Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
102 lines (73 loc) · 3.13 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

102 lines (73 loc) · 3.13 KB

Contributing Guidelines

This document is inspired by similar instructions from MintPY, ISCE, gdal and jupyterhub. These are several ways to contribute to the RAiDER framework:

  • Submitting bug reports and feature requests in RAiDER
  • Writing tutorials or jupyter-notebooks in RAiDER-docs
  • Fixing typos, code and improving documentation
  • Writing code for everyone to use

If you get stuck at any point you can create an issue on GitHub.

For more information on contributing to open source projects, GitHub's own guide is a great starting point if you are new to version control.

Git workflows

Setting up the development environment

Fork RAiDER from GitHub UI, and then

git clone https://github.com/dbekaert/RAiDER.git
cd RAiDER
git remote add my_user_name https://github.com/my_user_name/RAiDER.git

Setting up the documentation environment

Fork RAiDER-docs from GitHub UI, and then

git clone https://github.com/dbekaert/RAiDER-docs.git
cd RAiDER-docs
git remote add my_user_name https://github.com/my_user_name/RAiDER-docs.git

Updating your local master against upstream master

git checkout master
git fetch origin
# Be careful: this will loose all local changes you might have done now
git reset --hard origin/master

Working with a feature branch

Here is a great tutorial if you are new to rewriting history with git.

git checkout master
(potentially update your local master against upstream, as described above)
git checkout -b my_new_feature_branch

# do work. For example:
git add my_new_file
git add my_modifid_message
git rm old_file
git commit -a 

# you may need to resynchronize against master if you need some bugfix
# or new capability that has been added to master since you created your
# branch
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/master

# At end of your work, make sure history is reasonable by folding non
# significant commits into a consistent set
git rebase -i master (use 'fixup' for example to merge several commits together,
and 'reword' to modify commit messages)

# or alternatively, in case there is a big number of commits and marking
# all them as 'fixup' is tedious
git fetch origin
git rebase origin/master
git reset --soft origin/master
git commit -a -m "Put here the synthetic commit message"

# push your branch
git push my_user_name my_new_feature_branch

Issue a pull request from GitHub UI

commit locally and push. To get a reasonable history, you may need to

git rebase -i master

, in which case you will have to force-push your branch with

git push -f origin my_new_feature_branch

Once a pull request is issued it will be reviewed by multiple members before it will be approved and integrated into the main.

Things you should NOT do

(For anyone with push rights to RAiDER or RAiDER-docs) Never modify a commit or the history of anything that has been committed to https://github.com/dbekaert/RAiDER and https://github.com/dbekaert/RAiDER-docs.