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162 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
162 lines
8.4 KiB
Markdown
# Contribution Guidelines
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* [Prerequisites](#prerequisites)
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* [Definition of trivial contributions](#definition-of-trivial-contributions)
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* [Code](#code)
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* [Code style](#code-style)
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* [Dependencies](#dependencies)
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* [Unit tests](#unit-tests)
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* [Contributing process](#contributing-process)
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* [Get buyoff or find open community issues or features](#get-buyoff-or-find-open-community-issues-or-features)
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* [Set up your environment](#Set-up-your-environment)
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* [Prepare commits](#prepare-commits)
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* [Submit pull request](#Submit-pull-request)
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* [Respond to feedback on pull request](#respond-to-feedback-on-pull-request)
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* [Other general information](#other-general-information)
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* [Acknowledgement](#acknowledgement)
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## Prerequisites
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By contributing to Spectre.Console, you assert that:
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* The contribution is your own original work.
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* You have the right to assign the copyright for the work (it is not owned by your employer, or
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you have been given copyright assignment in writing).
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* You [license](https://github.com/spectreconsole/spectre.console/blob/main/LICENSE) the contribution under the terms applied to the rest of the Spectre.Console project.
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* You agree to follow the [code of conduct](https://github.com/spectreconsole/spectre.console/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).
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## Definition of trivial contributions
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It's hard to define what is a trivial contribution. Sometimes even a 1 character change can be considered significant.
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Unfortunately because it can be subjective, the decision on what is trivial comes from the maintainers of the project
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and not from folks contributing to the project.
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What is generally considered trivial:
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* Fixing a typo.
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* Documentation changes.
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## Code
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### Code style
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Normal .NET coding guidelines apply.
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See the [Framework Design Guidelines](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/design-guidelines/) for more information.
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### Dependencies
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The assembly `Spectre.Console` should have no dependencies except the .NET BCL library.
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### Unit tests
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Make sure to run all unit tests before creating a pull request.
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Any new code should also have reasonable unit test coverage.
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## Contributing process
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### Get buyoff or find open community issues or features
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* Through GitHub, or through the [GitHub discussions](https://github.com/spectreconsole/spectre.console/discussions) (preferred),
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you talk about a feature you would like to see (or a bug), and why it should be in Spectre.Console.
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* If approved through the GitHub discussions, ensure an accompanying GitHub issue is created with
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information and a link back to the discussion.
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* Once you get a nod from someone in the Spectre.Console Team, you can start on the feature.
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* Alternatively, if a feature is on the issues list with the
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[good first issue](https://github.com/spectreconsole/spectre.console/labels/good%20first%20issue) label,
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it is open for a community member (contributor) to patch. You should comment that you are signing up for it on
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the issue so someone else doesn't also sign up for the work.
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### Set up your environment
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* You create, or update, a fork of `spectreconsole/spectre.console` under your GitHub account.
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* From there you create a branch named specific to the feature.
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* In the branch you do work specific to the feature.
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* Please also observe the following:
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* No reformatting
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* No changing files that are not specific to the feature.
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* More covered below in the **Prepare commits** section.
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* Test your changes and please help us out by updating and implementing some automated tests.
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It is recommended that all contributors spend some time looking over the tests in the source code.
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You can't go wrong emulating one of the existing tests and then changing it specific to the behavior you are testing.
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* Please do not update your branch from the main branch unless we ask you to. See the responding to feedback section below.
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### Prepare commits
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This section serves to help you understand what makes a good commit.
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A commit should observe the following:
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* A commit is a small logical unit that represents a change.
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* Should include new or changed tests relevant to the changes you are making.
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* No unnecessary whitespace. Check for whitespace with `git diff --check` and `git diff --cached --check` before commit.
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* You can stage parts of a file for commit.
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### Submit pull request
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Prerequisites:
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* You are making commits in a feature branch.
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* All code should compile without errors or warnings.
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* All tests should be passing.
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Submitting PR:
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* Once you feel it is ready, submit the pull request to the `spectreconsole/spectre.console` repository against the `main` branch
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unless specifically requested to submit it against another branch.
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* In the case of a larger change that is going to require more discussion,
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please submit a PR sooner. Waiting until you are ready may mean more changes than you are
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interested in if the changes are taking things in a direction the maintainers do not want to go.
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* In the pull request, outline what you did and point to specific conversations (as in URLs)
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and issues that you are resolving. This is a tremendous help for us in evaluation and acceptance.
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* Once the pull request is in, please do not delete the branch or close the pull request
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(unless something is wrong with it).
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* One of the Spectre.Console team members, or one of the maintainers, will evaluate it within a
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reasonable time period (which is to say usually within 1-3 weeks). Some things get evaluated
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faster or fast tracked. We are human and we have active lives outside of open source so don't
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fret if you haven't seen any activity on your pull request within a month or two.
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We don't have a Service Level Agreement (SLA) for pull requests.
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Just know that we will evaluate your pull request.
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### Respond to feedback on pull request
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We may have feedback for you to fix or change some things. We generally like to see that pushed against
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the same topic branch (it will automatically update the Pull Request). You can also fix/squash/rebase
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commits and push the same topic branch with `--force` (it's generally acceptable to do this on topic
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branches not in the main repository, it is generally unacceptable and should be avoided at all costs
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against the main repository).
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If we have comments or questions when we do evaluate it and receive no response, it will probably
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lessen the chance of getting accepted. Eventually, this means it will be closed if it is not accepted.
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Please know this doesn't mean we don't value your contribution, just that things go stale. If in the
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future you want to pick it back up, feel free to address our concerns/questions/feedback and reopen
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the issue/open a new PR (referencing old one).
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Sometimes we may need you to rebase your commit against the latest code before we can review it further.
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If this happens, you can do the following:
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* `git fetch upstream` (upstream remote would be `spectreconsole/spectre.console`)
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* `git checkout main`
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* `git rebase upstream/main`
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* `git checkout your-branch`
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* `git rebase main`
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* Fix any merge conflicts
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* `git push origin your-branch` (origin would be your GitHub repo or `your-github-username/spectre.console` in this case).
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You may need to `git push origin your-branch --force` to get the commits pushed.
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This is generally acceptable with topic branches not in the mainstream repository.
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The only reasons a pull request should be closed and resubmitted are as follows:
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* When the pull request is targeting the wrong branch (this doesn't happen as often).
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* When there are updates made to the original by someone other than the original contributor.
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Then the old branch is closed with a note on the newer branch this supersedes #github_number.
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## Other general information
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If you reformat code or hit core functionality without an approval from a person on the Spectre.Console Team,
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it's likely that no matter how awesome it looks afterwards, it will probably not get accepted.
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Reformatting code makes it harder for us to evaluate exactly what was changed.
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If you do these things, it will be make evaluation and acceptance easy.
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Now if you stray outside of the guidelines we have above, it doesn't mean we are going to ignore
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your pull request. It will just make things harder for us.
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Harder for us roughly translates to a longer SLA for your pull request.
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## Acknowledgement
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This contribution guide was taken from the [Chocolatey project](https://chocolatey.org/)
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with permission and was edited to follow Spectre.Console's conventions and processes.
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