Your contribution is more than welcome. Let's keep LaraDock amazing.
If you have questions about how to use LaraDock, please direct your questions to the discussion on Gitter. If you believe your question could help others, then consider opening an Issue (it will be labeled as Question).
If you find a bug in the source code or a mistake in the documentation, you can help us by submitting an Issue. Even better you can submit a Pull Request with a fix.
You can request a new feature by submitting an Issue (it will be labeled as Feature Suggestion). If you would like to implement a new feature then consider submitting a Pull Request.
-
Create folder with the software name.
-
Add a
Dockerfile
, write your code there. -
You may add additional files in the software folder.
-
Add the software to the
docker-compose.yml
file. -
Make sure you follow our commenting style.
-
Add the software in the
Readme
.
-
Open the software (container) folder.
-
Edit the files you want to update.
-
Note: If you want to edit the base image of the
Workspace
or thephp-fpm
Containers, you need to edit their Dockerfiles from their Github repositories. For more info read their Dockerfiles comment on the LaraDock repository. -
Make sure to update the
Readme
incase you made any changes.
Before you submit your issue search the archive, maybe your question was already answered.
If your issue appears to be a bug, and hasn't been reported, open a new issue. Help us to maximize the effort we can spend fixing issues and adding new features, by not reporting duplicate issues.
Always Test everything and make sure its working:
- Pull the latest updates (or fork of you don’t have permission)
- Before editing anything:
- Test building the container (docker-compose build --no-cache container-name) build with no cache first.
- Test running the container with some other containers in real app and see of everything is working fine.
- Now edit the container (edit section by section and test rebuilding the container after every edited section)
- Testing building the container (docker-compose build container-name) with no errors.
- Test it in real App.
Consider the following guidelines:
-
Search GitHub for an open or closed Pull Request that relates to your submission. You don't want to duplicate effort.
-
Make your changes in a new git branch:
git checkout -b my-fix-branch master
-
Commit your changes using a descriptive commit message.
-
Push your branch to GitHub:
git push origin my-fix-branch
-
In GitHub, send a pull request to
laradock:master
. -
If we suggest changes then:
- Make the required updates.
- Commit your changes to your branch (e.g.
my-fix-branch
). - Push the changes to your GitHub repository (this will update your Pull Request).
If the PR gets too outdated we may ask you to rebase and force push to update the PR:
git rebase master -i
git push origin my-fix-branch -f
WARNING. Squashing or reverting commits and forced push thereafter may remove GitHub comments on code that were previously made by you and others in your commits.
After your pull request is merged, you can safely delete your branch and pull the changes from the main (upstream) repository:
-
Delete the remote branch on GitHub either through the GitHub web UI or your local shell as follows:
git push origin --delete my-fix-branch
-
Check out the master branch:
git checkout master -f
-
Delete the local branch:
git branch -D my-fix-branch
-
Update your master with the latest upstream version:
git pull --ff upstream master
### Happy Coding :)