TypeScript is currently accepting contributions in the form of bug fixes. A bug must have an issue tracking it in the issue tracker that has been approved ("Milestone == Community") by the TypeScript team. Your pull request should include a link to the bug that you are fixing. If you've submitted a PR for a bug, please post a comment in the bug to avoid duplication of effort.
Features (things that add new or improved functionality to TypeScript) may be accepted, but will need to first be approved (marked as "Milestone == Community" by a TypeScript coordinator with the message "Approved") in the suggestion issue. Features with language design impact, or that are adequately satisfied with external tools, will not be accepted.
Design changes will not be accepted at this time. If you have a design change proposal, please log a suggestion issue.
You will need to complete a Contributor License Agreement (CLA). Briefly, this agreement testifies that you are granting us permission to use the submitted change according to the terms of the project's license, and that the work being submitted is under appropriate copyright.
Please submit a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) before submitting a pull request. You may visit https://cla.microsoft.com to sign digitally. Alternatively, download the agreement (Microsoft Contribution License Agreement.docx or Microsoft Contribution License Agreement.pdf), sign, scan, and email it back to [email protected]. Be sure to include your github user name along with the agreement. Once we have received the signed CLA, we'll review the request.
Your pull request should:
- Include a description of what your change intends to do
- Be a child commit of a reasonably recent commit in the master branch
- Requests need not be a single commit, but should be a linear sequence of commits (i.e. no merge commits in your PR)
- It is desirable, but not necessary, for the tests to pass at each commit
- Have clear commit messages
- e.g. "Refactor feature", "Fix issue", "Add tests for issue"
- Include adequate tests
- At least one test should fail in the absence of your non-test code changes. If your PR does not match this criteria, please specify why
- Tests should include reasonable permutations of the target fix/change
- Include baseline changes with your change
- All changed code must have 100% code coverage
- Follow the code conventions descriped in Coding guidelines
- To avoid line ending issues, set
autocrlf = input
andwhitespace = cr-at-eol
in your git configuration
To run all tests, invoke the runtests
target using jake:
jake runtests
This run will all tests; to run only a specific subset of tests, use:
jake runtests tests=<regex>
e.g. to run all compiler baseline tests:
jake runtests tests=compiler
or to run a specific test: tests\cases\compiler\2dArrays.ts
jake runtests tests=2dArrays
To debug the tests, invoke the runtests-browser
task from jake.
You will probably only want to debug one test at a time:
jake runtests-browser tests=2dArrays
You can specify which browser to use for debugging. Currently Chrome and IE are supported:
jake runtests-browser tests=2dArrays browser=chrome
You can debug with VS Code or Node instead with jake runtests debug=true
:
jake runtests tests=2dArrays debug=true
To add a new test case, simply place a .ts
file in tests\cases\compiler
containing code that exemplifies the bugfix or change you are making.
These files support metadata tags in the format // @metaDataName: value
.
The supported names and values are the same as those supported in the compiler itself, with the addition of the fileName
flag.
fileName
tags delimit sections of a file to be used as separate compilation units.
They are useful for tests relating to modules.
See below for examples.
Note that if you have a test corresponding to a specific spec compliance item, you can place it in tests\cases\conformance
in an appropriately-named subfolder.
Note that filenames here must be distinct from all other compiler testcase names, so you may have to work a bit to find a unique name if it's something common.
When one needs to test for scenarios which require multiple files, it is useful to use the fileName
metadata tag as such:
// @fileName: file1.ts
export function f() {
}
// @fileName: file2.ts
import { f as g } from "file1";
var x = g();
One can also write a project test, but it is slightly more involved.
Compiler testcases generate baselines that track the emitted .js
, the errors produced by the compiler, and the type of each expression in the file. Additionally, some testcases opt in to baselining the source map output.
When a change in the baselines is detected, the test will fail. To inspect changes vs the expected baselines, use
jake diff
After verifying that the changes in the baselines are correct, run
jake baseline-accept
to establish the new baselines as the desired behavior. This will change the files in tests\baselines\reference
, which should be included as part of your commit. It's important to carefully validate changes in the baselines.
Note that baseline-accept
should only be run after a full test run! Accepting baselines after running a subset of tests will delete baseline files for the tests that didn't run.