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rfcs's Introduction

Ember RFCs

Many changes, including bug fixes and documentation improvements can be implemented and reviewed via the normal GitHub pull request workflow.

Some changes though are "substantial", and we ask that these be put through a bit of a design process and produce a consensus among the Ember core team.

The "RFC" (request for comments) process is intended to provide a consistent and controlled path for new features to enter the framework.

Active RFC List

When you need to follow this process

You need to follow this process if you intend to make "substantial" changes to Ember, Ember Data or its documentation. What constitutes a "substantial" change is evolving based on community norms, but may include the following.

  • A new feature that creates new API surface area, and would require a feature flag if introduced.
  • The removal of features that already shipped as part of the release channel.
  • The introduction of new idiomatic usage or conventions, even if they do not include code changes to Ember itself.

Some changes do not require an RFC:

  • Rephrasing, reorganizing or refactoring
  • Addition or removal of warnings
  • Additions that strictly improve objective, numerical quality criteria (speedup, better browser support)
  • Additions only likely to be noticed by other implementors-of-Ember, invisible to users-of-Ember.

If you submit a pull request to implement a new feature without going through the RFC process, it may be closed with a polite request to submit an RFC first.

Gathering feedback before submitting

It's often helpful to get feedback on your concept before diving into the level of API design detail required for an RFC. You may open an issue on this repo to start a high-level discussion, with the goal of eventually formulating an RFC pull request with the specific implementation design.

What the process is

In short, to get a major feature added to Ember, one must first get the RFC merged into the RFC repo as a markdown file. At that point the RFC is 'active' and may be implemented with the goal of eventual inclusion into Ember.

  • Fork the RFC repo http://github.com/emberjs/rfcs
  • Copy 0000-template.md to text/0000-my-feature.md (where 'my-feature' is descriptive. don't assign an RFC number yet).
  • Fill in the RFC. Put care into the details: RFCs that do not present convincing motivation, demonstrate understanding of the impact of the design, or are disingenuous about the drawbacks or alternatives tend to be poorly-received.
  • Submit a pull request. As a pull request the RFC will receive design feedback from the larger community, and the author should be prepared to revise it in response.
  • Build consensus and integrate feedback. RFCs that have broad support are much more likely to make progress than those that don't receive any comments.
  • Eventually, the core team will decide whether the RFC is a candidate for inclusion in Ember.
  • RFCs that are candidates for inclusion in Ember will enter a "final comment period" lasting 7 days. The beginning of this period will be signaled with a comment and tag on the RFC's pull request. Furthermore, Ember's official Twitter account will post a tweet about the RFC to attract the community's attention.
  • An RFC can be modified based upon feedback from the core team and community. Significant modifications may trigger a new final comment period.
  • An RFC may be rejected by the core team after public discussion has settled and comments have been made summarizing the rationale for rejection. A member of the core team should then close the RFC's associated pull request.
  • An RFC may be accepted at the close of its final comment period. A core team member will merge the RFC's associated pull request, at which point the RFC will become 'active'.

The RFC life-cycle

Once an RFC becomes active then authors may implement it and submit the feature as a pull request to the Ember repo. Becoming 'active' is not a rubber stamp, and in particular still does not mean the feature will ultimately be merged; it does mean that the core team has agreed to it in principle and are amenable to merging it.

Furthermore, the fact that a given RFC has been accepted and is 'active' implies nothing about what priority is assigned to its implementation, nor whether anybody is currently working on it.

Modifications to active RFC's can be done in followup PR's. We strive to write each RFC in a manner that it will reflect the final design of the feature; but the nature of the process means that we cannot expect every merged RFC to actually reflect what the end result will be at the time of the next major release; therefore we try to keep each RFC document somewhat in sync with the language feature as planned, tracking such changes via followup pull requests to the document.

Implementing an RFC

The author of an RFC is not obligated to implement it. Of course, the RFC author (like any other developer) is welcome to post an implementation for review after the RFC has been accepted.

If you are interested in working on the implementation for an 'active' RFC, but cannot determine if someone else is already working on it, feel free to ask (e.g. by leaving a comment on the associated issue).

Reviewing RFC's

Each week the core team will attempt to review some set of open RFC pull requests.

We try to make sure that any RFC that we accept is accepted at the Friday team meeting, and reported in core team notes. Every accepted feature should have a core team champion, who will represent the feature and its progress.

Ember's RFC process owes its inspiration to the Rust RFC process

rfcs's People

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rfcs's Issues

Explain interop

See

TODO: can we allow a base component to upgrade to Glimmer component while still being extended by traditional components? What about the reverse?

and

TODO. How do you upgrade an addon to use glimmer components while maintaining the best possible cross-version support?

Write "Base Class" section

Explain what methods / events / etc should be on a glimmer component base class.

Alternatively, explain how to do all those things without a base class using only decorators.

I have outlined the traditional component API in this spreadsheet with notes on which parts I think need to be addressed.

Design `mut` or equivalent

TODO: do we still want opt-in two-way binding, ala mut? What is our solution for the case where a child component truly has higher-fidelity state than its parent? How do we avoid echoes despite arbitrary asynchrony?

Document DOM API exposure

See

TODO: do we want this.$(), and if so should we limit how much of jQuery's API we are leaking into our own?

Check existing attribute binding semantics for plain elements

From the draft RFC:

TODO: I want the above attribute value semantics to be the same for glimmer components vs plain elements. But we are constrained in the semantics we can change on plain elements, since they are existing API. Are there inconsistencies between my proposal and the existing plain-element semantics?

Design a safe fragment API

This issue is to address the several TODOs in the section that begins with "An attractive alternative would be to allow fragments to have no element at all..."

The overall goal is to see if we can mitigate the usability risks of allowing fragments that don't require an explicit <fragment> marker in their template.

Design dependency tracking

See "Change Tracking and Derived State" in the draft RFC.

Also see, "TODO: if dependent keys are still a thing...".

Design else-block semantics or explain alternative

TODO: this else-block syntax is a strawman -- what should it really be? <else> could become a future HTML tag. {{else}} seems weird because it doesn't match the surrounding style. <power-select-else> seems terribly verbose.

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