. The behavior may be different from production.

  • Service Worker is watched by esbuild.

  • The frontend can be viewed by accessing http://localhost:5173.

  • The backend listens on the port configured with port in .config/default.yml. If you have not changed it from the default, it will be http://localhost:3000.

Testing

(see also Misskey's docs about testing)

To run many of the tests, you need a dedicated database.

  • start PostgreSQL and Redis

  • create the test configuration file:

    cp .config/test-example.yml .config/test.yml
    
  • start the database container:

    docker compose -f packages/backend/test/compose.yml up
    

Now you can run pnpm test and pnpm --filter=backend test:e2e

Environment Variables

  • MISSKEY_CONFIG_DIR changes the directory where config files are searched, defaults to .config/ at the top of the repository
  • MISSKEY_CONFIG_YML changes the configuration file name, defaults to default.yml (e.g. you can set MISSKEY_CONFIG_YML=2nd.yml to load .config/2nd.yml)
  • MISSKEY_WEBFINGER_USE_HTTP if set to true, WebFinger requests will be http instead of https, useful for testing federation between servers in localhost. NEVER USE IN PRODUCTION.

Continuous integration

Sharkey uses GitLab CI for executing automated tests.

Configuration files are located in .gitlab-ci.yml.

Merging from Misskey into Sharkey

Make sure you have both remotes in the same clone (git remote add misskey https://github.com/misskey-dev/misskey.git), then:

git remote update
git checkout develop   # this is Sharkey's develop
git checkout -m merge/$(date +%Y-%m-%d)   # or whatever
git merge --no-ff misskey/develop

fix conflicts and commit! (conflicts in pnpm-lock.yaml can usually be fixed by running pnpm install, it detects conflict markers and seems to do a decent job)

after that commit, do all the extra work, on the same branch:

  • copy all changes (commit after each step):

    • in packages/backend/src/core/activitypub/models/ApNoteService.ts, from createNote to updateNote
    • from packages/backend/src/core/NoteCreateService.ts to packages/backend/src/core/NoteEditService.ts
    • from packages/backend/src/server/api/endpoints/notes/create.ts to packages/backend/src/server/api/endpoints/notes/edit.ts
    • from MK note components to SK note components (if sensible)
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNote.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/SkNote.vue
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNoteDetailed.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/SkNoteDetailed.vue
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNoteHeader.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/SkNoteHeader.vue
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNoteSimple.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/SkNoteSimple.vue
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNoteSub.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/SkNoteSub.vue
    • from MK note components to Dynamic note components (if the public signature changed)
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNote.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/DynamicNote.vue
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNoteDetailed.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/DynamicNoteDetailed.vue
      • from packages/frontend/src/components/MkNoteSimple.vue to packages/frontend/src/components/DynamicNoteSimple.vue
    • from the global timeline to the bubble timeline
      • packages/backend/src/server/api/stream/channels/global-timeline.ts
      • packages/backend/src/server/api/stream/channels/bubble-timeline.ts
      • packages/frontend/src/timelines.ts
      • packages/frontend/src/components/MkTimeline.vue
      • packages/frontend/src/pages/timeline.vue
      • packages/frontend/src/ui/deck/tl-column.vue
      • packages/frontend/src/widgets/WidgetTimeline.vue
    • from packages/backend/src/queue/processors/InboxProcessorService.ts to packages/backend/src/core/UpdateInstanceQueue.ts, where updateInstanceQueue is impacted
    • from .config/example.yml to .config/ci.yml and chart/files/default.yml
    • in packages/backend/src/core/MfmService.ts, from toHtml to toMastoApiHtml
    • from verifyLink in packages/backend/src/core/activitypub/models/ApPersonService.ts to verifyFieldLinks in packages/backend/src/misc/verify-field-link.ts (if sensible)
  • if there have been any changes to the federated user data (the renderPerson function in packages/backend/src/core/activitypub/ApRendererService.ts), make sure that the set of fields in userNeedsPublishing and profileNeedsPublishing in packages/backend/src/server/api/endpoints/i/update.ts are still correct.

  • check the changes against our develop (git diff develop) and against Misskey (git diff misskey/develop)

  • re-generate misskey-js (pnpm build-misskey-js-with-types) and commit

  • re-generate locales (pnpm run build-assets) and commit

  • build the frontend: rm -rf built/; NODE_ENV=development pnpm --filter=frontend --filter=frontend-embed --filter=frontend-shared build (the development tells it to keep some of the original filenames in the built files)

  • make sure there aren't any new ti-* classes (Tabler Icons), and replace them with appropriate ph-* ones (Phosphor Icons) in vite.replaceicons.ts.

    • This command should show you want to change: grep -ohrP '(?<=["'\''](ti )?)(ti-(?!fw)[\w\-]+)' --exclude \*.map -- built/ | sort -u.

    • NOTE: ti-fw is a special class that's defined by Misskey, leave it alone.

    • After every change, re-build the frontend and check again, until there are no more ti-* classes in the built files.

    • Commit!

  • double-check the new migration, that they won't conflict with our db changes: git diff develop -- packages/backend/migration/

  • pnpm clean; pnpm build

  • run tests pnpm test; pnpm --filter backend test:e2e (requires a test database, see above) and fix them all (the e2e tests randomly fail with weird errors like relation "users" does not exist, run them again if that happens)

  • run lint pnpm --filter=backend --filter=frontend-shared lint + pnpm --filter=frontend --filter=frontend-embed eslint and fix all the problems

Then push and open a Merge Request.

Memory Caches

Sharkey offers multiple memory cache implementations, each meant for a different use case. The following table compares the available options:

Cache Type Consistency Persistence Data Source Cardinality Eviction Description
MemoryKVCache Key-Value None None Caller Single Lifetime Implements a basic in-memory Key-Value store. The implementation is entirely synchronous, except for user-provided data sources.
MemorySingleCache Single None None Caller Single Lifetime Implements a basic in-memory Single Value store. The implementation is entirely synchronous, except for user-provided data sources.
RedisKVCache Key-Value Eventual Redis Callback Single Lifetime Extends MemoryKVCache with Redis-backed persistence and a pre-defined callback data source. This provides eventual consistency guarantees based on the memory cache lifetime.
RedisSingleCache Single Eventual Redis Callback Single Lifetime Extends MemorySingleCache with Redis-backed persistence and a pre-defined callback data source. This provides eventual consistency guarantees based on the memory cache lifetime.
QuantumKVCache Key-Value Immediate None Callback Multiple Lifetime Combines MemoryKVCache with a pre-defined callback data source and immediate consistency via Redis sync events. The implementation offers multi-item batch overloads for efficient bulk operations. This is the recommended cache implementation for most use cases.

Key-Value caches store multiple entries per cache, while Single caches store a single value that can be accessed directly. Consistency refers to the consistency of cached data between different processes in the instance cluster: "None" means no consistency guarantees, "Eventual" caches will gradually become consistent after some unknown time, and "Immediate" consistency ensures accurate data ASAP after the update. Caches with persistence can retain their data after a reboot through an external service such as Redis. If a data source is supported, then this allows the cache to directly load missing data in response to a fetch. "Caller" data sources are passed into the fetch method(s) directly, while "Callback" sources are passed in as a function when the cache is first initialized. The cardinality of a cache refers to the number of items that can be updated in a single operation, and eviction, finally, is the method that the cache uses to evict stale data.

Selecting a cache implementation

For most cache uses, QuantumKVCache should be considered first. It offers strong consistency guarantees, multiple cardinality, and a cleaner API surface than the older caches.

An alternate cache implementation should be considered if any of the following apply:

  • The data is particularly slow to calculate or difficult to access. In these cases, either RedisKVCache or RedisSingleCache should be considered.

  • If stale data is acceptable, then consider MemoryKVCache or MemorySingleCache. These synchronous implementations have much less overhead than the other options.

  • There is only one data item, or all data items must be fetched together. Using MemorySingleCache or RedisSingleCache could provide a cleaner implementation without resorting to hacks like a fixed key.