All functionality should be available in pure Python. Optional C implementations may be written for performance reasons, but should never replace the Python implementation. The C implementations should follow the kernel/git coding style. Where possible include updates to NEWS along with your improvements. New functionality and bug fixes should be accompanied by matching unit tests. Coding style ------------ Where possible, please follow PEP8 with regard to coding style. Run ruff. Furthermore, triple-quotes should always be """, single quotes are ' unless using " would result in less escaping within the string. Public methods, functions and classes should all have doc strings. Please use Google style docstrings to document parameters and return values. You can generate the documentation by running "make doc". Running the tests ----------------- To run the testsuite, you should be able to simply run "make check". This will run the tests using unittest. :: $ make check Tox configuration is also present. String Types ------------ Like Linux, Git treats filenames as arbitrary bytestrings. There is no prescribed encoding for these strings, and although it is fairly common to use UTF-8, any raw byte strings are supported. For this reason, the lower levels in Dulwich treat git-based filenames as bytestrings. It is up to the Dulwich API user to encode and decode them if necessary. The porcelain may accept unicode strings and convert them to bytestrings as necessary on the fly (using 'utf-8'). * on-disk filenames: regular strings, or ideally, pathlib.Path instances * git-repository related filenames: bytes * object sha1 digests (20 bytes long): bytes * object sha1 hexdigests (40 bytes long): str (bytestrings on python2, strings on python3) Merge requests -------------- Please either send pull requests to the maintainer (jelmer@jelmer.uk) or create new pull requests on GitHub. Licensing --------- All contributions should be made under the same license that Dulwich itself comes under: both Apache License, version 2.0 or later and GNU General Public License, version 2.0 or later.