Check out our Basic Usage, Configuration, and FAQ articles on our wiki!
See also frequently asked questions tagged with parity
on Stack Exchange.
Do not open an issue on Github if you think your discovered bug could be a security-relevant vulnerability. Please, read our security policy instead.
Otherwise, just create a new issue in our repository and state:
- What's your OpenEthereum version?
- What's your operating system and version?
- How did you install OpenEthereum?
- Is your node fully synchronized?
- Did you try turning it off and on again?
Also, try to include steps to reproduce the issue and expand on the actual versus expected behavior.
If you would like to contribute to OpenEthereum, please fork it, fix bugs or implement features, and propose a pull request.
We use labels to manage PRs and issues and communicate the state of a PR. Please familiarize yourself with them. Furthermore we are organizing issues in milestones. Best way to get started is to a pick a ticket from the current milestone tagged easy
and get going, or mentor
and get in contact with the mentor offering their support on that larger task.
There are a few basic ground-rules for contributors (including the maintainer(s) of the project):
- No pushing directly to the master branch.
- All modifications must be made in a pull-request to solicit feedback from other contributors.
- Pull-requests cannot be merged before CI runs green and two reviewers have given their approval.
- Contributors should adhere to the Parity Ethereum Style Guide.
- Non-master branch names should be prefixed with a short name moniker, followed by the associated Github Issue ID (if any), and a brief description of the task using the format
<GITHUB_USERNAME>-<ISSUE_ID>-<BRIEF_DESCRIPTION>
(e.g.gavin-123-readme
). The name moniker helps people to inquiry about their unfinished work, and the GitHub Issue ID helps your future self and other developers (particularly those who are onboarding) find out about and understand the original scope of the task, and where it fits into OpenEthereum Projects. - Remove stale branches periodically
-
If your PR does not alter any logic (e.g. comments, dependencies, docs), then it may be tagged
insubstantial
. -
Once a PR is ready for review please add the
pleasereview
label.
- At least two reviewers are required to review PRs (even for PRs tagged
insubstantial
).
When doing a review, make sure to look for any:
- Buggy behavior.
- Undue maintenance burden.
- Breaking with house coding style.
- Pessimization (i.e. reduction of speed as measured in the projects benchmarks).
- Breaking changes should be carefuly reviewed and tagged as such so they end up in the changelog.
- Uselessness (i.e. it does not strictly add a feature or fix a known issue).
By contributing to OpenEthereum, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the GPLv3 License.