Our software is open source so you can solve your own problems without needing help from others. And if you solve a problem and are so kind, you can upstream it for the rest of the world to use. Check out our post about externalization. Development activity is coordinated through our GitHub Issues, GitHub Discussions, and Discord.
- Setup your development environment
- Read about the development workflow
- Join our Discord
- Docs are at https://docs.comma.ai and https://blog.comma.ai
openpilot's priorities are safety, stability, quality, and features, in that order. openpilot is part of comma's mission to solve self-driving cars while delivering shippable intermediaries, and all developoment is towards that goal.
The probability of a pull request being merged is a function of its value to the project and the effort it will take us to get it merged. If a PR offers some value but will take lots of time to get merged, it will be closed. Simple, well-tested bug fixes are the easiest to merge, and new features are the hardest to get merged.
All of these are examples of good PRs:
- typo fix: commaai#30678
- removing unused code: commaai#30573
- simple car model port: commaai#30245
- car brand port: commaai#23331
- arbitrary style changes: code is art, and it's up to the author to make it beautiful
- 500+ line PRs: clean it up, break it up into smaller PRs, or both
- PRs without a clear goal: every PR must have a singular and clear goal
- UI design changes: we do not have a good review process for this yet
- New features: We believe openpilot is mostly feature-complete, and the rest is a matter of refinement and fixing bugs. As a result of this, most feature PRs will be immediately closed, however the beauty of open source is that forks can and do offer features that upstream openpilot doesn't.
Check out any good first issue to get started.
A lot of openpilot work requires only a PC, and some requires a comma device. Most car-related contributions require access to that car, plus a comma device installed in the car.
Pull requests should be against the master branch. If you're unsure about a contribution, feel free to open a discussion, issue, or draft PR to discuss the problem you're trying to solve.
A good pull request has all of the following:
- a clearly stated purpose
- every line changed directly contributes to the stated purpose
- verification, i.e. how did you test your PR?
- justification
- if you've optimized something, post benchmarks to prove it's better
- if you've improved your car's tuning, post before and after plots
- passes the CI tests
- Report bugs in GitHub issues.
- Report driving issues in the
#driving-feedback
Discord channel. - Consider opting into driver camera uploads to improve the driver monitoring model.
- Connect your device to Wi-Fi regularly, so that we can pull data for training better driving models.
- Run the
nightly
branch and report issues. This branch is likemaster
but it's built just like a release. - Annotate images in the comma10k dateset.