Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
68 lines (47 loc) · 2.51 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

68 lines (47 loc) · 2.51 KB

Contributing In General

Our project welcomes external contributions. If you have an itch, please feel free to scratch it.

To contribute notebooks or documentation, please submit a pull request.

A good way to familiarize yourself with the notebooks and contribution process is to look for an issue in the issue tracker.

Before embarking on a more ambitious contribution, please raise an issue.

Note: We appreciate your effort, and want to avoid a situation where a contribution requires extensive rework (by you or by us), sits in backlog for a long time, or cannot be accepted at all!

Proposing new features

If you would like to add a new notebook, please raise an issue before sending a pull request so the contribution can be discussed.

Fixing bugs

If you would like to fix a bug, please raise an issue before sending a pull request so it can be tracked.

Merge approval

The project maintainers use LGTM (Looks Good To Me) in comments on the code review to indicate acceptance. A change requires a LGTM from a repository maintainer or from a notebook maintainer (in the area of the contribution).

For a list of the maintainers, see the MAINTAINERS.md page.

Legal

Each source file must include a license header for the Apache Software License 2.0. Using the SPDX format is the simplest approach. e.g.

/*
Copyright <holder> All Rights Reserved.

SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
*/

We have tried to make it as easy as possible to make contributions. This applies to how we handle the legal aspects of contribution. We use the same approach - the Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 (DCO) - that the Linux® Kernel community uses to manage code contributions.

We simply ask that when submitting a patch for review, the developer must include a sign-off statement in the commit message.

Here is an example Signed-off-by line, which indicates that the submitter accepts the DCO:

Signed-off-by: John Doe <john.doe@example.com>

You can include this automatically when you commit a change to your local git repository using the following command:

git commit -s