Thank you for taking the time to contribute to this project. The maintainers greatly appreciate the interest of contributors and rely on continued engagement with the community to ensure that this project remains useful. We would like to take steps to put contributors in the best possible position to have their contributions accepted. Please take a few moments to read this short guide on how to contribute; bear in mind that contributions regarding how to best contribute are also welcome.
If you wish to discuss anything related to the project, please open an issue or start a topic on the EGI Community Forum. The maintainers will sometimes move issues off of GitHub to the community forum if it is thought that longer, more open-ended discussion would be beneficial, including a wider community scope.
The maintainers recognise that contributions can be made in many forms, depending on the skills, experience and perspectives of interested parties. The maintainers recognise the multilingual nature of the community and welcome translations of the documentation and project supporting files. We undertake to identify these contributions through consensus-building and recognise them as formal contributions to the project where applicable. Contributions may come in the form of:
- Feature or documentation requests, where they describe a need or gap
- Authoring or review of releases
- Direct authorship of code or documentation
- Identifying and fixing bugs
Before proposing a contribution via pull request, please ensure that an issue is open describing the need for your contribution. You will need to refer to this issue number when you submit the pull request. We have a 3 step process for contributions.
- Fork the project if you have not, and commit changes to a git branch
- Create a GitHub Pull Request for your change, following the instructions in the pull request template.
- Perform a Code Review with the maintainers on the pull request.
- Explain your contribution in plain language. To assist the maintainers in understanding and appreciating your pull request, please use the template to explain why you are making this contribution, rather than just what the contribution entails.
Code review takes place in GitHub pull requests. See this article if you're not familiar with GitHub Pull Requests.
Once you open a pull request, maintainers will review your code using the built-in code review process in GitHub PRs. The process at this point is as follows:
- A maintainer will review your code and merge it if no changes are necessary. Your change will be merged into the repository's
master
branch and will be noted in the project'sCHANGELOG.md
at the time of release. - If a maintainer has feedback or questions on your changes they they will set
request changes
in the review and provide an explanation.
For collaboration purposes, it is best if you create a GitHub account and fork the repository to your own account. Once you do this you will be able to push your changes to your GitHub repository for others to see and use, and it will be easier to send pull requests.
You should submit your patch as a git branch named after the GitHub issue, such as #3
. This is called a topic branch and allows users to associate a branch of code with the ticket.
It is a best practice to have your commit message have a summary line that includes the ticket number, followed by an empty line and then a brief description of the commit. This also helps other contributors understand the purpose of changes to the code.
#3 - platform_family and style
* use platform_family for platform checking
* update notifies syntax to "resource_type[resource_name]" instead of
resources() lookup
* GH-692 - delete config files dropped off by packages in conf.d
* dropped debian 4 support because all other platforms have the same
values, and it is older than "old stable" debian release
The master branch is always available at http://egi-federated-cloud.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ Tagged versions may be created as needed following Semantic Versioning as far as applicable.
EGI benefits from a strong community of developers and system administrators, and vice-versa. If you have any questions or if you would like to get involved in the wider EGI community you can check out:
This file has been modified from the Chef Cookbook Contributing Guide.