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deeprank2 developer documentation

If you're looking for user documentation, go here.

Code editor

We use Visual Studio Code (VS Code) as code editor. The VS Code settings for this project can be found in .vscode. The settings will be automatically loaded and applied when you open the project with VS Code. See the guide for more info about workspace settings of VS Code.

Package setup

After having followed the installation instructions and installed all the dependencies of the package, the repository can be cloned and its editable version can be installed:

git clone https://github.com/DeepRank/deeprank2
cd deeprank2
pip install -e .'[test]'

Running the tests

You can check that all components were installed correctly, using pytest. The quick test should be sufficient to ensure that the software works, while the full test (a few minutes) will cover a much broader range of settings to ensure everything is correct.

Run pytest tests/test_integration.py for the quick test or just pytest for the full test (expect a few minutes to run).

Test coverage

In addition to just running the tests to see if they pass, they can be used for coverage statistics, i.e. to determine how much of the package's code is actually executed during tests. In an activated conda environment with the development tools installed, inside the package directory, run:

coverage run -m pytest

This runs tests and stores the result in a .coverage file. To see the results on the command line, run:

coverage report

coverage can also generate output in HTML and other formats; see coverage help for more information.

Linting and Formatting

We use ruff for linting, sorting imports and formatting of python (notebook) files. The configurations of ruff are set in pyproject.toml file.

If you are using VS code, please install and activate the Ruff extension to automatically format and check linting.

Otherwise, please ensure check both linting (ruff check .) and formatting (ruff format .) before requesting a review.

We use prettier for formatting most other files. If you are editing or adding non-python files and using VS code, the Prettier extension can be installed to auto-format these files as well.

Versioning

Bumping the version across all files is done before creating a new package release, running bump2version [part] from command line after having installed bump2version on your local environment. Instead of [part], type the part of the version to increase, e.g. minor. The settings in .bumpversion.cfg will take care of updating all the files containing version strings.

Branching workflow

We use a Git Flow-inspired branching workflow for development. DeepRank2's repository is based on two main branches with infinite lifetime:

  • main — this branch contains production (stable) code. All development code is merged into main in sometime.
  • dev — this branch contains pre-production code. When the features are finished then they are merged into dev.

During the development cycle, three main supporting branches are used:

  • Feature branches - Branches that branch off from dev and must merge into dev: used to develop new features for the upcoming releases.
  • Hotfix branches - Branches that branch off from main and must merge into main and dev: necessary to act immediately upon an undesired status of main.
  • Release branches - Branches that branch off from dev and must merge into main and dev: support preparation of a new production release. They allow many minor bug to be fixed and preparation of meta-data for a release.

Development conventions

  • Branching
    • When creating a new branch, please use the following convention: <issue_number>_<description>_<author_name>.
    • Always branch from dev branch, unless there is the need to fix an undesired status of main. See above for more details about the branching workflow adopted.
  • Pull Requests
    • When creating a pull request, please use the following convention: <type>: <description>. Example types are fix:, feat:, build:, chore:, ci:, docs:, style:, refactor:, perf:, test:, and others based on the Angular convention.

Making a release

Automated release workflow:

  1. IMP0RTANT: Create a PR for the release branch, targeting the main branch. Ensure there are no conflicts and that all checks pass successfully. Release branches are typically: traditional release branches (these are created from the dev branch), or hotfix branches (these are created directly from the main branch).
    • if everything goes well, this PR will automatically be closed after the draft release is created.
  2. Navigate to Draft Github Release on the Actions tab.
  3. On the right hand side, you can select the level increase ("patch", "minor", or "major") and which branch to release from.
    • Follow semantic versioning conventions to chose the level increase:
      • patch: when backward compatible bug fixes were made
      • minor: when functionality was added in a backward compatible manner
      • major: when API-incompatible changes have been made
    • Note that you cannot release from main (the default shown) using the automated workflow. To release from main directly, you must create the release manually.
  4. Visit Actions tab to check whether everything went as expected.
    • NOTE: there are two separate jobs in the workflow: "draft_release" and "tidy_workspace". The first creates the draft release on github, while the second merges changes into dev and closes the PR.
      • If "draft_release" fails, then there are likely merge conflicts with main that need to be resolved first. No release draft is created and the "tidy_workspace" job does not run. Coversely, if this action is succesfull, then the release branch (including a version bump) have been merged into the remote main branch.
      • If "draft_release" is succesfull but "tidy_workspace" fails, then there are likely merge conflicts with dev that are not conflicts with main. In this case, the draft release is created (and changes were merged into the remote main). Conflicts with dev need to be resolved with dev by the user.
      • If both jobs succeed, then the draft release is created and the changes are merged into both remote main and dev without any problems and the associated PR is closed. Also, the release branch is deleted from the remote repository.
  5. Navigate to the Releases tab and click on the newest draft release that was just generated.
  6. Click on the edit (pencil) icon on the right side of the draft release.
  7. Check/adapt the release notes and make sure that everything is as expected.
  8. Check that "Set as the latest release is checked".
  9. Click green "Publish Release" button to convert the draft to a published release on GitHub.

Updating the token:

In order for the workflow above to be able to bypass the branch protection on main and dev, a token with admin priviliges for the current repo is required. Below are instructions on how to create such a token. NOTE: the current token (associated to @DaniBodor) allowing to bypass branch protection will expire on 9 July 2025. To update the token do the following:

  1. Create a personal access token from a GitHub user account with admin priviliges for this repo.
  2. Check all the "repo" boxes and the "workflow" box, set an expiration date, and give the token a note.
  3. Click green "Generate token" button on the bottom
  4. Copy the token immediately, as it will not be visible again later.
  5. Navigate to the secrets settings.
  6. Edit the GH_RELEASE key giving your access token as the new value.

Manually create a release:

  1. Make sure you have all required developers tools installed pip install -e .'[test]'.
  2. Create a release- branch from main (if there has been an hotfix) or dev (regular new production release).
  3. Prepare the branch for the release (e.g., removing the unnecessary dev files, fix minor bugs if necessary). Do this by ensuring all tests pass pytest -v and that linting (ruff check) and formatting (ruff format --check) conventions are adhered to.
  4. Bump the version using bump-my-version: bump-my-version bump <level> where level must be one of the following (following semantic versioning conventions):
    • major: when API-incompatible changes have been made
    • minor: when functionality was added in a backward compatible manner
    • patch: when backward compatible bug fixes were made
  5. Merge the release branch into main and dev.
  6. On the Releases page:
    1. Click "Draft a new release"
    2. By convention, use v<version number> as both the release title and as a tag for the release.
    3. Click "Generate release notes" to automatically load release notes from merged PRs since the last release.
    4. Adjust the notes as required.
    5. Ensure that "Set as latest release" is checked and that both other boxes are unchecked.
    6. Hit "Publish release".
      • This will automatically trigger a GitHub workflow that will take care of publishing the package on PyPi.

UML

Code-base class diagrams updated on 02/11/2023, generated with https://www.gituml.com (save the images and open them in the browser for zooming).

  • Data processing classes and functions:
  • ML pipeline classes and functions: