Splunk welcomes contribution from the community, and your feedback and enhancements are appreciated. There's always code that can be clarified, functionality that can be extended, and new data filters to develop, and documentation to refine. If you see something you think should be fixed or added, go for it!
This is a community built and maintained product. Anyone with internet access can get a Splunk GitHub account and participate. As with any publicly available repository, care must be taken to never share private data via Issues, Pull Requests or any other mechanisms. Any data that is shared in the repository is made available to the entire Community without limits. Members of the Community and/or their employers (including Splunk) assume no responsibility or liability for any damages resulting from the sharing of private data via the Splunk GitHub.
Any data samples shared in the Splunk GitHub repository must be free of private data.
- Working locally, identify potentially sensitive field values in data samples (Public IP address, URL, Hostname, Etc.)
- Replace all potentially sensitive field values with synthetic values
- Manually review data samples to re-confirm they are free of private data before sharing in the Splunk GitHub
When contributing to this repository, please first discuss the change you wish to make via a GitHub issue or Slack message with the owners of this repository.
Have ideas on improvements or found a problem? While the community encourages everyone to contribute code, it is also appreciated when someone reports an issue. Please report any issues or bugs you find through GitHub's issue tracker.
If you are reporting a bug, please include the following details:
- Your operating system name and version
- Any details about your local setup that might be helpful in troubleshooting (ex. container runtime you use, etc.)
- Data sample (in raw, "on the wire" format)
- Detailed steps to reproduce the bug
We want to hear about you enhancements as well. Feel free to submit them as issues:
- Explain in detail how they should work
- Keep the scope as narrow as possible. This will make it easier to implement
Look through our issue tracker to find problems to fix! Feel free to comment and tag community members of this project with any questions or concerns.
What is a "pull request"? It informs the project's core developers about the changes you want to review and merge. Once you submit a pull request, it enters a stage of code review where you and others can discuss its potential modifications and even add more commits to it later on.
If you want to learn more, please consult this tutorial on how pull requests work in the GitHub Help Center.
Here's an overview of how you can make a pull request against this project:
- Fork the repository
- Clone your fork using git and create a branch off develop
git clone git@github.com:YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME/splunk-connect-for-snmp-traps.git
cd splunk-connect-for-snmp-traps
- This project uses 'develop' for all development activity, so create your branch off that
git checkout -b your-bugfix-branch-name develop
- Run all the tests to verify your environment
cd splunk-connect-for-snmp-traps
./test-with-compose.sh
- Make your changes, commit and push once your tests have passed
git commit -m ""
git push
- Submit a pull request through the GitHub website using the changes from your forked codebase
There are two aspects of code review: giving and receiving. To make it easier for your PR to receive reviews, consider the reviewers will need you to:
- Follow the project coding conventions
- Write good commit messages
- Break large changes into a logical series of smaller patches which individually make easily understandable changes, and in aggregate solve a broader issue
- Reviewers are highly encouraged to revisit the Code of Conduct and must go above and beyond to promote a collaborative, respectful community.
- When reviewing PRs from others, "The Gentle Art of Patch Review" suggests an iterative series of focuses which is designed to lead new contributors to positive collaboration without inundating them initially with nuances:
- Is the idea behind the contribution sound?
- Is the contribution architected correctly?
- Is the contribution polished?
- For this project, we require that at least 2 approvals are given and a build from our continuous integration system is successful off of your branch. Please note that any new changes made with your existing pull request during review will automatically unapprove and retrigger another build/round of tests.
Testing is the responsibility of all contributors. In general, we try to adhere to TDD, writing the test first. There are multiple types of tests. The location of the test code varies with type, as do the specifics of the environment needed to successfully run the test.
- Review existing tests in the tests folder of the repo
We could always use improvements to our documentation! Anyone can contribute to these docs - whether you’re new to the project, you’ve been around a long time, and whether you self-identify as a developer, an end user, or someone who just can’t stand seeing typos. What exactly is needed?
- More complementary documentation. Have you perhaps found something unclear?
- More examples or generic templates that others can use.
- Blog posts, articles and such – they’re all very much appreciated.
- You can also edit documentation files directly in the GitHub web interface, without creating a local copy. This can be convenient for small typos or grammar fixes.
To add commit messages to release notes, tag the message in following format
[TYPE] <commit message>
[TYPE] can be among the following
- FEATURE
- FIX
- DOC
- TEST
- CI
- REVERT
- FILTERADD
- FILTERMOD
Sample commit:
git commit -m "[TEST] test-message"