Welcome, and thank you for your interest in contributing to Project Mu!
There are many ways in which you can contribute, beyond writing code. The goal of this document is to provide a high-level overview of how you can get involved.
If this is your first time working with Project Mu, please keep in mind that many project details are maintained in the Project Mu Documentation.
Have a question? Rather than opening an issue, please post your question under the Q&A
category in the Discussions
section of the relevant Project Mu GitHub repo.
Every Project Mu repo has an Issues
section. Bug reports, feature requests, and documentation requests can all be
submitted in the issues section.
Please review the repos Security Policy
but in general every Project Mu repo has Private vulnerability reporting
enabled. Please use the security tab to report a potential issue.
Project Mu is distributed across multiple repositories. Use features such as issues and discussions in the repository most relevant to the topic.
Although we prefer items to be filed in the most relevant repo, if you're unsure which repo is most relevant, the item can be filed in the Project Mu Documentation Repo and we will review the request and move it to the relevant repo if necessary.
Before you create a new issue, please do a search in the issues section of the relevant repo to see if the issue or feature request has already been filed.
If you find your issue already exists, make relevant comments and add your reaction. Use a reaction in place of a "+1" comment:
- 👍 - upvote
- 👎 - downvote
If you cannot find an existing issue that describes your bug or feature, create a new issue using the guidelines below.
Please continue to follow your request after it is submitted to assist with any additional information that might be requested.
Pull requests for UEFI code can become large and difficult to review due to the large number of build and configuration files. To aid maintainers in reviewing your code, we suggest adhering to the following guidelines:
- Do keep code reviews single purpose; don't add more than one feature at a time.
- Do fix bugs independently of adding features.
- Do provide documentation and unit tests.
- Do introduce code in digestible amounts.
- If the contribution logically be broken up into separate pull requests that independently build and function successfully, do use multiple pull requests.
To keep code digestible, you may consider breaking large pull requests into three categories of commits within the pull request.
- Interfaces: .h, .inf, .dec, documentation
- Implementation: .c, unit tests, unit test build file; unit tests should build and run at this point
- Integration/Build: .dec, .dsc, .fdf, (.yml) configuration files, integration tests; code added to platform and affects downstream consumers
By breaking the pull request into these three categories, the pull request reviewers can digest each piece independently.
If your commits are still very large after adhering to these categories, consider further breaking the pull request down by library/driver; break each component into its own commit.
Implementation is ultimately composed of functions as logical units of code.
To help maintainers review the code and improve long-term maintainability, limit functions to 60 lines of code. If your function exceeds 60 lines of code, it likely has also exceeded a single responsibility and should be broken up.
Files are easier to review and maintain if they contain functions that serves similar purpose. Limit files to around 1,000 lines of code (excluding comments). If your file exceeds 1,000 lines of code, it may have functions that should be split into separate files.
By following these guidelines, your pull requests will be reviewed faster, and you'll avoid being asked to refactor the code to follow the guidelines.
Feel free to create a draft pull request and ask for suggestions on how to split the pull request if you are unsure.
Thank you for your interest in Project Mu and taking the time to contribute!