First, thank you for taking the time to contribute!
The following is a set of guidelines for contributors as well as information and instructions around our maintenance process. The two are closely tied together in terms of how we all work together and set expectations, so while you may not need to know everything in here to submit an issue or pull request, it's best to keep them in the same document.
Contributing isn't just writing code - it's anything that improves the project. All contributions are managed right here on GitHub. Here are some ways you can help:
If you're running into an issue, please take a look through existing issues and open a new one if needed. If you're able, include steps to reproduce, environment information, and screenshots/screencasts as relevant.
New features and enhancements are also managed via issues.
Pull requests represent a proposed solution to a specified problem. They should always reference an issue that describes the problem and contains discussion about the problem itself. Discussion on pull requests should be limited to the pull request itself, i.e. code review.
For more on how 10up writes and manages code, check out our 10up Engineering Best Practices.
The develop branch is the development branch which means it contains the next version to be released. stable contains the current latest release and master contains the corresponding stable development version. Always work on the develop branch and open up PRs against develop.
- Branch: Starting from
develop, cut a release branch namedrelease/X.Y.Zfor your changes. - Version bump: Bump the version number in
safe-redirect-manager.phpandreadme.txtif it does not already reflect the version being released. - Changelog: Add/update the changelog in both
readme.txtandCHANGELOG.md. - Props: Update
CREDITS.mdfile with any new contributors, confirm maintainers are accurate. - Readme updates: Make any other readme changes as necessary.
README.mdis geared toward GitHub andreadme.txtcontains WordPress.org-specific content. The two are slightly different. - New files: Check to be sure any new files/paths that are unnecessary in the production version are included in
.gitattributes. - Merge: Make a non-fast-forward merge from your release branch to
develop(or merge the pull request), then do the same fordevelopintotrunk(git checkout trunk && git merge --no-ff develop).trunkcontains the stable development version. - Test: While still on the
trunkbranch, test for functionality locally. - Push: Push your
trunkbranch to GitHub (e.g.git push origin trunk). - Release: Create a new release, naming the tag and the release with the new version number, and targeting the
trunkbranch. Paste the changelog fromCHANGELOG.mdinto the body of the release and include a link to the closed issues on the milestone (e.g.https://github.com/10up/safe-redirect-manager/milestone/#?closed=1). - SVN: Wait for the GitHub Action to finish deploying to the WordPress.org repository. If all goes well, users with SVN commit access for that plugin will receive an emailed diff of changes.
- Check WordPress.org: Ensure that the changes are live on https://wordpress.org/plugins/safe-redirect-manager/. This may take a few minutes.
- Close milestone: Edit the X.Y.Z milestone with release date (in the
Due date (optional)field) and link to GitHub release (in theDescriptionfield), then close the milestone. - Punt incomplete items: If any open issues or PRs which were milestoned for
X.Y.Zdo not make it into the release, update their milestone toX.Y.Z+1,X.Y+1.0,X+1.0.0orFuture Release.