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Arista Validated Design Development

Arista Validated Design (AVD) is maintained as a GitHub project under the Apache 2 license. Users are encouraged to submit GitHub issues for feature requests and bug reports.

Governance

AVD is a community-based Free Open Source Software (FOSS) project sponsored by Arista Networks. Arista Networks supports Ansible for managing devices running the EOS operating system natively through eAPI or CloudVision Portal (CVP). This collection includes a set of Ansible roles and modules to help kick-start your automation with Arista. The various roles and templates provided are designed to be customized and extended to your needs.

The AVD Core Team is responsible for the direction and execution of the code that gets committed to the project.

The following individuals are on the AVD Core Team:

Contributing

We welcome many forms of contributions to AVD. While we understand most contributions will commonly come from ansible power users, we encourage others to contribute through docs, tutorials, and user guides. Also, if you have other ideas for contributing, don’t hesitate to open an issue or have a discussion in one of the forums below.

Communication

Communication among the contributors should always occur via public channels. The following outlines the best ways to communicate and engage on all things AVD:

Slack

GitHub

  • GitHub issues - All feature requests, bug reports, and other substantial changes should be documented in an issue.
  • GitHub discussions - The preferred forum for general discussion and support issues. Ideal for shaping a feature request before submitting an issue.

GitHub’s discussions are the best place to get help or propose rough ideas for new functionality. Their integration with GitHub allows cross-referencing and converting posts to issues as needed. Below are some examples of categories used for discussions:

  • General - General community discussion.
  • Ideas - Ideas for new functionality that still needs to be prepared for a formal feature request.
  • Q&A - Request help with installing or using AVD.

Deprecation Policy

The deprecation policy will be such that at least one release will inform users of a feature that will be deprecated in the next release.

Versioning

Semantic Versioning (SemVer) is used for AVD versioning.

Contributor Workflow

The following documents the lifecycle of work within AVD:

  1. Open/request a feature enhancement or file a bug a. If bug, see here b. If feature request or enhancement, continue.
  2. Open a GitHub Issue a. The issue will be reviewed. Based on the request, it will get labeled as current, near-term, or future. b. It will likely only stay in current if it’s trivial and quick work. c. If it gets labeled as future, the issue will be closed in the next batch of issues that get migrated and converted to GitHub discussions.

If you follow these steps, there will be a GitHub Issue opened before submitting a Pull Request (PR). However, a PR may come in without being discussed in an Issue or Discussion. While we don’t advocate for this, you should be aware of the process that will be followed for those circumstances.

Should this happen, and if you followed the project guidelines, have sample tests, and code quality, you will first be acknowledged for your work; thank you in advance. After that, the PR will be quickly reviewed to ensure that it makes sense as a contribution to the project and to gauge the work effort or issues with merging into devel. If the effort required by the core team is manageable, it’ll likely still be a few weeks before it gets thoroughly reviewed and merged. After that, it will just depend on the current backlog.

Contributing to Arista Validated Design

Contributing pull requests are gladly welcomed for this repository. If you are planning a significant change, please start a discussion first to ensure we can merge it.

Branching model

  • The devel branch corresponds to the release actively under development.
  • The release tags correspond to stable releases.
  • Fork the repository and create a branch based on devel to set up a dev environment if you want to open a PR.
  • See the AVD release for information about active branches.

Reporting Bugs

  • First, ensure that you’re running the latest stable version of AVD. If you’re running an older version, it’s possible that the bug has already been fixed.
  • Next, check the GitHub issues list to see if the bug you’ve found has already been reported. If you think you may be experiencing a reported issue that hasn’t already been resolved, please click “add a reaction” in the top right corner of the issue and add a thumbs up (+1). Also, add a comment describing how it’s affecting your installation. This will allow us to prioritize bugs based on how many users are affected.
  • When submitting an issue, please be as descriptive as possible. Be sure to provide all information requests in the issue template, including:

    • The environment in which AVD is running
    • The exact steps that can be taken to reproduce the issue
    • Expected and observed behavior
    • Any error messages generated
    • Screenshots (if applicable)
  • Please avoid prepending any tag (for example, “[Bug]”) to the issue title. The issue will be reviewed by a maintainer after submission, and the appropriate labels will be applied for categorization.
  • Keep in mind that bugs are prioritized based on their severity and how much work is required to resolve them. It may take some time for someone to address your issue.

Feature Requests

  • First, check the GitHub issues list and Discussions to see if the feature you’re requesting is already listed. If the feature you’d like to see has already been requested and is open, click “add a reaction” in the top right corner of the issue and add a thumbs up (+1). This ensures that the issue has a better chance of receiving attention. Also, feel free to add a comment with any additional justification for the feature. However, note that comments with no substance other than a “+1” will be deleted. Please use GitHub’s reactions feature to indicate your support.
  • Before filing a new feature request, consider starting with a GitHub Discussion. The feedback you receive there will help validate and shape the proposed feature before filing a formal issue. Suppose the feature request isn’t accepted into the current or near-term backlog. In that case, it will get converted to a discussion anyway.
  • Good feature requests are very narrowly defined. Be sure to describe the functionality and data models being proposed thoroughly. The more effort you put into writing a feature request, the better its chance is of being implemented. Overly broad feature requests will be closed.
  • When submitting a feature request on GitHub, be sure to include all information requested by the issue template, including:

    • A detailed description of the proposed functionality
    • A use case for the feature; who would use it and what value it would add to AVD
    • A rough description of changes necessary to the database schema (if applicable)
    • Any third-party libraries or other resources which would be involved
    • Please avoid prepending any tag (for example, “[Feature]”) to the issue title.

The issue will be reviewed by a moderator after submission, and the appropriate labels will be applied for categorization.

Submitting Pull Requests

  • If you’re interested in contributing to AVD, check out our getting started documentation for tips on setting up your development environment.
  • It’s recommended to open an issue before starting work on a pull request and discuss your idea with the AVD maintainers before beginning work. This will save time on something we might be unable to implement. When suggesting a new feature, ensure it will be consistent with any work already in progress.
  • Once you’ve opened or identified an issue you’d like to work on, ask that it be assigned to you so that others know it’s being worked on. A maintainer will then mark the issue as “accepted.”
  • All new functionality must include relevant tests where applicable.
  • When submitting a pull request, please work off the devel branch rather than releases/*. The devel branch is used for ongoing development, while releases/* is used for tagging stable releases.
  • In most cases, adding a changelog entry is unnecessary: A maintainer will take care of this when the PR is merged. (This helps avoid merge conflicts resulting from multiple PRs being submitted simultaneously.)
  • All code submissions should meet the following criteria (CI will enforce these checks):

    • Jinja2 templates follow our guidelines.
    • Molecule is updated with data covering your fix.
    • Molecule artifacts are updated with your coverage.
    • Python syntax is valid.
    • All unit tests pass successfully.
    • PEP 8 compliance is enforced, with the exception that lines may be greater than 80 characters in length.
  • A PR can be opened before all the work is complete. The PR state should be set to draft in this situation. The maintainer team will review PRs marked as ready for review (not in draft).
  • To automate release-notes creation and make the filtering process more manageable, it’s strongly recommended to use conventional commit syntax, at least for the PR title. The scope should be module or role updated. As a reminder, the list below provides all supported commit types and scopes:

    • Types:

      • Feat: Create a capability, e.g., feature, test, dependency.
      • Fix: Fix an issue, e.g., bug, typo, accident, misstatement.
      • Cut: Remove a capability, e.g., feature, test, dependency.
      • Doc: Refactor of documentation, e.g., help files.
      • CI: Update CI components, e.g., molecule files or GitHub Actions.
      • Bump: Increase the version of something, e.g., dependency.
      • Test: Add or refactor anything regarding a test, e.g., adding new testCases.
      • Refactor: A code change that MUST be just a refactoring.
      • Revert: Change back to the previous commit
    • Scopes:

      • {{ role_name }}: AVD role impacted by PR. Required for Feat, Cut, and Fix types
      • plugins: To use when AVD plugin is impacted by PR. Required for Feat, Cut, and Fix types
      • requirements: To use when using the Bump type and when any AVD requirement is updated

      Scopes

      The scope is optional and can be ignored safely if your PR covers an undefined scope.

Project Structure

All development of the current AVD release occurs in the devel branch; releases are packaged from the releases/* branches. A releases/v* branch should always represent a stable release in its entirety, such that installing AVD by either downloading a packaged release or cloning the releases/v* branch provides the same code base.