We're happy you want to contribute! You can help us in different ways:
- Open an issue with suggestions for improvements
- Fork this repository and submit a pull request
Before accepting any code contributions we ask that contributors sign a Contributor License Agreement (CLA). For an explanation of why we ask this as well as instructions for how to proceed, see the Microsoft CLA.
The easiest way to start contributing is via our devcontainer. This container works both locally in visual studio code with docker-desktop/docker-for-mac as well as Github Codespaces. To open the project in vscode you will need the Dev Containers extension. For codespaces you will need to create a new codespace.
With the extension installed you can run the following from the command pallet to get started
> Dev Containers: Clone Repository in Container Volume...
In the subsequent popup paste the url to the repo and hit enter.
https://github.com/citusdata/citus
This will create an isolated Workspace in vscode, complete with all tools required to build, test and run the Citus extension. We keep this container up to date with the supported postgres versions as well as the exact versions of tooling we use.
To quickly start we suggest splitting your terminal once to have two shells. The left one in the /workspaces/citus
, the second one changed to /data
. The left terminal will be used to interact with the project, the right one with a testing cluster.
To get citus installed from source we run make install -s
in the first terminal. Once installed you can start a Citus cluster in the second terminal via citus_dev make citus
. The cluster will run in the background, and can be interacted with via citus_dev
. To get an overview of the available commands.
With the Citus cluster running you can connect to the coordinator in the first terminal via psql -p9700
. Because the coordinator is the most common entrypoint the PGPORT
environment is set accordingly, so a simple psql
will connect directly to the coordinator.
-
Start Debugging: Press F5 in VS Code to start debugging. When prompted, you'll need to attach the debugger to the appropriate PostgreSQL process.
-
Identify the Process: If you're running a psql command, take note of the PID that appears in your psql prompt. For example:
[local] citus@citus:9700 (PID: 5436)=#
This PID (5436 in this case) indicates the process that you should attach the debugger to. If you are uncertain about which process to attach, you can list all running PostgreSQL processes using the following command:
ps aux | grep postgres
Look for the process associated with the PID you noted. For example:
citus 5436 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S 14:00 0:00 postgres: citus citus
-
Attach the Debugger: Once you've identified the correct PID, select that process when prompted in VS Code to attach the debugger. You should now be able to debug the PostgreSQL session tied to the psql command.
-
Set Breakpoints and Debug: With the debugger attached, you can set breakpoints within the code. This allows you to step through the code execution, inspect variables, and fully debug the PostgreSQL instance running in your container.
PostgreSQL documentation has a section on upgrade policy.
We always recommend that all users run the latest available minor release [for PostgreSQL] for whatever major version is in use.
We expect Citus users to honor this recommendation and use latest available PostgreSQL minor release. Failure to do so may result in failures in our test suite. There are some known improvements in PG test architecture such as this commit that are missing in earlier minor versions.
- Install Xcode
- Install packages with Homebrew
brew update
brew install git postgresql python
- Get, build, and test the code
git clone https://github.com/citusdata/citus.git
cd citus
./configure
# If you have already installed the project, you need to clean it first
make clean
make
make install
# Optionally, you might instead want to use `make install-all`
# since `multi_extension` regression test would fail due to missing downgrade scripts.
cd src/test/regress
pip install pipenv
pipenv --rm
pipenv install
pipenv shell
make check
- Install build dependencies
echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt/ $(lsb_release -cs)-pgdg main" | \
sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pgdg.list
wget --quiet -O - https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc | \
sudo apt-key add -
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y postgresql-server-dev-14 postgresql-14 \
autoconf flex git libcurl4-gnutls-dev libicu-dev \
libkrb5-dev liblz4-dev libpam0g-dev libreadline-dev \
libselinux1-dev libssl-dev libxslt1-dev libzstd-dev \
make uuid-dev
- Get, build, and test the code
git clone https://github.com/citusdata/citus.git
cd citus
./configure
# If you have already installed the project previously, you need to clean it first
make clean
make
sudo make install
# Optionally, you might instead want to use `sudo make install-all`
# since `multi_extension` regression test would fail due to missing downgrade scripts.
cd src/test/regress
pip install pipenv
pipenv --rm
pipenv install
pipenv shell
make check
- Find the RPM URL for your repo at yum.postgresql.org
- Register its contents with Yum:
sudo yum install -y <url>
- Register EPEL and SCL repositories for your distro.
On CentOS:
yum install -y centos-release-scl-rh epel-release
On RHEL, see this RedHat blog post to install set-up SCL first. Then run:
yum install -y epel-release
- Install build dependencies
sudo yum update -y
sudo yum groupinstall -y 'Development Tools'
sudo yum install -y postgresql14-devel postgresql14-server \
git libcurl-devel libxml2-devel libxslt-devel \
libzstd-devel llvm-toolset-7-clang llvm5.0 lz4-devel \
openssl-devel pam-devel readline-devel
git clone https://github.com/citusdata/citus.git
cd citus
PG_CONFIG=/usr/pgsql-14/bin/pg_config ./configure
# If you have already installed the project previously, you need to clean it first
make clean
make
sudo make install
# Optionally, you might instead want to use `sudo make install-all`
# since `multi_extension` regression test would fail due to missing downgrade scripts.
cd src/test/regress
pip install pipenv
pipenv --rm
pipenv install
pipenv shell
make check
CI pipeline will automatically reject any PRs which do not follow our coding
conventions. The easiest way to ensure your PR adheres to those conventions is
to use the citus_indent
tool. This tool uses uncrustify
under the hood.
# Uncrustify changes the way it formats code every release a bit. To make sure
# everyone formats consistently we use version 0.68.1:
curl -L https://github.com/uncrustify/uncrustify/archive/uncrustify-0.68.1.tar.gz | tar xz
cd uncrustify-uncrustify-0.68.1/
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make -j5
sudo make install
cd ../..
git clone https://github.com/citusdata/tools.git
cd tools
make uncrustify/.install
Once you've done that, you can run the make reindent
command from the top
directory to recursively check and correct the style of any source files in the
current directory. Under the hood, make reindent
will run citus_indent
and
some other style corrections for you.
You can also run the following in the directory of this repository to automatically format all the files that you have changed before committing:
cat > .git/hooks/pre-commit << __EOF__
#!/bin/bash
citus_indent --check --diff || { citus_indent --diff; exit 1; }
__EOF__
chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit
Sometimes you need to make change to the SQL that the citus extension runs upon
creations. The way this is done is by changing the last file in
src/backend/distributed/sql
, or creating it if the last file is from a
published release. If you needed to create a new file, also change the
default_version
field in src/backend/distributed/citus.control
to match your
new version. All the files in this directory are run in order based on
their name. See this page in the Postgres
docs for more
information on how Postgres runs these files.
If you need to change any functions defined by Citus. You should check inside
src/backend/distributed/sql/udfs
to see if there is already a directory for
this function, if not create one. Then change or create the file called
latest.sql
in that directory to match how it should create the function. This
should be including any DROP (IF EXISTS), COMMENT and REVOKE statements for this
function.
Then copy the latest.sql
file to {version}.sql
, where {version}
is the
version for which this sql change is, e.g. {9.0-1.sql}
. Now that you've
created this stable snapshot of the function definition for your version you
should use it in your actual sql file, e.g.
src/backend/distributed/sql/citus--8.3-1--9.0-1.sql
. You do this by using C
style #include
statements like this:
#include "udfs/myudf/9.0-1.sql"
Any other SQL you can put directly in the main sql file, e.g.
src/backend/distributed/sql/citus--8.3-1--9.0-1.sql
.
- Check out the release branch that you want to backport to
git checkout release-11.3
- Make sure you have the latest changes
git pull
- Create a new release branch with a unique name
git checkout -b release-11.3-<yourname>
- Cherry-pick the commit that you want to backport
git cherry-pick -x <sha>
(the-x
is important) - Push the branch
git push
- Wait for tests to pass
- If the cherry-pick required non-trivial merge conflicts, create a PR and ask for a review.
- After the tests pass on CI, fast-forward the release branch
git push origin release-11.3-<yourname>:release-11.3
See src/test/regress/README.md
User-facing documentation is published on docs.citusdata.com. When adding a new feature, function, or setting, you can open a pull request or issue against the Citus docs repo.
Detailed descriptions of the implementation for Citus developers are provided in the Citus Technical Documentation. It is currently a single file for ease of searching. Please update the documentation if you make any changes that affect the design or add major new features.