Signed-off-by: Gerhard Lazu <gerhard@lazu.co.uk>
4.1 KiB
Contributing to Dagger
GitHub Workflow
The recommended workflow is to clone the repository from dagger/dagger
and
open pull requests from your own fork.
1) Cloning the repository
git clone https://github.com/dagger/dagger.git
NOTE: If you cloned your fork, either switch back to dagger/dagger
using
git remote
or start over.
2) Forking
- Click on the Fork button on GitHub
- Add your fork as a remote
git remote add fork git@github.com:MYFORK/dagger.git
3) Creating a Pull Request
# create a branch
git checkout -b mybranch
# make changes to your branch, use `git commit -s`, ...
# ...
# push the branch to your own fork
git push -u fork mybranch
# create a pull request from https://github.com/dagger/dagger
4) Rebasing
git checkout main
git pull # <-- this will pull from `dagger/dagger`
git checkout mybranch
git rebase main # <-- this will rebase `dagger/dagger` into your `FORK/dagger`
git push -f -u fork mybranch # <-- update the pull request
Scope of Pull Requests
We prefer small incremental changes that can be reviewed and merged quickly. It's OK if it takes multiple pull requests to close an issue.
The idea is that each improvement should land in Dagger's main branch within a few hours. The sooner we can get multiple people looking at and agreeing on a specific change, the quicker we will have it out in a release. The quicker we can get these small improvementes in a Dagger release, the quicker we can get feedback from our users and find out what doesn't work, or what we have missed.
The added benefit is that this will force everyone to think about handling partially implemented features & non-breaking changes. Both are great approached, and they work really well in the context of Dagger.
"Small incremental changes ftw" -> Small pull requests that get merged within hours!
Commits
DCO
Contributions to this project must be accompanied by a Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO).
All commit messages must contain the Signed-off-by line with an email address that matches the commit author. When commiting, use the --signoff
flag:
git commit -s
The Signed-off-by line must match the author's real name, otherwise the PR will be rejected.
Commit Messages
How to Write a Git Commit Message
Guidelines:
- Group Commits: Each commit should represent a meaningful change (e.g. implement feature X, fix bug Y, ...).
- For instance, a PR should not look like 1) Add Feature X 2) Fix Typo 3) Changes to features X 5) Bugfix for feature X 6) Fix Linter 7) ...
Instead, these commits should be squashed together into a single "Add Feature" commit. - Each commit should work on its own: it must compile, pass the linter and so on.
- This makes life much easier when using
git log
,git blame
,git bisect
, etc. - For instance, when doing a
git blame
on a file to figure out why a change was introduced, it's pretty meaningless to see a Fix linter commit message. "Add Feature X" is much more meaningful. - Use
git rebase -i main
to group commits together and rewrite their commit message - To add changes to the previous commit, use
git commit --amend -s
. This will change the last commit (amend) instead of creating a new commit. - Format: Use the imperative mood in the subject line: "If applied, this commit will your subject line here"
Docs
Use relative links to markdown files
Link to markdown files ([link](../foo.md)
) instead of relative URLs
([link](/foo)
).
The docs compiler will replace file links with relative URLs automatically.
This is to avoid broken links. If a file gets renamed, the compiler will catch broken links and throw an error. Relative URLs get broken unnoticed.
FAQ
How to run the markdown linter locally
First install markdownlint-cli
:
- On Mac OS:
brew install markdownlint-cli
- On other systems, with yarn installed:
yarn global add markdownlint-cli
Then from the repository root:
markdownlint -c .markdownlint.yaml docs/**/*.md