# Contribute to virt-manager ## Bug reporting The preferred place for bug reports is bugzilla.redhat.com. This is documented more at https://virt-manager.org/bugs/ Small issues can be reported in the [github issue tracker](https://github.com/virt-manager/virt-manager/issues). Anything that's non-trivial, or is a feature request, should be filed in bugzilla. Please only file issues if they apply to the latest version of virt-manager. If you are using an older version from a distro, please file a bug with them. When filing a bug, please reproduce the issue with the `--debug` flag passed to the tool and attach the full output in the bug report. ## Writing patches The following commands will be useful for anyone writing patches: ```sh ./setup.py test # Run local unit test suite ./setup.py pylint # Run pylint/pycodestyle checking ``` Any patches shouldn't change the output of 'test' or 'pylint'. Depending on what version of libvirt or pylint is installed, you may see some pre-existing errors from these commands. The important thing is that any changes you make do not add additional errors. The 'pylint' command requires [`pylint`](https://github.com/PyCQA/pylint) and [`pycodestyle`](https://github.com/pycqa/pycodestyle) to be installed. If [`codespell`](https://github.com/codespell-project/codespell) is installed, it will be invoked as well. One useful way to manually test virt-manager's UI is using libvirt's unit test driver. From the source directory, Launch virt-manager like: ```sh ./virt-manager --connect test://$PWD/tests/testdriver.xml ``` This testdriver has many fake XML definitions that can be used to see each bit of virt-manager's UI. It also enables testing the various wizards without having to alter your host virt config. The command line tools can be tested similarly. To run a virt-install command that won't alter your host config, you can do: ```sh ./virt-install --connect test:///default --debug ... ``` `--connect test:///default` here is libvirt's built in unit test driver. We use [glade-3](https://glade.gnome.org/) for building most of virt-manager's UI. See the files in the ui/ directory. ## Submitting patches The [virt-manager git repo](https://github.com/virt-manager/virt-manager) is hosted on github. Small patches are acceptable via github pull-request, but anything non-trivial should be sent to the [virt-tools-list mailing list](https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/virt-tools-list). Sending patches using `git send-email` is preferred, but `git format-patch` output attached to an email is also fine. ## Introductory tasks Extending the virt-install or virt-xml command line is a good introductory task for virt-manager. See [the wiki](https://github.com/virt-manager/virt-manager/wiki) for both a patch tutorial, and a list of libvirt `` XML options that still need to be added to our command line. ## Translations Translations are handled at `fedora.zanata.org`. Please register for a Fedora account and request access to a translation team, as described at [Translate on Zanata](https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/L10N/Translate_on_Zanata), and contribute at [virt-manager at Zanata](https://fedora.zanata.org/project/view/virt-manager/). ## Advanced testing There's a few standalone specialty tests: ```sh ./setup.py test_ui # dogtail UI test suite. This takes over your desktop ./setup.py test_urls # Test fetching media from live distro URLs ./setup.py test_initrd_inject # Test live virt-install --initrd-inject ``` All test 'test*' commands have a `--debug` option if you are hitting problems. For more options, see `./setup.py test --help`.