Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
133 lines (92 loc) · 5.04 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

133 lines (92 loc) · 5.04 KB

Marionette has a few guidelines to facilitate your contribution and streamline the process of getting changes merged in and released.

  1. Setting up Marionette locally
  2. Reporting a bug
  3. Submitting patches and fixes
  4. Running Tests

Setting up Marionette locally

  • Fork the Marionette repo.
  • git clone your fork onto your computer.
  • Run npm install to make sure you have all Marionette dependencies locally.
  • Run npm build to build source files.

Reporting a bug

In order to best help out with bugs, we need to know the following information in your bug submission:

  • Marionette version #.

Including this information in a submission will help us test the problem and ensure that the bug is both reproduced and corrected on the platforms / versions that you are having issues with.

Provide A Meaningful Description

It is very important to provide a meaningful description with your bug reports and pull requests. A good format for these descriptions will include the following things:

  1. The problem you are facing (in as much detail as is necessary to describe the problem to someone who doesn't know anything about the system you're building)

  2. A summary of the proposed solution

  3. A description of how this solution solves the problem, in more detail than item #2

  4. Any additional discussion on possible problems this might introduce, questions that you have related to the changes, etc.

For a PR, we need at least the first 2 items to understand why you are changing the code. If not, we will ask that you add the necessary information.

Please refrain from giving code examples in altJS languages like CoffeeScript, etc. Marionette is written in plain-old JavaScript and is generally easier for all members in the community to read.

When you don't have a bug fix

If you are stuck in a scenario that fails in your app, but you don't know how to fix it, submit a failing spec to show the failing scenario. Follow the guidelines for a pull request submission, but don't worry about fixing the problem. A failing spec to show that a problem exists is a very very very helpful pull request for us.

We'll even accept a failing test pasted into the ticket description instead of a PR. That would at least get us started on creating the failing test in the code.

Submitting patches and fixes

See Github's documentation for pull requests.

Pull requests are by far the best way to contribute to Marionette. They are by far the easiest way to demonstrate issues and your proposed resolution. To really help us evaluate your pull request and bring it into Marionette, please provide as much information as possible and follow the guidelines below:

  1. Determine the branch as your base: next or master
  2. Provide a brief summary of what your pull request is doing
  3. Reference any relevant Github issue numbers
  4. Include any extra detail you feel will help provide context

Determining your branch

When submitting your pull request, you need to determine whether to base off next or master:

  • If you're submitting a bug fix, base off next
  • If you're submitting a new feature, base off next
  • If you're submitting documentation for a new feature, base off next
  • If you're submitting documentation for the current release, base off master

Submitting a Great Patch

We want Marionette to provide a great experience to developers and help you write great applications using it. To help us achieve this goal, please follow these guidelines when submitting your patches.

Solving Issues

When you're submitting a bug fix, include spec tests, where applicable, showing the issue and the resolution. We strive to maintain 100% code coverage in our testing.

Coding Guidelines

The Marionette coding conventions are provided in the ESLint configuration included in the repository. Most IDEs and text editors will provide, or allow for, a plugin for ESLint to read the .eslintrc file. For areas where the configuration provides no guidance, try to stick to the conventions in the file you're editing.

How we Approve Pull Requests

We utilise Github's review approach. When receiving your pull request, we will comment inline and provide guidance to help you get your pull request merged into Marionette. This is not a one-way process and we're more than happy to discuss the context of your decisions.

Once two Marionette.js members approve the pull request, we will then merge it into the base branch.

Please remember that Marionette is a community-maintained project and, as such, many of us are working on this in our spare time. If we haven't commented on your pull request, please be patient. We may be available on our Gitter channel to discuss further.

Running Tests

  • via command-line by running yarn test
  • in the browser by running yarn test-browser

To see the test matrix - run yarn coverage

Writing Tests and Code Style

More information