Thank you so much for contributing to Cobra. We appreciate your time and help. Here are some guidelines to help you get started.
Be kind and respectful to the members of the community. Take time to educate others who are seeking help. Harassment of any kind will not be tolerated.
If you have questions regarding Cobra, feel free to ask it in the community #cobra Slack channel
- Before filing an issue, please check the existing issues to see if a similar one was already opened. If there is one already opened, feel free to comment on it.
- If you believe you've found a bug, please provide detailed steps of reproduction, the version of Cobra and anything else you believe will be useful to help troubleshoot it (e.g. OS environment, environment variables, etc...). Also state the current behavior vs. the expected behavior.
- If you'd like to see a feature or an enhancement please open an issue with a clear title and description of what the feature is and why it would be beneficial to the project and its users.
- CLA: Upon submitting a Pull Request (PR), contributors will be prompted to sign a CLA. Please sign the CLA 🙂
- Tests: If you are submitting code, please ensure you have adequate tests
for the feature. Tests can be run via
go test ./...
ormake test
. - Since this is golang project, ensure the new code is properly formatted to
ensure code consistency. Run
make all
.
- Fork the project.
- Download your fork to your PC (
git clone https://github.com/your_username/cobra && cd cobra
) - Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Make changes and run tests (
make test
) - Add them to staging (
git add .
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -m 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new pull request