If you’re going to be doing development on Twisted itself, or if you want to take advantage of bleeding-edge features (or bug fixes) that are not yet available in a numbered release, you’ll probably want to check out a tree from the Twisted Git repository. The Trunk is where all current development takes place.
This document lists some useful tips for working on this cutting edge.
Git tutorials can be found elsewhere, see in particular Git and GitHub learning resources . The relevant data you need to check out a copy of the Twisted tree is available on the development page , and is as follows:
$ git clone https://github.com/twisted/twisted Twisted
The output of git blame
will be better if you configure it to use our ignore file:
$ cd Twisted
$ git config blame.ignoreRevsFile .git-blame-ignore-revs
By using git clone https://github.com/twisted/twisted otherdir
, you can put the workspace tree in a directory other than “Twisted” . I do this (with a name like “Twisted-Git” ) to
remind myself that this tree comes from Git and not from a released
version (like “Twisted-1.0.5” ). This practice can cause a few problems,
because there are a few places in the Twisted tree that need to know where
the tree starts, so they can add it to sys.path
without
requiring the user manually set their PYTHONPATH. These functions walk the
current directory up to the root, looking for a directory named “Twisted” (sometimes exactly that, sometimes with a .startswith
test). Generally these are test scripts or other
administrative tools which expect to be launched from somewhere inside the
tree (but not necessarily from the top).
If you rename the tree to something other than Twisted
, these
tools may wind up trying to use Twisted source files from /usr/lib/python2.5
or elsewhere on the default sys.path
. Normally this won’t
matter, but it is good to be aware of the issue in case you run into
problems.
twisted/test/process_twisted.py
is one of these programs.
There are currently several C extension modules in Twisted: twisted.internet.cfsupport
, twisted.internet.iocpreactor._iocp
,
and twisted.python._epoll
. These modules
are optional, but you’ll have to compile them if you want to experience their
features, performance improvements, or bugs. There are two approaches.
The first is to do a regular distutils ./setup.py build
, which
will create a directory under build/
to hold both the generated .so
files as well as a copy of the 600-odd .py
files
that make up Twisted. If you do this, you will need to set your PYTHONPATH to
something like MyDir/Twisted/build/lib.linux-i686-2.5
in order to
run code against the Git twisted (as opposed to whatever’s installed in /usr/lib/python2.5
or wherever python usually looks). In
addition, you will need to re-run the build
command every time you change a .py
file. The build/lib.foo
directory is a copy of the main tree, and that copy is only updated when you
re-run setup.py build
. It is easy to forget this and then wonder
why your code changes aren’t being expressed.
The second technique is to build the C modules in place, and point your
PYTHONPATH at the top of the tree, like MyDir/Twisted
. This way
you’re using the .py files in place too, removing the confusion a forgotten
rebuild could cause with the separate build/ directory above. To build the C
modules in place, do ./setup.py build_ext -i
. You only need to
re-run this command when you change the C files. Note that setup.py
is not Make, it does not always get the dependencies
right (.h
files in particular), so if you are hacking on the
cReactor you may need to manually delete the .o
files before
doing a rebuild. Also note that doing a setup.py clean
will
remove the .o
files but not the final .so
files,
they must be deleted by hand.
To run the full unit-test suite, do:
./bin/trial twisted
To run a single test file (like twisted/test/test_defer.py
),
do one of:
./bin/trial twisted.test.test_defer
or
./bin/trial twisted/test/test_defer.py
To run any tests that are related to a code file, like twisted/protocols/imap4.py
, do:
./bin/trial --testmodule twisted/mail/imap4.py
This depends upon the .py
file having an appropriate “test-case-name” tag that indicates which test cases provide coverage.
See the Test Standards document for
details about using “test-case-name” . In this example, the twisted.mail.test.test_imap
test will be run.
Many tests create temporary files in /tmp or ./_trial_temp, but
everything in /tmp should be deleted when the test finishes. Sometimes these
cleanup calls are commented out by mistake, so if you see a stray /tmp/@12345.1
directory, it is probably from test_dirdbm
or test_popsicle
.
Look for an rmtree
that has been commented out and complain to
the last developer who touched that file.
Twisted documentation (not including the automatically-generated API docs) is generated by Sphinx .
The docs are written in Restructured Text (.rst
) and translated into .html
files by the bin/admin/build-docs
script.
To build the HTML form of the docs into the doc/
directory, do the following:
./bin/admin/build-docs .
Twisted’s Trac installation is notified when the Git repository changes,
and will update the ticket depending on the Git commit logs.
When making a branch for a ticket, the branch name should end
in -<ticket number>
, for
example my-branch-9999
. This will add a ticket comment containing a
changeset link and branch name. To make your commit message show up as a comment
on a Trac ticket, add a refs #<ticket number>
line at the
bottom of your commit message. To automatically close a ticket on Trac
as Fixed
and add a comment with the closing commit message, add
a Fixes: #<ticket number>
line to your commit message. In
general, a commit message closing a ticket looks like this:
Merge my-branch-9999: A single-line summary.
Author: jesstess
Reviewers: exarkun, glyph
Fixes: #9999
My longer description of the changes made.
The Twisted Coding Standard elaborates on commit messages and source control.
A minor mode for development with Twisted using Emacs is available. See twisted-dev.el
, provided by twisted-emacs ,
for several utility functions which make it easier to grep for methods, run test cases, etc.
Our support for building Debian packages has fallen into disrepair. We would very much like to restore this functionality, but until we do so, if you are interested in this, you are on your own. See stdeb for one possible approach to this.
Travis CI is configured to run a subset of the official Buildbot builders for each push to a PR or to trunk
The tests are executed using tox-travis
. See the tox.ini
file for the actual configuration.