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- .. _contributing:
-
- How to contribute
- =================
-
- This document will eventually outline all aspects of guidance to make your contributing experience a fruitful and enjoyable one.
- What it already contains is information about *commit message formatting* and how that directly affects the numerous automated processes that are used for this repo.
- It also covers how to contribute to this *formula's documentation*.
-
- .. contents:: **Table of Contents**
-
- Overview
- --------
-
- Submitting a pull request is more than just code!
- To achieve a quality product, the *tests* and *documentation* need to be updated as well.
- An excellent pull request will include these in the changes, wherever relevant.
-
- Commit message formatting
- -------------------------
-
- Since every type of change requires making Git commits,
- we will start by covering the importance of ensuring that all of your commit
- messages are in the correct format.
-
- Automation of multiple processes
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- This formula uses `semantic-release <https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release>`_ for automating numerous processes such as bumping the version number appropriately, creating new tags/releases and updating the changelog.
- The entire process relies on the structure of commit messages to determine the version bump, which is then used for the rest of the automation.
-
- Full details are available in the upstream docs regarding the `Angular Commit Message Conventions <https://github.com/angular/angular.js/blob/master/DEVELOPERS.md#-git-commit-guidelines>`_.
- The key factor is that the first line of the commit message must follow this format:
-
- .. code-block::
-
- type(scope): subject
-
-
- * E.g. ``docs(contributing): add commit message formatting instructions``.
-
- Besides the version bump, the changelog and release notes are formatted accordingly.
- So based on the example above:
-
- ..
-
- .. raw:: html
-
- <h3>Documentation</h3>
-
- * **contributing:** add commit message formatting instructions
-
-
- * The ``type`` translates into a ``Documentation`` sub-heading.
- * The ``(scope):`` will be shown in bold text without the brackets.
- * The ``subject`` follows the ``scope`` as standard text.
-
- Linting commit messages in Travis CI
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- This formula uses `commitlint <https://github.com/conventional-changelog/commitlint>`_ for checking commit messages during CI testing.
- This ensures that they are in accordance with the ``semantic-release`` settings.
-
- For more details about the default settings, refer back to the ``commitlint`` `reference rules <https://conventional-changelog.github.io/commitlint/#/reference-rules>`_.
-
- Relationship between commit type and version bump
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- This formula applies some customisations to the defaults, as outlined in the table below,
- based upon the `type <https://github.com/angular/angular.js/blob/master/DEVELOPERS.md#type>`_ of the commit:
-
- .. list-table::
- :name: commit-type-vs-version-bump
- :header-rows: 1
- :stub-columns: 0
- :widths: 1,2,3,1,1
-
- * - Type
- - Heading
- - Description
- - Bump (default)
- - Bump (custom)
- * - ``build``
- - Build System
- - Changes related to the build system
- - –
- -
- * - ``chore``
- - –
- - Changes to the build process or auxiliary tools and libraries such as
- documentation generation
- - –
- -
- * - ``ci``
- - Continuous Integration
- - Changes to the continuous integration configuration
- - –
- -
- * - ``docs``
- - Documentation
- - Documentation only changes
- - –
- - 0.0.1
- * - ``feat``
- - Features
- - A new feature
- - 0.1.0
- -
- * - ``fix``
- - Bug Fixes
- - A bug fix
- - 0.0.1
- -
- * - ``perf``
- - Performance Improvements
- - A code change that improves performance
- - 0.0.1
- -
- * - ``refactor``
- - Code Refactoring
- - A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- - –
- - 0.0.1
- * - ``revert``
- - Reverts
- - A commit used to revert a previous commit
- - –
- - 0.0.1
- * - ``style``
- - Styles
- - Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space,
- formatting, missing semi-colons, etc.)
- - –
- - 0.0.1
- * - ``test``
- - Tests
- - Adding missing or correcting existing tests
- - –
- - 0.0.1
-
- Use ``BREAKING CHANGE`` to trigger a ``major`` version change
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- Adding ``BREAKING CHANGE`` to the footer of the extended description of the commit message will **always** trigger a ``major`` version change, no matter which type has been used.
- This will be appended to the changelog and release notes as well.
- To preserve good formatting of these notes, the following format is prescribed:
-
- * ``BREAKING CHANGE: <explanation in paragraph format>.``
-
- An example of that:
-
- .. code-block:: git
-
- ...
-
- BREAKING CHANGE: With the removal of all of the `.sls` files under
- `template package`, this formula no longer supports the installation of
- packages.
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