We welcome contributions in several forms, e.g.
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Improve end user documenting on the Wiki
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Testing
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e.g. by using an instant version of FOSSology with vagrant
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Write unit tests and learn how the code works
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Verify available patches (pull requests)
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Working on issues
- Fix a bug
- Add a new feature
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etc.
FOSSology uses GitHub's issue tracker. All bugs and enhancements should be entered so that we don't lose track of them, can prioritize, assign, and so code fixes can refer to the bug number in its check-in comments.
The issue usually contains much more detail (including test cases) than can be reasonably put in check-in comments, so being able to correlate the two is important.
Consider the usual best practice for writing issues, among them:
- More verbosity rather than one liners
- Screenshots are a great help
- Providing example files (in case for example scanning crashes)
- Please determine the version, better the commit id
- Details on operating system you are using
follow the Coding Style
Not familiar with git, see Git basic commands
We are using the Feature Branch Workflow (also known as GitHub Flow), and prefer delivery as pull requests.
Our first line of defense is the Travis CI build defined within .travis.yml and triggered for every pull request.
Create a feature branch:
git checkout -B feat/tune-vagrant-vm
The cardinal rule for creating good commits is to ensure there is only one "logical change" per commit. Why is this an important rule?
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The smaller the amount of code being changed, the quicker & easier it is to review & identify potential flaws.
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If a change is found to be flawed later, it may be necessary to revert the broken commit. This is much easier to do if there are not other unrelated code changes entangled with the original commit.
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When troubleshooting problems using Git's bisect capability, small well defined changes will aid in isolating exactly where the code problem was introduced.
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When browsing history using Git annotate/blame, small well defined changes also aid in isolating exactly where & why a piece of code came from.
Things to avoid when creating commits
- Mixing whitespace changes with functional code changes.
- Mixing two unrelated functional changes.
- Sending large new features in a single giant commit.
We use git commit as per Conventional Changelog:
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
Example:
feat(vagrant): increase upload size
Allowed types:
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- docs: Documentation only changes
- style: Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, newline, line endings, etc)
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug or adds a feature
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- test: Adding missing tests
- chore: Changes to the build process or auxiliary tools and libraries such as documentation generation
You can add additional details after a new line to describe the change in detail or automatically close a issue on Github.
feat(CONTRIBUTING.md): create initial CONTRIBUTING.md
makes the following wiki Page obsolete:
- https://github.com/fossology/fossology/wiki/Reporting-bugs
This closes #22
NOTE: CHANGELOG.md is generated based on the commits.
All commits not submitted via GitHub pull request shall contain a Signed-off-by line, also known as the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) as we know it from the Linux Kernel Documenation/SubmittingPatches
Signed-off-by: Peace Fun Ingenium <[email protected]>
Additional tags in addition to Signed-off-by shall be used as long as it makes sense for any commit, e.g.
Reviewed-by:
Tested-by:
Reviewed-by:
Suggested-by:
Acked-by:
Sponsored-by: