So you want to contribute your changes back to WPILib. Great! We have a few contributing rules that will help you make sure your changes will be accepted into the project. Please remember to follow the rules written here, and behave with Gracious Professionalism.
- Everything in the library must work for the 3000+ teams that will be using it.
- We need to be able to maintain submitted changes, even if you are no longer working on the project.
- Tool suite changes must be generally useful to a broad range of teams
- Excluding bug fixes, changes in one language generally need to have corresponding changes in other languages.
- Some features, such the addition of C++11 for WPILibC or Functional Interfaces for WPILibJ, are specific to that version of WPILib only.
- Substantial changes often need to have corresponding LabVIEW changes. To do this, we will work with NI on these large changes.
- Changes should have tests.
- Code should be well documented.
- This involves writing tutorials and/or usage guides for your submitted feature. These articles are then hosted on the WPILib documentation website. See the frc-docs repository for more information.
- Bug reports and fixes
- We will generally accept bug fixes without too much question. If they are only implemented for one language, we will implement them for any other necessary languages. Bug reports are also welcome, please submit them to our GitHub issue tracker.
- While we do welcome improvements to the API, there are a few important rules to consider:
- Features must be added to both WPILibC and WPILibJ, with rare exceptions.
- During competition season, we will not merge any new feature additions. We want to ensure that the API is stable during the season to help minimize issues for teams.
- Ask about large changes before spending a bunch of time on them! You can create a new issue on our GitHub tracker for feature request/discussion and talk about it with us there.
- Features that make it easier for teams with less experience to be more successful are more likely to be accepted.
- Features in WPILib should be broadly applicable to all teams. Anything that is team specific should not be submitted.
- As a rule, we are happy with the general structure of WPILib. We are not interested in major rewrites of all of WPILib. We are open to talking about ideas, but backwards compatibility is very important for WPILib, so be sure to keep this in mind when proposing major changes.
- Generally speaking, we do not accept code for specific sensors. We have to be able to test the sensor in hardware on the WPILib test bed. Additionally, hardware availability for teams is important. Therefore, as a general rule, the library only directly supports hardware that is in the Kit of Parts. If you are a company interested in getting a sensor into the Kit of Parts, please contact FIRST directly at [email protected].
WPILib uses modified Google style guides for both C++ and Java, which can be found in the styleguide repository. Autoformatters are available for many popular editors at https://github.com/google/styleguide. Running wpiformat is required for all contributions and is enforced by our continuous integration system. We currently use clang-format 6.0 with wpiformat.
While the library should be fully formatted according to the styles, additional elements of the style guide were not followed when the library was initially created. All new code should follow the guidelines. If you are looking for some easy ramp-up tasks, finding areas that don't follow the style guide and fixing them is very welcome.
Changes should be submitted as a Pull Request against the main branch of WPILib. For most changes, we ask that you squash your changes down to a single commit. For particularly large changes, multiple commits are ok, but assume one commit unless asked otherwise. No change will be merged unless it is up to date with the current main. We will also not merge any changes with merge commits in them; please rebase off of main before submitting a pull request. We do this to make sure that the git history isn't too cluttered.
When you first submit changes, Azure DevOps will attempt to run ./gradlew check
on your change. If this fails, you will need to fix any issues that it sees. Once Azure passes, we will begin the review process in more earnest. One or more WPILib team members will review your change. This will be a back-and-forth process with the WPILib team and the greater community. Once all tests have passed and the team is satisfied, we will merge your change into the WPILib repository.
By contributing to WPILib, you agree that your code will be distributed with WPILib, and licensed under the license for the WPILib project. You should not contribute code that you do not have permission to relicense in this manner. This includes code that is licensed under the GPL that you do not have permission to relicense, as WPILib is not released under a copyleft license. Our license is the 3-clause BSD license, which you can find here.