clap/CONTRIBUTING.md
2015-05-29 13:13:17 -04:00

39 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown

# How to Contribute
Contributions are always welcome! Please use the following guidelines when contributing to `clap`
1. Fork `clap`
2. Clone your fork (`git clone https://github.com/$YOUR_USERNAME/clap-rs && cd clap-rs`)
3. Create new branch (`git checkout -b new-branch`)
4. Make your changes, and commit (`git commit -am "your message"`)
* I use a [conventional](https://github.com/ajoslin/conventional-changelog/blob/master/CONVENTIONS.md) changelog format so I can update my changelog using [clog](https://github.com/thoughtram/clog)
* Format your commit subject line using the following format: `TYPE(COMPONENT): MESSAGE` where `TYPE` is one of the following:
- `feat` - A new feature
- `imp` - An improvement to an existing feature
- `perf` - A performance improvement
- `docs` - Changes to documentation only
- `tests` - Changes to the testing framework or tests only
- `fix` - A bug fix
- `refactor` - Code functionality doesn't change, but underlying structure may
- `style` - Stylistic changes only, no functionality changes
- `wip` - A work in progress commit (Should typically be `git rebase`'ed away)
- `chore` - Catch all or things that have to do with the build system, etc
* The `COMPONENT` is optional, and may be a single file, directory, or logical component. Can be omitted if commit applies globally
5. Run the tests (`cargo test && make -C clap-tests test`)
6. `git rebase` into concise commits and remove `--fixup`s (`git rebase -i HEAD~NUM` where `NUM` is number of commits back)
7. Push your changes back to your fork (`git push origin $your-branch`)
8. Create a pull request! (You can also create the pull request first, and we'll merge when ready. This a good way to discuss proposed changes.)
## Goals
There are a few goals of `clap` that I'd like to maintain throughout contributions.
* Remain backwards compatible when possible
- If backwards compatibility *must* be broken, use deprecation warnings if at all possible before removing legacy code
- This does not apply for security concerns
* Parse arguments quickly
- Parsing of arguments shouldn't slow down usage of the main program
- This is also true of generating help and usage information (although *slightly* less stringent, as the program is about to exit)
* Try to be cognizant of memory usage
- Once parsing is complete, the memory footprint of `clap` should be low since the main program is the star of the show
* `panic!` on *developer* error, exit gracefully on *end-user* error