Please do! Thanks for your help improving the project! 🎈
All contributors are welcome. Please see the newcomers welcome guide for how, where and why to contribute. This project is community-built and welcomes collaboration. Contributors are expected to adhere to our Code of Conduct.
Not sure where to start? First, see the newcomers welcome guide. Grab an open issue with the help-wanted label and jump in. Join the Slack account and engage in conversation. Create a new issue if needed. All pull requests should reference an open issue. Include keywords in your pull request descriptions, as well as commit messages, to automatically close issues in GitHub.
Sections
Relevant coding style guidelines are the Go Code Review Comments and the Formatting and style section of Peter Bourgon's Go: Best Practices for Production Environments.
In order to contribute to Meshery, please follow the fork-and-pull request workflow described here.
To contribute to this project, you must agree to the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) for each commit you make. The DCO is a simple statement that you, as a contributor, have the legal right to make the contribution.
See the DCO file for the full text of what you must agree to and how it works here. To signify that you agree to the DCO for contributions, you simply add a line to each of your git commit messages:
Signed-off-by: Jane Smith <[email protected]>
In most cases, you can add this signoff to your commit automatically with the
-s
or --signoff
flag to git commit
. You must use your real name and a reachable email
address (sorry, no pseudonyms or anonymous contributions). An example of signing off on a commit:
$ commit -s -m “my commit message w/signoff”
To ensure all your commits are signed, you may choose to add this alias to your global .gitconfig
:
~/.gitconfig
[alias]
amend = commit -s --amend
cm = commit -s -m
commit = commit -s
Or you may configure your IDE, for example, Visual Studio Code to automatically sign-off commits for you:
GetNighthawk aims to provide generally-available distributions of Nighthawk under different architectures and platforms and easy-to-use tooling for installation and operation. This will include creating distributions of Nighthawk as well as augmenting existing tooling, Meshery, to retrieve these arch-specific packages and update their deployments.
You can contribute to the GetNightHawk main project and documentation or you could help in building and contributing to the site which is running on Jekyll, a static site generator(SSG).
- Visit the Project documentation
- Suggest requests, changes, or features by creating an issue on the repository
- Look at existing issues to tackle and get involved with
- Fork this repository
- Clone your forked copy to your local computer
cd
into the getnighthawk repocd docs
to access the GetNighthawk Jekyll website codebase- Run the following code in your terminal
bundle install
. - Run
make site
in order to serve the jekyll website on your machine athttp://127.0.0.1:4000/
(bundle exec jekyll serve
can also be used for spinning up the Jekyll website athttp://127.0.0.1:4000/
)
Layer5 uses ES-Lint to maintain code quality & consistency in our UI Code.
All contributors are invited to review pull requests. See this short video on how to review a pull request.
Resources: https://lab.github.com and https://try.github.com/
This repository and site are available as open source under the terms of the Apache 2.0 License.
Community First
The Layer5 community represents the largest collection of service mesh projects and their maintainers in the world.
Open Source First
Our projects establish industry standards and enable service developers, owners, and operators with repeatable patterns and best practices for managing all aspects of distributed services. Our shared commitment to the open source spirit push the Layer5 community and its projects forward.