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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Contributor's Agreement

You are under no obligation whatsoever to provide any bug fixes, patches, or upgrades to the features, functionality or performance of the source code ("Enhancements") to anyone; however, if you choose to make your Enhancements available either publicly, or directly to the project, without imposing a separate written license agreement for such Enhancements, then you hereby grant the following license: a non-exclusive, royalty-free perpetual license to install, use, modify, prepare derivative works, incorporate into other computer software, distribute, and sublicense such enhancements or derivative works thereof, in binary and source code form.

Technical Steering Committee

(in alphabetical order by surname)

TSC chair: Jonathon Anderson

Pull requests

  • All commits must be "Signed-off" (i.e., by using git commit -s), acknowledging that you agree to the Developer Certificate of Origin.

  • All PRs should summarize the purpose of the PR in the attached GitHub conversation.

  • Larger fixes or enhancemens should be discussed with the TSC or developers, e.g., on Slack or over Email.

  • PRs should be sent to the main branch by default. A committer or the TSC may request that certain bug fixes also be submitted to a minor release branch.

  • Follow existing code style precedent. For Go, you should mostly conform to the style and form enforced by the "go fmt" and "golint" tools for proper formatting.

  • For any new functionality, please write appropriate go tests. These run as part of the continuous integration system.

  • Make sure that the project's default copyright and header have been included in any new source files.

  • Make sure your code passes linting, by running make lint before submitting the PR.

  • Make sure you have locally tested using make test and that all tests succeed before submitting the PR.

  • PRs which introduce a new Go dependency to the project should explain why the dependency is required. Any new dependency should be added to LICENSE_DEPENDENCIES.md by running scripts/update-license-dependencies.sh.

Documentation

  • The README is a place to document critical information for new users of Warewulf. It should typically not change, but in the case where a change is necessary a PR may update it.

  • The CHANGELOG documents functional differences between versions of Warewulf, and should not read like a commit log.

    Once a release is tagged (e.g. v4.0.0), a new top level section is made titled Changes Since vX.Y.Z (e.g. Changes Since v4.0.0) where new changes are documented, leaving the previous section immutable.

    The CHANGELOG must be updated for any of the following changes:

    • Renamed commands or subcommands
    • Deprecated / removed commands or subcommands
    • Changed defaults / behaviors
    • Backwards-incompatible changes
    • New features / functionalities
  • The user guide should document anything pertinent to the use of Warewulf. Changes to Warewulf functionality should simultaneously include pertinent updates to the user guide, which is maintained alongside the code under userdocs/.

Branches

  • Development occurs primarily on the main branch. This is the branch that most PRs should be submitted against unless otherwise directed.

  • A minor release is accompanied by a minor branch named v4.MINOR.x from which patch releases may be generated.

  • No other branches are maintained in the primary Warewulf repository.

Maintaining

Additional policies regarding the maintenance of the Warewulf source code, including roadmapping, merging, and release policies, is documented at MAINTAINING.md.