Contributions to Containerization are welcomed and encouraged.
We would love your contributions in the form of:
🐛 Bug fixes
⚡️ Performance improvements
✨ API additions or enhancements
📝 Documentation
🧑💻 Project advocacy: blogs, conference talks, and more
Anything else that could enhance the project!
To file a bug or feature request, use GitHub issues.
🚧 For unexpected behavior or usability limitations, detailed instructions on how to reproduce the issue are appreciated. This will greatly help the priority setting and speed at which maintainers can get to your issue.
We require all commits be signed with any of GitHub's supported methods, such as GPG or SSH. Information on how to set this up can be found on GitHub's docs.
To make a pull request, use GitHub. Please give the team a few days to review but it's ok to check in on occasion. We appreciate your contribution!
Important
If you plan to make substantial changes or add new features, we encourage you to first discuss them with the wider containerization developer community. You can do this by filing a GitHub issue. This will save time and increases the chance of your pull request being accepted.
We use a "squash and merge" strategy to keep our main branch history clean and easy to follow. When your pull request
is merged, all of your commits will be combined into a single commit.
With the "squash and merge" strategy, the title and body of your pull request is extremely important. It will become the commit message for the squashed commit. Think of it as the single, definitive description of your contribution.
Before merging, we'll review the pull request title and body to ensure it:
- Clearly and concisely describes the changes.
- Uses the imperative mood (for example, "Add feature," "Fix bug").
- Provides enough context for future developers to understand the purpose of the change.
The pull request description should be concise and accurately describe the what and why of your changes.
We do not currently accept contributions to add editor specific additions to the root .gitignore. We urge contributors to make a global .gitignore file with their rulesets they may want to add instead. A global .gitignore file can be set like so:
git config --global core.excludesfile ~/.gitignoreMake sure your contributions are consistent with the rest of the project's formatting. You can do this using our Makefile:
make fmtIf you submit a contribution that adds a new file, please add the license header. You can do this using our Makefile:
make update-licensesTo clarify of what is expected of our contributors and community members, the Containerization team has adopted the code of conduct defined by the Contributor Covenant. This document is used across many open source communities and articulates our values well. For more detail, please read the Code of Conduct.