Thanks for your interest in contributing to all-contributors-auto-action
! 💖
After this page, see DEVELOPMENT.md for local development instructions.
This project contains a Contributor Covenant code of conduct all contributors are expected to follow.
Please do report an issue on the issue tracker if there's any bugfix, documentation improvement, or general enhancement you'd like to see in the repository! Please fully fill out all required fields in the most appropriate issue form.
Sending your own changes as contribution is always appreciated! There are two steps involved:
With the exception of very small typos, all changes to this repository generally need to correspond to an open issue marked as accepting prs
on the issue tracker.
If this is your first time contributing, consider searching for unassigned issues that also have the good first issue
label.
If the issue you'd like to fix isn't found on the issue, see Reporting Issues for filing your own (please do!).
Once you've identified an open issue accepting PRs that doesn't yet have a PR sent, you're free to send a pull request. Be sure to fill out the pull request template's requested information -- otherwise your PR will likely be closed.
PRs are also expected to have a title that adheres to commitlint. Only PR titles need to be in that format, not individual commits. Don't worry if you get this wrong: you can always change the PR title after sending it. Check previously merged PRs for reference.
If you don't think your PR is ready for review, set it as a draft. Draft PRs won't be reviewed.
Please keep pull requests single-purpose: in other words, don't attempt to solve multiple unrelated problems in one pull request. Send one PR per area of concern. Multi-purpose pull requests are harder and slower to review, block all changes from being merged until the whole pull request is reviewed, and are difficult to name well with semantic PR titles.
When a PR is not in draft, it's considered ready for review.
Please don't manually @
tag anybody to request review.
A maintainer will look at it when they're next able to.
PRs should have passing GitHub status checks before review is requested (unless there are explicit questions asked in the PR about any failures).
If you need help and/or have a question, posting a comment in the PR is a great way to do so. There's no need to tag anybody individually. One of us will drop by and help when we can.
Please post comments as line comments when possible, so that they can be threaded. You can resolve conversations on your own when you feel they're resolved - no need to comment explicitly and/or wait for a maintainer.
After a maintainer reviews your PR, they may request changes on it. Once you've made those changes, re-request review on GitHub.
Please try not to force-push commits to PRs that have already been reviewed. Doing so makes it harder to review the changes. We squash merge all commits so there's no need to try to preserve Git history within a PR branch.
Once you've addressed all our feedback by making code changes and/or started a followup discussion, re-request review from each maintainer whose feedback you addressed.
Once all feedback is addressed and the PR is approved, we'll ensure the branch is up to date with main
and merge it for you.
Once your PR is merged, if you haven't yet been added to the Contributors table in the README.md for its type of contribution, you should be soon. Please do ping the maintainer who merged your PR if that doesn't happen within 24 hours - it was likely an oversight on our end!