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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to syslog-ng

syslog-ng is developed as a community project, and relies on volunteers to produce syslog-ng. Reporting bugs, testing changes, writing code, or simply providing feedback are all important contributions. This guide provides guidelines to make contributing easier.

Table of contents

  1. Issues
  2. Reporting issues
  3. Feature requests
  4. Testing
  5. Pull requests
  6. Additional resources

Issues

One of the easiest ways to contribute to the development of syslog-ng is to participate in the discussions about features, bugs and design. Some of these discussions started on the mailing list, some in the issue tracker. Bugs tagged good first issue are generally good targets to contribute your feedback - but pretty much any open issue can be a good start!

Reporting bugs

When you report a bug, it is important to share as much relevant information as you can, including:

  • version number of syslog-ng used;
  • the platform (operating system and its version, architecture, etc);
  • a backtrace from the core file if the issue is a crash (this can be invaluable);
  • if possible, a configuration that triggers the problem;
  • a detailed description of the issue.

To make it easy to read reports, if you send a configuration snippet, or a backtrace, use fenced code blocks around them.

Feature requests

We use the same issue tracker to handle features requests (they're all tagged with the enhancement label. You are welcome to share your ideas on existing requests, or to submit your own.

Testing

An incredibly useful way to contribute is to test patches and pull requests - there's only so much automated testing can do. For example, you can help testing on platforms the developers do not have access to, or try configurations not thought of before.

Pull requests

If you plan to open a pull request, please follow the guideline below.

Branch

You need to fork syslog-ng in github, and create a working branch from master in your fork.

After writing the code, just before opening the pull request, make sure your working branch is rebased against master.

PR description

In the description, please explain (if applicable):

  • The problem your pull request intends to solve.
  • A general overview about the implementation, or any information that can help reviewers to understand your code.
  • Please explain how one can try out your code: configuration snippets, or deployment information.
  • You can mention if you were considering alternative solutions or explain problems you ran into.
  • If you submit a pull request that fixes an existing issue, please mention the issue somewhere in the pull request, so we can close the original issue as well.

The documentation is created from the description. Please provide a description that can be a good input for the admin guide as well.

Commits

Commit messages

The commit messages be formatted according to this:

module: short description

Long description, that may be
formatted in markdown.

Signed-off-by: your name <[email protected]>

This format is checked by the CI.

If you do not want to share your email address due to privacy reasons, you can use [email protected], which is automatically generated and tracked by github. You can check the exact address in your github settings->email->primary email address, if you enabled email privacy.

module refers to the part of syslog-ng that the patch intends to change. For example python, redis, persist, scratch-buffers, etc.

Patches

We are using a coding style very similar to GNU Coding Standards for syslog-ng.

You can use make style-check or make style-format to check or format automatically your code. These commands are executed by our CI as well.

If possible, please organize your code into a set of small and self contained patches, with clear descriptions each, that can help to understand the patch. This greatly helps the review process.

Please follow clean code guidelines whenever possible. Functions should be small and responsible for one thing. Try to avoid code duplication. Add descriptive names for functions and variables. Etc...

News file

We are automatically generating the news file before each release. So that to work, please add a news entry for your change under the news directory.

The file name should be news/type-PR_ID.md (for example: news/bugfix-1234.md). For now the following types are supported: feature, bugfix, packaging, developer-note, other.

If you think there is no need for a news file (for example it is a small fix for an earlier pull request of the same release), you can leave a note about it in the pull request description.

The generated news file will contain a link to the pull request, where the interested users can find detailed information in the description. This means your news entry does not need to be too descriptive.

The news file format should look like this:

`module`: short description

long description

See news/README.md for more information.

Testing

If possible please add tests for your change. You can add unit tests in c (tests directory in most of syslog-ng modules), or there is an initiative so that contributors write tests in python (for now the feature set is limited). You can check tests/light/functional_tests/source_drivers/generator_source/ as an example.

CI

After opening the pull requests, one of the maintainers will enable the tests to run for your pull requests. So that the pull request could be merged, all tests must pass, and the PR needs two approvals from the maintainers.

You do not need to find reviewers. The maintainers continuously monitor the project, and will assign themselves. We try to add feedback as soon as possible.

If you get stuck with a regression test, feel free to ask for help. Sometimes it is difficult to understand the test logs.

Licensing

Please ensure that your contribution is clean in respect to licensing and copyright.

If your contribution is eligible for copyright, you should also extend the list of copyright holders at the top of the relevant files which carry your modifications.

The absolute minimum to specify is the identity of the author entity, which is usually one or more of an e-mail address and your full name or the name of the legal entity who holds the intellectual rights if it is not you. Please make it clear which is the case, because this may depend on your contract if you are employed or are a subcontractor.

Note that from time to time, we may rephrase the exact text surrounding attributions, however the specified identities and the license binding a given contribution will not be changed in a legally incompatibly manner.

Every new file must carry a standard copyright notice and be compatible with our licensing scheme described in COPYING. You should observe some of the existing files for reference.

Additional resources

For additional information, have a look at the syslog-ng.org website, which is a recommended starting point for finding out more about syslog-ng.

To contact us, visit the mailing list where you can ask questions, and discuss your feature requests with a wider audience.

We also have a Gitter channel, where developers hang out.

We use GitHub issues to track issues, feature requests and patches. We are also using Travis CI for automatic testing.