Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
84 lines (65 loc) · 3.94 KB

CONTRIBUTION.md

File metadata and controls

84 lines (65 loc) · 3.94 KB

How to contribute

Windows Machine Config Operator is Apache 2.0 licensed and accepts contributions via GitHub pull requests. This document outlines some of the conventions on commit message formatting, instructions on how to set up a dev environment, and other resources to help get contributions into the project.

Setting up a dev environment

  • Fork the repository on GitHub
  • Clone the forked repository in your go path.

Reporting bugs and creating issues

If any part of the project has bugs or documentation mistakes, please let us know by opening a Jira issue (Red Hat internal) or a GitHub issue (external users) or a PR.

Contribution flow

This is an outline of what a contributor's workflow looks like:

  • Fork the repository on GitHub.
  • Clone the forked repository outside your go path, or refer to the Kubernetes repo's example.
  • Create a topic branch from where to base the contribution. This is usually master.
  • Make commits of logical units. A commit should typically add a feature or fix a bug, but never both at the same time. Vendor commits should always be separate.
  • A PR should consist of a set of logical commits that makes it easy to review and should not follow your personal development flow.
  • Make sure commit messages are in the proper format (see below).
  • Push changes in a topic branch to a personal fork of the repository.
  • To make sure that your topic branch is in sync with the remote master branch, follow a rebase workflow.
  • Submit a pull request to openshift/windows-machine-config-bootstrapper (see PR workflow below).
  • The PR must receive one /lgtm and one /approve comments from the maintainers of the project.

Thanks for contributing!

Format of the commit message

We follow a convention for commit messages that is designed to answer two questions: what changed and why. The subject line should feature the what and the body of the commit should describe the why.

The format can be described more formally as follows:

[subsystem] <what changed>
<BLANK LINE>
<why this change was made>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>

Example

[docs] Updated the Guidlines

Cupcake ipsum dolor sit. Amet tart cheesecake tiramisu chocolate cake topping.
Icing ice cream sweet roll. Biscuit dragée toffee wypas.
Does not yet address T44834 or T176. Follow-up to Id5e7cbb1.

Bug: T42

The first line is the subject and should be no longer than 50 characters, the second line is always blank, and other lines should be wrapped at 80 characters. This allows the message to be easier to read on GitHub as well as in various git tools.

PR workflow

  • Before submitting a PR
    • Format your code and fix all the spelling/grammatical mistakes.
    • Limit the column length of the code and the comments within the code to 120 characters.
    • Error messages within the code should be limited to a single line.
    • Update the documentation if your PR is introducing or changing user facing functionality.
    • Ensure each PR commit compiles and all unit and e2e tests pass on your local machine.
      • PRs that have vendor commits are an exception to this rule.
  • Following are the things you should keep in mind once you open a PR:
    • Wait for comments from at least 2 reviewers before pushing changes. Open comments in the meanwhile can be worked on locally.
    • PR comments should be addressed in new commits. Before final approval, they have to be squashed.
    • If PR has multiple commits, changes requested should eventually be squashed into the original commit where the change was requested before the final merge. Each commit in the final PR before merge should pass the tests and be usable. (see below)

Sample PR life-cycle