I like to encourage you to contribute to the repository.
This should be as easy as possible for you but there are a few things to consider when contributing. The following guidelines for contribution should be followed if you want to submit a pull request.
- You need a GitHub account
- Submit an issue ticket
for your issue if there is no one yet.
- Describe the issue and include steps to reproduce if it's a bug.
- Ensure to mention the earliest version that you know is affected.
- If you are able and want to fix this, fork the repository on GitHub
- In your forked repository, create a topic branch for your upcoming
patch. (e.g.
feature/new-backend
orbug/auth-fails
)- Usually this is based on the
master
branch. - Create a branch based on master
git branch bug/auth-fails master
then checkout the new branch withgit checkout bug/auth-fails
. Please avoid working directly on themaster
branch.
- Usually this is based on the
- Make commits of logical units and describe them properly.
- Make sure you stick to PEP8 coding style that is used already.
- If possible, submit tests to your patch / new feature so it can be tested easily.
- Assure nothing is broken by running all the tests.
- Push your changes to a topic branch in your fork of the repository.
- Open a pull request to the original repository and choose the right original branch you want to patch.
- If not done in commit messages (which you really should do) please reference and update your issue with the code changes. But please do not close the issue yourself.
- Even if you have write access to the repository, do not directly push or merge pull-requests. Let another team member review your pull request and approve.
- General GitHub documentation
- GitHub pull request documentation
- Read the Issue Guidelines by @necolas for more details
This documented is based in the work from anselmh/CONTRIBUTING.md, licensed as Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.