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The [spec](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119) states that these keywords are aliased to each other (in order to alleviate issues arising from the misinterpretation of using "shall"). Consistency helps readers (especially new/unfamiliar ones). 👀 References: - https://www.faa.gov/about/initiatives/plain_language/articles/mandatory/ - https://ell.stackexchange.com/a/171990/2487
172 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
172 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Contributing to Monero
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A good way to help is to test, and report bugs. See
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[How to Report Bugs Effectively (by Simon Tatham)](https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html)
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if you want to help that way. Testing is invaluable in making a piece
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of software solid and usable.
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## General guidelines
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* Comments are encouraged.
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* If modifying code for which Doxygen headers exist, that header must be modified to match.
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* Tests would be nice to have if you're adding functionality.
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Patches are preferably to be sent via a Github pull request. If that
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can't be done, patches in "git format-patch" format can be sent
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(eg, posted to fpaste.org with a long enough timeout and a link
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posted to #monero-dev on irc.freenode.net).
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Patches should be self contained. A good rule of thumb is to have
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one patch per separate issue, feature, or logical change. Also, no
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other changes, such as random whitespace changes, reindentation,
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or fixing typoes, spelling, or wording, unless user visible.
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Following the code style of the particular chunk of code you're
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modifying is encouraged. Proper squashing should be done (eg, if
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you're making a buggy patch, then a later patch to fix the bug,
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both patches should be merged).
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If you've made random unrelated changes (either because your editor
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is annoying or you made them for other reasons), you can select
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what changes go into the coming commit using git add -p, which
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walks you through all the changes and asks whether or not to
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include this particular change. This helps create clean patches
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without any irrelevant changes. git diff will show you the changes
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in your tree. git diff --cached will show what is currently staged
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for commit. As you add hunks with git add -p, those hunks will
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"move" from the git diff output to the git diff --cached output,
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so you can see clearly what your commit is going to look like.
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## Commits and pull requests
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Commit messages should be sensible. That means a subject line that
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describes the patch, with an optional longer body that gives details,
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documentation, etc.
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When submitting a pull request on Github, make sure your branch is
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rebased. No merge commits nor stray commits from other people in
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your submitted branch, please. You may be asked to rebase if there
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are conflicts (even trivially resolvable ones).
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PGP signing commits is strongly encouraged. That should explain why
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the previous paragraph is here.
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# [Code of Conduct (22/C4.1)](http://rfc.zeromq.org/spec:22)
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## License
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Copyright (c) 2009-2015 Pieter Hintjens.
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Copyright (c) 2017-2018 The Monero Project.
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This Specification is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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This Specification is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses>.
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## Language
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The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
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The "Monero Maintainer Team" is defined in this document as the following users:
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- fluffypony
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- moneromooo
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- hyc
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## Goals
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C4 is meant to provide a reusable optimal collaboration model for open source software projects. It has these specific goals:
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- To maximize the scale and diversity of the community around a project, by reducing the friction for new Contributors and creating a scaled participation model with strong positive feedbacks;
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- To relieve dependencies on key individuals by separating different skill sets so that there is a larger pool of competence in any required domain;
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- To allow the project to develop faster and more accurately, by increasing the diversity of the decision making process;
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- To support the natural life cycle of project versions from experimental through to stable, by allowing safe experimentation, rapid failure, and isolation of stable code;
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- To reduce the internal complexity of project repositories, thus making it easier for Contributors to participate and reducing the scope for error;
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- To enforce collective ownership of the project, which increases economic incentive to Contributors and reduces the risk of hijack by hostile entities.
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## Design
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### Preliminaries
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- The project MUST use the git distributed revision control system.
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- The project MUST be hosted on github.com or equivalent, herein called the "Platform".
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- The project MUST use the Platform issue tracker.
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- Non-GitHub example:
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- "Platform" could be a vanilla git repo and Trac hosted on the same machine/network.
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- The Platform issue tracker would be Trac.
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- The project SHOULD have clearly documented guidelines for code style.
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- A "Contributor" is a person who wishes to provide a patch, being a set of commits that solve some clearly identified problem.
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- A "Maintainer" is a person who merges patches to the project. Maintainers are not developers; their job is to enforce process.
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- Contributors MUST NOT have commit access to the repository unless they are also Maintainers.
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- Maintainers MUST have commit access to the repository.
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- Everyone, without distinction or discrimination, MUST have an equal right to become a Contributor under the terms of this contract.
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### Licensing and ownership
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- The project MUST use a share-alike license, such as BSD-3, the GPLv3 or a variant thereof (LGPL, AGPL), or the MPLv2.
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- All contributions to the project source code ("patches") MUST use the same license as the project.
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- All patches are owned by their authors. There MUST NOT be any copyright assignment process.
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- The copyrights in the project MUST be owned collectively by all its Contributors.
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- Each Contributor MUST be responsible for identifying themselves in the project Contributor list.
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### Patch requirements
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- Maintainers MUST have a Platform account and SHOULD use their real names or a well-known alias.
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- Contributors SHOULD have a Platform account and MAY use their real names or a well-known alias.
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- A patch SHOULD be a minimal and accurate answer to exactly one identified and agreed problem.
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- A patch MUST adhere to the code style guidelines of the project if these are defined.
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- A patch MUST adhere to the "Evolution of Public Contracts" guidelines defined below.
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- A patch MUST NOT include non-trivial code from other projects unless the Contributor is the original author of that code.
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- A patch MUST compile cleanly and pass project self-tests on at least the principle target platform.
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- A patch commit message SHOULD consist of a single short (less than 50 character) line summarizing the change, optionally followed by a blank line and then a more thorough description.
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- A "Correct Patch" is one that satisfies the above requirements.
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### Development process
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- Change on the project MUST be governed by the pattern of accurately identifying problems and applying minimal, accurate solutions to these problems.
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- To request changes, a user SHOULD log an issue on the project Platform issue tracker.
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- The user or Contributor SHOULD write the issue by describing the problem they face or observe.
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- The user or Contributor SHOULD seek consensus on the accuracy of their observation, and the value of solving the problem.
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- Users MUST NOT log feature requests, ideas, or suggestions unrelated to Monero code or Monero's dependency code or Monero's potential/future dependency code or research which successfully implements Monero.
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- Users MUST NOT log any solutions to problems (verifiable or hypothetical) of which are not explicitly documented and/or not provable and/or cannot be reasonably proven.
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- Thus, the release history of the project MUST be a list of meaningful issues logged and solved.
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- To work on an issue, a Contributor MUST fork the project repository and then work on their forked repository.
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- To submit a patch, a Contributor MUST create a Platform pull request back to the project.
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- A Contributor MUST NOT commit changes directly to the project.
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- To discuss a patch, people MAY comment on the Platform pull request, on the commit, or elsewhere.
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- To accept or reject a patch, a Maintainer MUST use the Platform interface.
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- Maintainers SHOULD NOT merge their own patches except in exceptional cases, such as non-responsiveness from other Maintainers for an extended period (more than 30 days) or unless urgent as defined by the Monero Maintainers Team.
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- Maintainers MUST NOT make value judgments on correct patches unless the Maintainer (as may happen in rare circumstances) is a core code developer.
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- Maintainers MUST NOT merge pull requests in less than 168 hours (1 week) unless deemed urgent by at least 2 people from the Monero Maintainer Team.
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- The Contributor MAY tag an issue as "Ready" after making a pull request for the issue.
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- The user who created an issue SHOULD close the issue after checking the patch is successful.
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- Maintainers SHOULD ask for improvements to incorrect patches and SHOULD reject incorrect patches if the Contributor does not respond constructively.
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- Any Contributor who has value judgments on a correct patch SHOULD express these via their own patches.
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- Maintainers MAY commit changes to non-source documentation directly to the project.
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### Creating stable releases
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- The project MUST have one branch ("master") that always holds the latest in-progress version and SHOULD always build.
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- The project MUST NOT use topic branches for any reason. Personal forks MAY use topic branches.
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- To make a stable release someone MUST fork the repository by copying it and thus become maintainer of this repository.
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- Forking a project for stabilization MAY be done unilaterally and without agreement of project maintainers.
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- A patch to a stabilization project declared "stable" MUST be accompanied by a reproducible test case.
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### Evolution of public contracts
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- All Public Contracts (APIs or protocols) MUST be documented.
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- All Public Contracts SHOULD have space for extensibility and experimentation.
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- A patch that modifies a stable Public Contract SHOULD not break existing applications unless there is overriding consensus on the value of doing this.
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- A patch that introduces new features to a Public Contract SHOULD do so using new names.
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- Old names SHOULD be deprecated in a systematic fashion by marking new names as "experimental" until they are stable, then marking the old names as "deprecated".
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- When sufficient time has passed, old deprecated names SHOULD be marked "legacy" and eventually removed.
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- Old names MUST NOT be reused by new features.
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- When old names are removed, their implementations MUST provoke an exception (assertion) if used by applications.
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### Project administration
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- The project founders MUST act as Administrators to manage the set of project Maintainers.
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- The Administrators MUST ensure their own succession over time by promoting the most effective Maintainers.
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- A new Contributor who makes a correct patch MUST be invited to become a Maintainer.
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- Administrators MAY remove Maintainers who are inactive for an extended period of time, or who repeatedly fail to apply this process accurately.
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- Administrators SHOULD block or ban "bad actors" who cause stress and pain to others in the project. This should be done after public discussion, with a chance for all parties to speak. A bad actor is someone who repeatedly ignores the rules and culture of the project, who is needlessly argumentative or hostile, or who is offensive, and who is unable to self-correct their behavior when asked to do so by others.
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