This page lists the operational governance model of this project, as well as the recommendations and requirements for how to best contribute to this repository. We strive to obey these as best as possible. As always, thanks for contributing – we hope these guidelines make it easier and shed some light on our approach and processes.
The intent and goal of open sourcing this project is because it may contain useful or interesting code/concepts that we wish to share with the larger open source community. Although occasional work may be done on it, we will not be looking for or soliciting contributions.
Use GitHub Issues page to submit issues, enhancement requests and discuss ideas.
- If you find a bug, please search for it in the Issues, and if it isn't already tracked, create a new issue. Fill out the "Bug Report" section of the issue template. Even if an Issue is closed, feel free to comment and add details, it will still be reviewed.
- Issues that have already been identified as a bug (note: able to reproduce) will be labelled
bug
. - If you'd like to submit a fix for a bug, send a Pull Request and mention the Issue number.
- Include tests that isolate the bug and verifies that it was fixed.
- If you'd like to add new functionality to this project, describe the problem you want to solve in a new Issue.
- Issues that have been identified as a feature request will be labelled
enhancement
. - If you'd like to implement the new feature, please wait for feedback from the project
maintainers before spending too much time writing the code. In some cases,
enhancement
s may not align well with the project objectives at the time.
- If you'd like to improve the tests, you want to make the documentation clearer, you have an alternative implementation of something that may have advantages over the way its currently done, or you have any other change, we would be happy to hear about it!
- If its a trivial change, go ahead and send a Pull Request with the changes you have in mind.
- If not, open an Issue to discuss the idea first.
If you're new to our project and looking for some way to make your first contribution, look for
Issues labelled good first contribution
.
- Clean, simple, well styled code
- Commits should be atomic and messages must be descriptive. Related issues should be mentioned by Issue number.
- Comments
- Module-level & function-level comments.
- Comments on complex blocks of code or algorithms (include references to sources).
- Tests
- The test suite, if provided, must be complete and pass
- Increase code coverage, not versa.
- Use any of our testkits that contains a bunch of testing facilities you would need. For example:
import com.salesforce.op.test._
and borrow inspiration from existing tests.
- Dependencies
- Minimize number of dependencies.
- Prefer Apache 2.0, BSD3, MIT, ISC and MPL licenses.
- Reviews
- Changes must be approved via peer code review
- Ensure the bug/feature was not already reported by searching on GitHub under Issues. If none exists, create a new issue so that other contributors can keep track of what you are trying to add/fix and offer suggestions (or let you know if there is already an effort in progress).
- Clone the forked repo to your machine.
- Create a new branch to contain your work (e.g.
git br fix-issue-11
) - Commit changes to your own branch.
- Push your work back up to your fork. (e.g.
git push fix-issue-11
) - Submit a Pull Request against the
main
branch and refer to the issue(s) you are fixing. Try not to pollute your pull request with unintended changes. Keep it simple and small. - Sign the Salesforce CLA (you will be prompted to do so when submitting the Pull Request)
NOTE: Be sure to sync your fork before making a pull request.
Please follow our Code of Conduct.
By contributing your code, you agree to license your contribution under the terms of our project LICENSE and to sign the Salesforce CLA