Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
45 lines (32 loc) · 2.41 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

45 lines (32 loc) · 2.41 KB

Contributing

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.

We welcome 3rd party pull requests. For significant changes we strongly recommend opening an issue to start a design discussion first.

Best practices

  • Use Windows PowerShell or PowerShell Core (including on Linux/OSX) to run .ps1 scripts. Some scripts set environment variables to help you, but they are only retained if you use PowerShell as your shell.

Prerequisites

All dependencies can be installed by running the init.ps1 script at the root of the repository using Windows PowerShell or PowerShell Core (on any OS). Some dependencies installed by init.ps1 may only be discoverable from the same command line environment the init script was run from due to environment variables, so be sure to launch Visual Studio or build the repo from that same environment. Alternatively, run init.ps1 -InstallLocality Machine (which may require elevation) in order to install dependencies at machine-wide locations so Visual Studio and builds work everywhere.

The only prerequisite for building, testing, and deploying from this repository is the .NET SDK. You should install the version specified in global.json or a later version within the same major.minor.Bxx "hundreds" band. For example if 2.2.300 is specified, you may install 2.2.300, 2.2.301, or 2.2.310 while the 2.2.400 version would not be considered compatible by .NET SDK. See .NET Core Versioning for more information.

Package restore

The easiest way to restore packages may be to run init.ps1 which automatically authenticates to the feeds that packages for this repo come from, if any. dotnet restore or nuget restore also work but may require extra steps to authenticate to any applicable feeds.

Building

This repository can be built on Windows, Linux, and OSX.

Building, testing, and packing this repository can be done by using the standard dotnet CLI commands (e.g. dotnet build, dotnet test, dotnet pack, etc.).