Our project welcomes external contributions. If you have an itch, please feel free to scratch it.
To contribute code or documentation, please submit a pull request.
A good way to familiarize yourself with the codebase and contribution process is to look for and tackle low-hanging fruit in the issue tracker.
Note: We appreciate your effort, and want to avoid a situation where a contribution requires extensive rework (by you or by us), sits in backlog for a long time, or cannot be accepted at all!
If you would like to implement a new feature, please raise an issue before sending a pull request so the feature can be discussed. This is to avoid you wasting your valuable time working on a feature that the project developers are not interested in accepting into the code base.
If you would like to fix a bug, please raise an issue before sending a pull request so it can be tracked.
The project maintainers use LGTM (Looks Good To Me) in comments on the code review or Github PR review approval to indicate acceptance.
Each source file must include a license header for the Apache Software License 2.0. Using the SPDX format is the simplest approach. e.g.
#
# Copyright <holder> All Rights Reserved.
# SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
#
We have tried to make it as easy as possible to make contributions. This applies to how we handle the legal aspects of contribution. We use the same approach - the Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 (DCO) - that the Linux® Kernel community uses to manage code contributions.
We simply ask that when submitting a patch for review, the developer must include a sign-off statement in the commit message.
Here is an example Signed-off-by line, which indicates that the submitter accepts the DCO:
Signed-off-by: John Doe <[email protected]>
You can include this automatically when you commit a change to your local git repository using the following command:
git commit -s