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author | Vincent Ambo <mail@tazj.in> | 2018-06-15T15·03+0200 |
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committer | Vincent Ambo <mail@tazj.in> | 2018-06-15T15·03+0200 |
commit | 23286d13b9107d3c537b7583b7833d1b75715d85 (patch) | |
tree | 22e8c3a6827cee144b9376a499d9ea5e207e1e07 | |
parent | bb968ed8edf6aea6f6c34fd4af474fd13aca7402 (diff) |
docs: Add contribution guidelines
Adds contribution guidelines. These are a slightly modified version of the guidelines I use for my personal projects.
-rw-r--r-- | CONTRIBUTING.md | 114 |
1 files changed, 114 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..ae492ef2daf2 --- /dev/null +++ b/CONTRIBUTING.md @@ -0,0 +1,114 @@ +Contribution Guidelines +======================= + +<!-- markdown-toc start - Don't edit this section. Run M-x markdown-toc-refresh-toc --> +**Table of Contents** + +- [Contribution Guidelines](#contribution-guidelines) + - [Before making a change](#before-making-a-change) + - [Commit messages](#commit-messages) + - [Commit content](#commit-content) + - [Code quality](#code-quality) + - [Builds & tests](#builds--tests) + +<!-- markdown-toc end --> + +This is a loose set of "guidelines" for contributing to journaldriver. +Please note that we will not accept any pull requests that don't +follow these guidelines. + +Also consider the [code of conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). No really, +you should. + +## Before making a change + +Before making a change, consider your motivation for making the +change. Documentation updates, bug fixes and the like are *always* +welcome. + +When adding a feature you should consider whether it is only useful +for your particular use-case or whether it is generally applicable for +other users of the project. + +When in doubt - just ask! + +## Commit messages + +All commit messages should follow the style-guide used by the [Angular +project][]. This means for the most part that your commit message +should be structured like this: + +``` +type(scope): Subject line with at most 68 a character length + +Body of the commit message with an empty line between subject and +body. This text should explain what the change does and why it has +been made, *especially* if it introduces a new feature. + +Relevant issues should be mentioned if they exist. +``` + +Where `type` can be one of: + +* `feat`: A new feature has been introduced +* `fix`: An issue of some kind has been fixed +* `docs`: Documentation or comments have been updated +* `style`: Formatting changes only +* `refactor`: Hopefully self-explanatory! +* `test`: Added missing tests / fixed tests +* `chore`: Maintenance work + +And `scope` should refer to some kind of logical grouping inside of +the project. + +Please take a look at the existing commit log for examples. + +## Commit content + +Multiple changes should be divided into multiple git commits whenever +possible. Common sense applies. + +The fix for a single-line whitespace issue is fine to include in a +different commit. Introducing a new feature and refactoring +(unrelated) code in the same commit is not fine. + +`git commit -a` is generally **taboo**. + +In our experience making "sane" commits becomes *significantly* easier +as developer tooling is improved. The interface to `git` that I +recommend is [magit][]. Even if you are not yet an Emacs user, it +makes sense to install Emacs just to be able to use magit - it is +really that good. + +For staging sane chunks on the command line with only git, consider +`git add -p`. + +## Code quality + +This one should go without saying - but please ensure that your code +quality does not fall below the rest of the project. This is of course +very subjective, but as an example if you place code that throws away +errors into a block in which errors are handled properly your change +will be rejected. + +In our experience there is a strong correlation between the visual +appearance of a code block and its quality. This is a simple way to +sanity-check your work while squinting and keeping some distance from +your screen ;-) + +## Builds & tests + +Most of our projects are built using [Nix][] to avoid "build +pollution" via the user's environment. If you have Nix installed and +are contributing to a project that has a `default.nix`, consider using +`nix-build` to verify that builds work correctly. + +If the project has tests, check that they still work before submitting +your change. + +Both of these will usually be covered by Travis CI. + + +[Angular project]: https://gist.github.com/stephenparish/9941e89d80e2bc58a153#format-of-the-commit-message +[magit]: https://magit.vc/ +[Nix]: https://nixos.org/nix/ |