refiners/CONTRIBUTING.md

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We are happy to accept contributions from everyone. Feel free to browse our bounty list to find a task you would like to work on.

This document describes the process for contributing to Refiners.

Licensing

Refiners is a library that is freely available to use and modify under the MIT License. It's essential to exercise caution when using external code, as any code that can affect the licensing of Refiners, including proprietary code, should not be copied and pasted. It's worth noting that some open-source licenses can also be problematic. For instance, we'd need to redistribute an Apache 2.0 license if you're using code from an Apache 2.0 codebase.

Design principles

We do not enforce strict rules on the design of the code, but we do have a few guidelines that we try to follow:

  • No dead code. We keep the codebase clean and remove unnecessary code/functionality.
  • No unnecessary dependencies. We keep the number of dependencies to a minimum and only add new ones if necessary.
  • Separate concerns. We separate the code into different modules and avoid having too many dependencies between modules. In particular, we try not to revisit existing code/models when adding new functionality. Instead, we add new functionality in a separate module with the Adapter pattern.
  • Declarative style. We make the code as declarative, self-documenting, and easily read as possible. By reading the model's repr, you should understand how it works. We use explicit names for the different components of the models or the variables in the code.

Setting up your environment

We use Rye to manage our development environment. Please follow the instructions on the Rye website to install it.

Once Rye is installed, you can clone the repository and run rye sync to install the dependencies.

Linting

We use the standard integration of ruff in Rye to lint and format our code. You can lint your code by running:

rye fmt
rye lint --fix

We also enforce strict type checking with pyright. You can run the type checker with:

rye run pyright

Running the tests

Running end-to-end tests is pretty compute-intensive, and you must convert all the model weights to the correct format before you can run them.

First, install test dependencies with:

rye sync --all-features

Then, download and convert all the necessary weights. Be aware that this will use around 100 GB of disk space:

python scripts/prepare_test_weights.py

Some tests require cloning the original implementation of the model as they use torch.hub.load:

git clone git@github.com:facebookresearch/dinov2.git tests/repos/dinov2

Finally, run the tests:

rye run pytest

The -k option is handy to run a subset of tests that match a given expression, e.g.:

rye run pytest -k diffusion_std_init_image

You can enforce running tests on CPU. Tests that require a GPU will be skipped.

REFINERS_TEST_DEVICE=cpu rye run pytest

You can collect code coverage data while running tests with, e.g.:

rye run test-cov

Then, browse the corresponding HTML report with:

rye run serve-cov-report