2.1 KiB
Want to contribute? Great! First, read this page.
Before you contribute
Any contribution that you make to this repository will be under the Apache 2 License, as dictated by that license:
5. Submission of Contributions. Unless You explicitly state otherwise,
any Contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the Work
by You to the Licensor shall be under the terms and conditions of
this License, without any additional terms or conditions.
Notwithstanding the above, nothing herein shall supersede or modify
the terms of any separate license agreement you may have executed
with Licensor regarding such Contributions.
Developer Certificate of Origin
Contributors must sign-off each commit by adding a Signed-off-by: ...
line to commit messages to certify that they have the right to submit
the code they are contributing to the project according to the
Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO).
You can sign-off a commit via git commit -s
.
Code reviews
All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review. We use GitHub pull requests for this purpose. Make sure you've read, understood and considered all the points below before creating your PR.
Style guide
C++ code should adhere to the
Google C++ Style Guide.
You can handle the formatting part of the style guide via git clang-format
.
Best practices
When preparing your PR and also during the code review make sure to follow best practices. Most importantly, keep your PR under 200 lines of code and address a single concern.
Testing
- Add unit tests and documentation (these do not count toward your 200 lines).
- Run tests as appropriate, e.g.
docker build . -t cartographer:noetic -f Dockerfile.noetic
. - Keep rebasing (or merging) of master branch to a minimum. It triggers Travis runs for every update which blocks merging of other changes.