Frameworks/CreationGuidelines
Guidelines for creating a new framework
If you are creating a new framework, this checklist can help you get it done correctly:
- Make sure it follows all the active policies
- The above includes many important things, make sure to read all of it. E.g. it includes the often forgotten rule for installing translations
- If it is created by splitting code from an existing repository, the new repository should be created by using a script to create a graft point
- Run astyle-kdelibs or uncrustify-kf5 (both are part of kde-dev-scripts)
- Ensure the module doesn't depend on deprecated or "portingAid" frameworks like kdelibs4support
- Ensure the module is in frameworks on projects.kde.org (the source information is in the repo kde:sysadmin/repo-metadata), otherwise ask for it to be moved there (https://go.kde.org/systickets)
- Adjust kde:kde-build-metadata - in particular, add it to the deps for frameworks/kf5umbrella
- Get the CI jobs set up
- Get the job set up on build.kde.org by filing a task towards https://phabricator.kde.org/tag/build.kde.org/
- Make sure to request it to be added to the relevant view: https://build.kde.org/job/Frameworks/
- Ensure it is green
- Add a new product for it on bugs.kde.org, which must be called frameworks-<name>
- Create a README.md file
- Finally when it's all ready, change the yaml file to say release: true. The release scripts will then pick it up automatically for the next KF release.
Template
The framework-template directory in the kdeexamples repository has a setup.sh script that generates a helpful skeleton framework that is a good starting point for creating a framework. For example, if you were creating the KConfig framework, you might run
./setup.sh KConfig ../../kconfig
then go to the newly created "kconfig" directory and start adding source files etc.