Grafana uses GitHub to manage contributions. Contributions take the form of pull requests that will be reviewed by the core team.
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If you are a new contributor see: Steps to Contribute
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If you have a trivial fix or improvement, go ahead and create a pull request.
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If you plan to do something more involved, discuss your idea on the respective issue or create a new issue if it does not exist. This will avoid unnecessary work and surely give you and us a good deal of inspiration.
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Sign our CLA.
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For changes in the backend, follow the style guides used in Go Code Review Comments and Peter Bourgon's Go: Best Practices for Production Environments
Should you wish to work on a GitHub issue, check first if it is not already assigned to someone. If it is free, you claim it by commenting on the issue that you want to work on it. This is to prevent duplicated efforts from contributors on the same issue.
Please check the beginner friendly
and help wanted
labels to find issues that are good for getting started. If you have questions about one of the issues, with or without the tag, please comment on them and one of the core team or the original poster will clarify it.
To setup a local development environment we recommend reading Building Grafana from source
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Branch from the master branch and, if needed, rebase to the current master branch before submitting your pull request. If it doesn't merge cleanly with master you may be asked to rebase your changes.
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If your patch is not getting reviewed or you need a specific person to review it, you can @-reply a reviewer asking for a review in the pull request or a comment.
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Add tests relevant to the fixed bug or new feature.
Commits should be as small as possible, while ensuring that each commit is correct independently (i.e., each commit should compile and pass tests).
Make sure to include Closes #<issue number>
or Fixes #<issue number>
in the pull request description.
Please make all changes in one commit if possible. Include Closes #<issue number>
in bottom of the commit message.
A commit message for a bug fix should look something like this:
Dashboard: Avoid infinite loop in the dashboard provisioner
If one dashboard with an uid is refered to by two
provsioners each provisioner overwrite each other.
filling up dashboard_versions quite fast if using
default settings.
Closes #12864
For more details about PR naming and commit messages please see PR and commit messages guidelines
If the pull request needs changes before its merged the new commits should be rebased into one commit before its merged.
The Grafana project uses Go modules to manage dependencies on external packages. This requires a working Go environment with version 1.11 or greater installed.
All dependencies are vendored in the vendor/
directory.
To add or update a new dependency, use the go get
command:
# Pick the latest tagged release.
go get example.com/some/module/pkg
# Pick a specific version.
go get example.com/some/module/pkg@vX.Y.Z
Tidy up the go.mod
and go.sum
files and copy the new/updated dependency to the vendor/
directory:
# The GO111MODULE variable can be omitted when the code isn't located in GOPATH.
GO111MODULE=on go mod tidy
GO111MODULE=on go mod vendor
You have to commit the changes to go.mod
, go.sum
and the vendor/
directory before submitting the pull request.
PR title and squash commit messages should follow guidelines below:
Area of changes: Message
Detailed description
The Area of changes
is related either to functional domain (i.e. Build, Release) or feature domain (i.e. Explore, Plugins, BarGaugePanel).
Message
should be concise, written in present tense and start with capitalised verb. Detailed description should be provided as commit message body, by entering a blank line between commit title and the description.
Explore: Adds Live option for supported datasources
GraphPanel: Don't sort series when legend table & sort column is not visible
Build: Support publishing MSI to grafana.com