4.1 KiB
Contribution
If you want to contribute to this project - first of all, thank you! I'm glad to see interest in it!
Here are some notes about how to contribute to bottom (structure is based on the official Rust contribution guidelines):
Feature reports
Feature suggestions can be submitted via GitHub Issues using the "feature" tag. Prior to submission, please look to see if this has already been suggested or solved; if it has and is not resolved, it would be better to comment on the relevant report.
Within your feature report, try to answer the given prompts - in particular, state the specific feature you want and if possible, please state why you want this added to the program.
Bug reports
Bug reports can be submitted via GitHub Issues using the "bug" tag. Prior to submission, please look to see if this has already been reported or solved; if it has and is not resolved, it would be better to comment on the relevant report.
Within your bug report, try to answer the given prompts. Be as specific as possible - describe your bug to the best of your ability, how to replicate it, and provide information like screenshots, OS and terminal. It can be very useful to help whoever is dealing with the issue!
Other types of reports
For reports/suggestions that don't fit the definition of a feature or bug, try to use the other tags:
- documentation: If you note a typo, or want to suggest something to do with the documentation of bottom, use this.
- question: If you have a question, and not really a suggestion or request, then use this tag.
- ci, investigative, refactoring: Generally, these are for internal use to track issues in order to manage GitHub Projects, and won't be the appropriate topic for a report.
- other: If your suggestion doesn't fit those categories, then use this.
Pull requests
If you want to help contribute by submitting a PR, by all means, I'm open! In regards to the development process:
-
I develop primarily using stable Rust. That is, whatever is the most up-to-date stable version you can get via running
rustup update stable
. -
I use both clippy and rustfmt in development (with some settings, see clippy.toml and rustfmt.toml). Note clippy must pass to pass CI.
- You can check clippy using
cargo +nightly clippy
.
- You can check clippy using
-
You may notice that I have fern and log as dependencies; this is mostly for easy debugging via the
debug!()
macro. It writes to thedebug.log
file that will automatically be created if you run in debug mode (socargo run
).
And in regards to the pull request process:
-
Create a personal fork of the process and PR that, as per the fork and pull method.
-
Merge against the
master
branch. -
If you encounter a merge conflict, I expect you to resolve this via rebasing to
master
. -
Ensure your change builds, runs, and works. Furthermore, state how you checked this, including what platforms you tested on.
-
If your change will result in needing to update documentation, please do so. In particular:
-
Does the README need to be updated to accommodate your change?
-
Does the help action,
?
, need to be updated to accommodate your change?
-
-
Please ensure that CI passes. If it fails, check to see why it fails! Chances are it's clippy.
-
If all looks good, then request someone with write access (so basically me, @ClementTsang) to give your code a review. If it's fine, then I'll merge!
-
Please use the pull request template to help you in this process.