Contributing code is an essential part of open source, and we try to make this as easy as possible. There are several ways you can contribute to ebx-linkedin-sdk. Here are some guidelines for creating new issues and sending us pull requests. Please read them carefully before contributing.
We like new issues and are very keen to hear your problems, ideas and proposals. After analyzing them, they are categorized and assigned to a milestone. To make this part easier you should give us some information. Please read the checklist and try to mark as many entries as possible.
Issue checklist:
- Check the closed issues and don't open duplicates
- Explain your idea or problem in plain English
- Provide a JSON snippet if possible (values may be obfuscated but similar to the original)
- Tell us why this is beneficial and what the advantage is for the users
- Explain your use case, it's easier to understand a proposal if we have some background knowledge
Pull requests (PR) are a very important way to contribute code to the library. We have guidelines for sending us a PR, because changes to the source code are even more fundamental than sending a new issue. This is an overview of our prerequisites.
PR checklist:
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Please ensure you have an associated github issue to hand, this needs to be included in the PR. If a suitable issue doesn't already exist feel free to create one, as described above.
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The code must be formatted with our code formatter (have a look at the CodeStyle folder). If you perform a local mvn verify before creating the PR your changes will already be getting validated for style.
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The code layout should conform to our general design standards (if you feel it's necessary to go against the grain, please ask us first!).
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You should complete the PR template and please format your PR title as follows:
GH-[Issue#] [Summary of change or issue title]
for example:
GH-123 Fixed NPE exception when resvoling an organisation
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The pull request should be merge-able, i.e. no conflicts.
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Junit tests required for any functional change must be included.
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The pull request should be targeted at the
dev
branch. If you raise it againstmaster
the PR will fail to build. -
Please try to keep PR commits in a logical order in case we need to review each commit separately, but generally speaking the fewer commits the better.
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Your PR will have to build successfully against our CI (we use CircleCI).
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Important Note: If your PR contains breaking changes you must include a MAJOR version bump in the PR.