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Contributing to Gobot
Target Branch
Please open all non-hotfix PRs against the dev
branch!
Gobot follows a "git flow"-style model for managing development.
Issue Contributions
When opening new issues or commenting on existing issues on this repository please make sure discussions are related to concrete technical issues with the Gobot software.
Code Contributions
The Gobot project welcomes new contributors.
This document will guide you through the contribution process.
What do you want to contribute?
- I want to otherwise correct or improve the docs or examples
- I want to report a bug
- I want to add some feature or functionality to an existing hardware platform
- I want to add support for a new hardware platform
Descriptions for each of these will eventually be provided below.
General Guidelines
- All active development is in the
dev
branch. New or updated features must be added to thedev
branch. Hotfixes will be considered on themaster
branch in situations where it does not alter behavior or features, only fixes a bug. - All patches must be provided under the Apache 2.0 License
- Please use the -S option in git to "sign off" that the commit is your work and you are providing it under the Apache 2.0 License
- Submit a Github Pull Request to the appropriate branch and describe the changes sufficient.
- Please follow our naming conventions for Pull Requests.
- We will look at the patch, test it out, and give you feedback.
- Avoid doing minor whitespace changes, renamings, etc. along with merged content. These will be done by the maintainers from time to time but they can complicate merges and should be done separately.
- Take care to maintain the existing coding style.
golangci-lint
your code, see instruction for local installationgo fmt
your code (with the go version of go.mod)- Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality.
- All pull requests should be "fast forward"
- If there are commits after yours use “git rebase -i <new_head_branch>”
- If you have local changes you may need to use “git stash”
- For git help see progit which is an awesome (and free) book on git
Creating Pull Requests
Because Gobot makes use of self-referencing import paths, you will want to implement the local copy of your fork as a remote on your copy of the original Gobot repo. Katrina Owen has an excellent post on this workflow.
The basics are as follows:
-
Fork the project via the GitHub UI
-
go get
the upstream repo and set it up as theupstream
remote and your own repo as theorigin
remote:go get gobot.io/x/gobot/v2
cd $GOPATH/src/gobot.io/x/gobot
git remote rename origin upstream
git remote add origin git@github.com/YOUR_GITHUB_NAME/gobot
All import paths should now work fine assuming that you've got the proper branch checked out.
-
Get all the needed gobot's dependencies each of them at their needed version. Gobot uses dep (Dependency management for Go) to manage the project's dependencies. To get all the correct dependencies:
- Install dep tool. Follow the dep installation instructions in case you don't have it already installed.
cd $GOPATH/src/gobot.io/x/gobot
dep ensure
will fetch all the dependencies at their needed version.
Landing Pull Requests
(This is for committers only. If you are unsure whether you are a committer, you are not.)
-
Set the contributor's fork as an upstream on your checkout
git remote add contrib1 https://github.com/contrib1/gobot
-
Fetch the contributor's repo
git fetch contrib1
-
Checkout a copy of the PR branch
git checkout pr-1234 --track contrib1/branch-for-pr-1234
-
Review the PR as normal
-
Land when you're ready via the GitHub UI
Convention for Pull Request Descriptions
Making unified descriptions helps a lot to generate the CHANGELOG for the next release. We support the style from https://www.conventionalcommits.org, so you can use something like this:
- type(scope): description
- i2c(PCF8583): added
- gpio(HD44780): fix wrong constants
- raspi(PWM): refactor usage
- docs(core): usage of Kernel driver
- or alternative: core(docs): usage of Kernel driver
- build(style): adjust rule for golangci-lint
We try to keep it as simple as possible:
- Do not use "fix" or "bugfix" for
type
- Please assign "fix", "style", "refactor", "perf", "test" etc. to the related
type
(driver-type/platform-name etc.), and start the description with e.g. "fix...", "test..." etc. - For
type
use the name of the deepest folder (e.g. i2c/raspi/system). Feel free to order "examples" to the related driver. - Further values for
type
are: "docs", "build", "core" - Please use "build" instead of "CI"
- For the
scope
use the name of the driver or feature (e.g. grove/PWM). - If unsure don't panic, follow your feeling. Possibly the reviewer will correct it or suggest a better description.
Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.0
By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:
- (a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I have the right to submit it under the open source license indicated in the file; or
- (b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source license and I have the right under that license to submit that work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part by me, under the same open source license (unless I am permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated in the file; or
- (c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified it.
Code of Conduct
Gobot is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. You can read about it here.
Origins
This document is based on the original io.js contribution guidelines