Introduction
PR Rules
- We prefer smaller PRs.
- Try stacked PRs with graphite if you have write access, which will be given to you when you contribute a lot.
- Please create an issue or discussion if the PR contains architectural changes.
Development Policy
- Embrace data-oriented design.
- Keep APIs simple and well-documented.
- Always provide a reference to the source if the implementation is from another project.
Performance
- All performance issues are considered as bugs in this project, this includes all runtime and compilation performance issues.
- Follow guidance from the Rust performance book.
- Minimize the use of the
regex
crate. Use Rust iterators and string methods for better performance.
- Compile time must be minimized to reduce impact on development workflow and downstream tools.
- Minimize third-party dependencies to reduce compilation speed and project complexity.
- Avoid heavy macros, generics, or any Rust techniques that slow down compilation.
- Our CI runs complete in 3 minutes, any regressions need to be fixed.
Maintenance Policy
- Monitor code coverage for unused code. Aim for 99% code coverage.
- Actively monitor and work on reducing the CI time to speed up merging of PRs. The current CI time on GitHub actions is around 3 minutes.
- Documentation first - documentation should serve as the source of truth. Keep the documentation updated and share the link instead of repeatedly answering the same questions. See GitLab's handbook-first approach.
Conventional Commits
We follow conventional commits:
The commit contains the following structural elements, to communicate intent to the consumers:
fix
: a commit of the type fix patches a bug in your codebase.feat
: a commit of the type feat introduces a new feature to the codebase.- BREAKING CHANGE: a appends a
!
after the type/scope, introduces a breaking API change, e.g.feat(parser)!: new feature
. - the scopes are crate names.
- the types are
feat:
,fix:
,chore:
,ci:
,docs:
,style:
,refactor:
,perf:
andtest:
.
Action Policy
Taken from Astral's values:
We bias towards action, even in the face of uncertainty. We favor pragmatic doing over prolonged debating; we favor asking for forgiveness over permission. We value decisiveness — especially when a decision isn’t clear cut, and especially when a decision is reversible.
A bias towards action is not the same as recklessness. Rather, it’s a bias towards making responsible decisions and acting on them with urgency, even if we’re left with lingering ambiguity or known unknowns.