Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
109 lines (82 loc) · 4.14 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

109 lines (82 loc) · 4.14 KB

Contributing to sabre projects

Want to contribute to sabre/dav? Here are some guidelines to ensure your patch gets accepted.

Building a new feature? Contact us first

We may not want to accept every feature that comes our way. Sometimes features are out of scope for our projects.

We don't want to waste your time, so by having a quick chat with us first, you may find out quickly if the feature makes sense to us, and we can give some tips on how to best build the feature.

If we don't accept the feature, it could be for a number of reasons. For instance, we've rejected features in the past because we felt uncomfortable assuming responsibility for maintaining the feature.

In those cases, it's often possible to keep the feature separate from the sabre projects. sabre/dav for instance has a plugin system, and there's no reason the feature can't live in a project you own.

In that case, definitely let us know about your plugin as well, so we can feature it on sabre.io.

We are often on IRC, in the #sabredav channel on freenode. If there's no one there, post a message on the mailing list.

Coding standards

sabre projects follow:

  1. PSR-1
  2. PSR-4

sabre projects don't follow PSR-2.

In addition to that, here's a list of basic rules:

  1. PHP 5.4 array syntax must be used every where. This means you use [ and ] instead of array( and ).
  2. Use PHP namespaces everywhere.
  3. Use 4 spaces for indentation.
  4. Try to keep your lines under 80 characters. This is not a hard rule, as there are many places in the source where it felt more sensibile to not do so. In particular, function declarations are never split over multiple lines.
  5. Opening braces ({) are always on the same line as the class, if, function, etc. they belong to.
  6. public must be omitted from method declarations. It must also be omitted for static properties.
  7. All files should use unix-line endings (\n).
  8. Files must omit the closing php tag (?>).
  9. true, false and null are always lower-case.
  10. Constants are always upper-case.
  11. Any of the rules stated before may be broken where this is the pragmatic thing to do.

Unit test requirements

Any new feature or change requires unittests. We use PHPUnit for all our tests.

Adding unittests will greatly increase the likelyhood of us quickly accepting your pull request. If unittests are not included though for whatever reason, we'd still love your pull request.

We may have to write the tests ourselves, which can increase the time it takes to accept the patch, but we'd still really like your contribution!

To run the testsuite jump into the directory cd tests and trigger phpunit. Make sure you did a composer install beforehand.

Release process

Generally, these are the steps taken to do releases.

  1. Update the changelog. Every repo will have a CHANGELOG.md file. This file should have a new version, and contain all the changes since the last release. I generally run a git diff to figure out if I missed any changes. This file should also have the current date.
  2. If there were BC breaks, this usually now means a major version bump.
  3. Ensure that lib/Version.php or lib/DAV/Version.php also matches this version number.
  4. Tag the release (Example git tag 3.0.1 and push the tag (git push --tags).
  5. (only for the sabre/dav project), create a zip distribution. Run php bin/build.php.
  6. For the relevant project, go to github and click the 'releases' tab. On this tab I create the release with the relevant version. I also set the description of the release to the same information of the changelog. In the case of the sabre/dav project I also upload the zip distribution here.
  7. Write a blog post on sabre.io. This also automatically updates twitter.