A big welcome and thank you for considering contributing to this project.
This project is a community effort and lives off your contributions, be it in the form of bug reports, feature requests, discussions, or fixes and other code changes.
Reading and following these guidelines will help us make the contribution process easy and effective for everyone involved. It also communicates that you agree to respect the time of the developers managing and developing these open source projects. In return, we will reciprocate that respect by addressing your issue, assessing changes, and helping you finalize your pull requests.
We take our open source community seriously and hold ourselves and other contributors to high standards of communication. By participating and contributing to this project, you agree to uphold our Code of Conduct.
Contributions are made to this repo via Issues and Pull Requests (PRs). A few general guidelines that cover both:
- Search for existing Issues and PRs before creating your own.
- We work hard to makes sure issues are handled in a timely manner but, depending on the impact, it could take a while to investigate the root cause. A friendly ping in the comment thread to the submitter or a contributor can help draw attention if your issue is blocking.
Issues should be used to report problems with this project, request a new feature, or to discuss potential changes before a PR is created. When you create a new Issue, a template will be loaded that will guide you through collecting and providing the information we need to investigate.
If you find an Issue that addresses the problem you're having, please add your own reproduction information to the existing issue rather than creating a new one. Adding a reaction can also help be indicating to our maintainers that a particular problem is affecting more than just the reporter.
PRs to our repositories are always welcome and can be a quick way to get your fix or improvement slated for the next release. In general, PRs should:
- Only fix/add the functionality in question OR address wide-spread whitespace/style issues, not both.
- Add unit or integration tests for fixed or changed functionality (if a test suite already exists).
- Address a single concern in the least number of changed lines as possible.
- Include documentation in the repo or on our docs site.
- Be accompanied by a complete Pull Request template (loaded automatically when a PR is created).
For changes that address core functionality or would require breaking changes (e.g. a major release), it's best to open an Issue to discuss your proposal first. This is not required but can save time creating and reviewing changes.
In general, we follow the Forking Workflow:
- Fork the repository to your own Github account
- Clone the project to your machine
- Create a branch locally with a succinct but descriptive name
- Commit changes to the branch
- Following any formatting and testing guidelines specific to this repo
- Push changes to your fork
- Open a PR in our repository and follow the PR template so that we can efficiently review the changes.
We recommend that you add this repository as an upstream remote to your local git repository so that you can fetch the latest updates.
On your local machine make sure you have the latest version of the staging
branch from this upstream repository:
git checkout staging
git pull upstream staging
This project relies on Node tools and project-specific commands listed in the file package.json to streamline the development and testing of this project. The command below will install the required development tools.
npm install
Please add tests for new code. These might include unit tests (to test specific functionality of code that was added to support fixing the bug or feature), integration tests (to test that the feature is usable - e.g., it should have complete the expected behavior as reported in the feature request or bug report), or both.
Before submitting a PR, please check that the content of the branch that you plan to submit passes with the tests defined for this project:
npm run test
Maintainers are required to follow the procedure below when creating a new release. Releases are created with the npm package release-it.
- Identify whether the release is a major, minor or patch release.
- Obtain a personal access token (release-it only needs "repo" access; no "admin" or other scopes).
- Make sure the token is available as an environment variable.
- Preview the release information using one of the commands listed below. These
commands will not modify any local or remote files.
npm run release -- major --ci --dry-run
npm run release -- minor --ci --dry-run
npm run release -- patch --ci --dry-run
- Create the release using one of the commands listed below.
npm run release -- major --ci
npm run release -- minor --ci
npm run release -- patch --ci
- Check that the release has been successfully created on GitHub along with any release artifacts that may have been created (GitHub Pages, Docker image pushed to Docker registry, Python package published to PyPi, etc.).
Join us on the NLP Sandbox Discord server and post your question to the channel that best matches the topic of your request.