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- Chat: We have an active community chat on Gitter. You can register for free their with your Github identity.
- Tweet: Janssen is on Twitter too. Follow us there to stay up to date on release announcements and news around Janssen.
- Email: We have an active mailing list also.
- Google group : You can subscribe to the Janssen Google Group and post messages there.
Please go through our contribution guidelines so it'll be easy for you to make successful contributions.
In case you are first-time contributor, then you can start with our good first issues list These are issues where you can easily contribute and community members will guide and support your contribution as always.
If you need Janssen installation to test out your fix, here are the steps.
There are many ways of contributing to Janssen. And it is not just limited to fixing issues and raising pull requests. Janssen welcomes you to raise issues, respond to queries, suggest new features, tell us your experience with Janssen, be it good or bad. All these are contributions towards making Janssen better.
Try first, ask questions later? Here's how to deploy Janssen
Start a fresh ubuntu 18.04
or 20.04
and execute the following
sudo su -
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/JanssenProject/jans-cloud-native/master/automation/startdemo.sh && chmod u+x startdemo.sh && ./startdemo.sh
This will install docker, microk8s, helm and Janssen with the default settings can be found inside values.yaml. Please map the ip
of the instance running ubuntu to demoexample.jans.io
and then access the endpoints at your browser such in the example in the table below. Also see instructions for Amazon EKS
Service | Example endpoint |
---|---|
Auth server | https://demoexample.jans.io/.well-known/openid-configuration |
fido2 | https://demoexample.jans.io/.well-known/fido2-configuration |
scim | https://demoexample.jans.io/.well-known/scim-configuration |
To install:
# curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/JanssenProject/jans-setup/master/install.py > install.py
# python3 install.py
To uninstall, run the script again with the -uninstall
argument:
# python3 install.py -uninstall
Option 3: You can build jans-auth server.
We are really glad you are reading this, because we need volunteer developers to help this project come to fruition.
Janssen project has a Code of Conduct to which all contributors must adhere, please read it before interacting with the repository or the community in any way.
We have setup a community chat on Gitter. Please raise discussion and support requests here first.
Join the google group mailing list for news, announcements, and a Google calendar invite for our community open source meetings.
We also run monthly community calls which are open calls to discuss Janssen projects from an user perspective. In case you want to discuss a topic during those calls you can simply propose it opening an issue in the community repository and join the call!
There are four kinds of issues you can open:
- Bug report: you believe you found a problem in a project and you want to discuss and get it fixed, creating an issue with the bug report template is the best way to do so.
- Enhancement: any kind of new feature need to be discussed in this kind of issue, do you want a new rule or a new feature? This is the kind of issue you want to open. Be very good at explaining your intent, it's always important that others can understand what you mean in order to discuss, be open and collaborative in letting others help you getting this done!
- Vulnerability: If you identify a security problem, please report it immediately, providing details about the nature, and if applicable, how to reproduce it. If you want to report an issue privately, you can email [email protected]
- Failing tests: you noticed a flaky test or a problem with a build? This is the kind of issue to triage that!
The best way to get involved in the project is through issues, you can help in many ways:
- Issues triaging: participating in the discussion and adding details to open issues is always a good thing, sometimes issues need to be verified, you could be the one writing a test case to fix a bug!
- Helping to resolve the issue: you can help in getting it fixed in many ways, more often by opening a pull request. In case you are first-time contributor, then you can start with our good first issues list These are issues where you can easily contribute and community members will guide and support your contribution as always.
Triage is a process of evaluating issues and PRs in order to determine their characteristics and take quick actions if possible.
When you triage an issue, you:
-
assess whether it has merit or not
-
quickly close it by correctly answering a question
-
point the reporter to a resource or documentation answering the issue
-
tag it via labels, projects, or milestones
-
take ownership submitting a PR for it, in case you want 😇
Here is how we continously triage new issues and PRs so that contributors can contribute faster and better.
As commit convention, we adopt Conventional Commits v1.0.0, we have an history of commits that do not adopt the convention but any new commit must follow it to be eligible for merge.
Besides the classic types, we adopt a type for rules, rule(<scope>):
.
Example:
rule(Write below monitored dir): make sure monitored dirs are monitored.
Each rule change must be on its own commit, if a change to a macro is done while changing a rule they can go together but only one rule per commit must happen.
If you are changing only a macro, the commit will look like this:
rule(macro user_known_write_monitored_dir_conditions): make sure conditions are great
The Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) is a lightweight way for contributors to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit the code they are contributing to the project.
Contributors to the Janssen project sign-off that they adhere to these requirements by adding a Signed-off-by
line to commit messages.
This is a commit message
Signed-off-by: Foo Bar <[email protected]>
Git even has a -s
command line option to append this automatically to your commit message:
$ git commit -s -m 'This is my commit message'