We want to make contributing to this project as easy and transparent as possible.
Minor changes and improvements will be released on an ongoing basis. Larger changes (e.g., changesets implementing a new paper) will be released on a more periodic basis.
We actively welcome your pull requests.
- Fork the repo and create your branch from
main
. - If you've added code that should be tested, add tests.
- If you've changed APIs, update the documentation.
- Ensure the test suite passes.
- Make sure your code passes static analysis (see below).
- If you haven't already, complete the Contributor License Agreement ("CLA").
In order to accept your pull request, we need you to submit a CLA. You only need to do this once to work on any of Facebook's open source projects.
Complete your CLA here: https://code.facebook.com/cla
We use GitHub issues to track public bugs. Please ensure your description is clear and has sufficient instructions to be able to reproduce the issue.
Facebook has a bounty program for the safe disclosure of security bugs. In those cases, please go through the process outlined on that page and do not file a public issue.
~$ python3 -m venv venv
~$ source venv2/bin/activate
(venv2) ~$ cd git/fairscale/
(venv2) ~/git/fairscale $ pip3 install -r requirements-dev.txt
- We follow the PEP8 style guide.
- In your editor, install the editorconfig extension which should ensure that you are following the same standards as us.
- Please read the editorconfig file to understand the exact coding style preferences.
- Please place Python code related to models in fairscale/nn. Place Python code related to optimizers in fairscale/optim. Place C++ extensions in fairscale/clib.
- Please put
__all__:List[str] = []
in new__init__.py
files for consistent importing behavior and less development overhead in maintaining an importing list. - Please setup pre-commit before opening up your PR.
We use pre-commit to maintain the coding style. Pre-Commit checks are run via Github Actions on every commit. To install all the relevant libraries and run the pre-commit tests locally, execute the following commands:
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
pre-commit install
After the above, your git commit
command will automatically trigger pre-commit checks.
Note that, trailing spaces are not checked by the manual commands below, but they are checked by the pre-commit hooks we use above.
black .
isort .
flake8
mypy --ignore-missing-imports --scripts-are-modules --pretty .
FairScale code is tested on Python 3.9.7, CUDA 11.2 and the following three PyTorch versions:
- the latest stable version
- the latest LTS version
- a recent nightly release
See the README for the exact version numbers.
pytest
# single test
python -m pytest tests/nn/data_parallel/test_oss_ddp.py::test_on_cpu
python -m pytest --cov-report term --cov=fairscale/nn/data_parallel \
tests/nn/data_parallel/test_oss_ddp.py::test_on_cpu
From your PR page, you can expand on the CircleCI results. For GPU test, you should see what CI has run, like:
...
----- generated xml file: /home/circleci/fairscale/test-results/junit.xml ------
================== 217 passed, 2 xfailed in 218.74s (0:03:38) ==================
CircleCI received exit code 0
The number of passed and failed should give you an idea on whether your local test was the same or not.
We follow the same guidelines as AngularJS. Each commit message consists of a header, a body and a footer. The header has a special format that includes a type, and a subject:
[<type>] <subject>
<BLANK LINE>
<body>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>
Any line of the commit message cannot be longer 100 characters! This allows the message to be easier to read on github as well as in various git tools.
Must be one of the following:
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- cleanup: Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, dead code removal etc.)
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug or adds a feature
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- test: Adding missing tests or fixing them
- chore: Changes to the build process or auxiliary tools and libraries such as documentation generation
- docs: Documentation only changes
By contributing to fairscale, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.