The public stable branch for end users is master
.
$ git clone -o upstream git://github.com/nojhan/liquidprompt.git
$ cd liquidprompt
# Run liquidprompt and check that your issue is still on that branch
$ source liquidprompt
# Prepare a fix (include the issue number in the branch name if an issue
# already exists)
$ git checkout -b fix/my-fix
# Prepare a new feature
$ git checkout -b feature/my-feature
# Hack, commit, hack, commit...
# Fork the project on GitHub (if you haven't yet)
# Add the remote target for pushes
$ git remote add github [email protected]:$GITHUB_USER/liquidprompt.git
# Check that your local repo is up to date
$ git fetch
# Rebase your work on the latest state of `master`
$ git rebase upstream/master
# Push your commits
$ git push github fix/my-fix
$ git push github feature/my-feature
# Create the pull request on GitHub. Check that Github chose the `master`
# branch as the starting point for your branch.
-
Check that your Git authorship settings are correct:
$ git config -l | grep ^user\.
-
All the commits in the pull request must be on the same topic. If instead you propose fixes on different topics, use separate branches in your repo and make a pull request for each.
-
Good commit messages:
- first line must be 72 chars max and is a summary of the commit
- second line must be empty
- following lines (72 chars max) are optional and take this space freely
to express what that changes does.
Use references to GitHub issues number (ex:
#432
) if applicable
-
Use a good title for your pull request.
-
Put details, web links, in the pull request body. Use Markdown fully to format the content (see Markdown syntax). For example use triple backquotes for code blocks.
Never, ever, merge the branches master
of the main repo into one
of your own branches. Instead, always rebase your own work on top the master
branch.
Before being applied, your pull request will be reviewed, by the maintainer and also by other users. You can also help the project by reviewing others pull requests.
If your patch is accepted it will be applied either:
- by "merging" your branch
- by cherry-picking your commit on top of the
master
branch. This makes the history linear, and so easier to track.
In any case, your authorship will be preserved in the commit.
If you don't even get a review, add a "ping" comment with increasing delay between pings: 1 week, 2 weeks, then every month.
If a stable version is released while your pull request has still not been
merged on any working branch of the main repo, it would be helpful to ease
the maitainer's work by rebasing your branch on top of the latest master
and push it again to your GitHub repo. Be careful (for example create a
branch or a tag before your rebase) because your may lose all your work in
that process.
Olivier Mengué, maintainer. http://github.com/dolmen