Files
opentf/vendor/github.com/Ensighten/udnssdk/CONTRIBUTING.md
Joseph Anthony Pasquale Holsten d783e831f8 ultradns providers and improvements (#9788)
* vendor: update github.com/Ensighten/udnssdk to v1.2.1

* ultradns_tcpool: add

* ultradns.baseurl: set default

* ultradns.record: cleanup test

* ultradns_record: extract common, cleanup

* ultradns: extract common

* ultradns_dirpool: add

* ultradns_dirpool: fix rdata.ip_info.ips to be idempotent

* ultradns_tcpool: add doc

* ultradns_dirpool: fix rdata.geo_codes.codes to be idempotent

* ultradns_dirpool: add doc

* ultradns: cleanup testing

* ultradns_record: rename resource

* ultradns: log username from config, not client

udnssdk.Client is being refactored to use x/oauth2, so don't assume we
can access Username from it

* ultradns_probe_ping: add

* ultradns_probe_http: add

* doc: add ultradns_probe_ping

* doc: add ultradns_probe_http

* ultradns_record: remove duplication from error messages

* doc: cleanup typos in ultradns

* ultradns_probe_ping: add test for pool-level probe

* Clean documentation

* ultradns: pull makeSetFromStrings() up to common.go

* ultradns_dirpool: log hashIPInfoIPs

Log the key and generated hashcode used to index ip_info.ips into a set.

* ultradns: simplify hashLimits()

Limits blocks only have the "name" attribute as their primary key, so
hashLimits() needn't use a buffer to concatenate.

Also changes log level to a more approriate DEBUG.

* ultradns_tcpool: convert rdata to schema.Set

RData blocks have the "host" attribute as their primary key, so it is
used by hashRdatas() to create the hashcode.

Tests are updated to use the new hashcode indexes instead of natural
numbers.

* ultradns_probe_http: convert agents to schema.Set

Also pull the makeSetFromStrings() helper up to common.go

* ultradns: pull hashRdatas() up to common

* ultradns_dirpool: convert rdata to schema.Set

Fixes TF-66

* ultradns_dirpool.conflict_resolve: fix default from response

UltraDNS REST API User Guide claims that "Directional Pool
Profile Fields" have a "conflictResolve" field which "If not
specified, defaults to GEO."
https://portal.ultradns.com/static/docs/REST-API_User_Guide.pdf

But UltraDNS does not actually return a conflictResolve
attribute when it has been updated to "GEO".

We could fix it in udnssdk, but that would require either:
* hide the response by coercing "" to "GEO" for everyone
* use a pointer to allow checking for nil (requires all
users to change if they fix this)

An ideal solution would be to have the UltraDNS API respond
with this attribute for every dirpool's rdata.

So at the risk of foolish consistency in the sdk, we're
going to solve it where it's visible to the user:
by checking and overriding the parsing. I'm sorry.

* ultradns_record: convert rdata to set

UltraDNS does not store the ordering of rdata elements, so we need a way
to identify if changes have been made even it the order changes.
A perfect job for schema.Set.

* ultradns_record: parse double-encoded answers for TXT records

* ultradns: simplify hashLimits()

Limits blocks only have the "name" attribute as their primary key, so
hashLimits() needn't use a buffer to concatenate.

* ultradns_dirpool.description: validate

* ultradns_dirpool.rdata: doc need for set

* ultradns_dirpool.conflict_resolve: validate
2016-12-15 16:28:34 +00:00

4.1 KiB

Contributing

Want to contribute? Up-to-date pointers should be at: http://contributing.appspot.com/udnssdk

Got an idea? Something smell wrong? Cause you pain? Or lost seconds of your life you'll never get back?

All contributions are welcome: ideas, patches, documentation, bug reports, complaints, and even something you drew up on a napkin.

Programming is not a required skill. Whatever you've seen about open source and maintainers or community members saying "send patches or die": you will not see that here.

It is more important to me that you are able to contribute. If you haven't got time to do anything else, just email me and I'll try to help: joseph@josephholsten.com.

I promise to help guide this project with these principles:

  • Community: If a newbie has a bad time, it's a bug.
  • Software: Make it work, then make it right, then make it fast.
  • Technology: If it doesn't do a thing today, we can make it do it tomorrow.

Here are some ways you can be part of the community:

Something not working? Found a Bug?

Find something that doesn't feel quite right? Here are 5 steps to getting it fixed!

Check your version

To make sure you're not wasting your time, you should be using the latest version before you file your bug. First of all, you should download the latest revision to be sure you are up to date. If you've done this and you still experience the bug, go ahead to the next step.

Search our issues

Now that you have the latest version and still think you've found a bug, search through issues first to see if anyone else has already filed it. This step is very important! If you find that someone has filed your bug already, please go to the next step anyway, but instead of filing a new bug, comment on the one you've found. If you can't find your bug in issues, go to the next step.

Create a Github account https://github.com/join

You will need to create a Github account to be able to report bugs (and to comment on them). If you have registered, proceed to the next step.

File the bug!

Now you are ready to file a bug. The Writing a Good Bug Report document gives some tips about the most useful information to include in bug reports. The better your bug report, the higher the chance that your bug will be addressed (and possibly fixed) quickly!

What happens next?

Once your bug is filed, you will receive email when it is updated at each stage in the bug life cycle. After the bug is considered fixed, you may be asked to download the latest revision and confirm that the fix works for you.

Submitting patches

  1. Fork the repository.
  2. Create a topic branch.
  3. Add specs for your unimplemented feature or bug fix.
  4. Run script/test. If your specs pass, return to step 3.
  5. Implement your feature or bug fix.
  6. Run script/test. If your specs fail, return to step 5.
  7. Add, commit (say why the changes were made, we can look at the diff to see how they were made.), and push your changes. For documentation-only fixes, please add [ci skip] to your commit message to avoid needless CI builds.
  8. Submit a patch.

Setting up a local dev environment

For those of you who do want to contribute with code, we've tried to make it easy to get started. You can install all dependencies and tools with:

script/bootstrap

Good luck!

Style guide

There are great style guides out there, we don't need to reinvent the wheel. Here are ones we like:

For some things, the best we've got is a decent formatting tool:

  • markdown: pandoc --to=markdown --reference-links --atx-headers --columns 72
  • json: jq .