We value your documentation contributions, and we want to make it as easy as possible to work in this repository. One of the first things to decide is which branch to base your work on. If you get confused, just ask and we will help. If a reviewer realizes you have based your work on the wrong branch, we'll let you know so that you can rebase it.
Note: To contribute code to Docker projects, see the Contribution guidelines.
If you spot a problem while reading the documentation and want to try to fix it yourself, click the Edit this page link at the bottom of that page. The page will open in the Github editor, which means you don't need to know a lot about Git, or even about Markdown.
When you save, you will be prompted to create a fork if you don't already have one, and to create a branch in your fork and submit the pull request. We hope you give it a try!
Most commits will be made against the master
branch. This includes:
- Conceptual and task-based information not specific to new features
- Restructuring / rewriting
- Doc bug fixing
- Typos and grammar errors
One quirk of this project is that the master
branch is where the live docs are
published from, so upcoming features can't be documented there. See
Specific new features for a project
for how to document upcoming features. These feature branches will be periodically
merged with master
, so don't worry about fixing typos and documentation bugs
there.
Do you enjoy creating graphics? Good graphics are key to great documentation, and we especially value contributions in this area.
Unless the PR author specifically disables it, you can push commits into another contributor's PR. You can do it from the command line by adding and fetching their remote, checking out their branch, and adding commits to it. Even easier, you can add commits from the Github web UI, by clicking the pencil icon for a given file in the Files view.
If a PR consists of multiple small addendum commits on top of a more significant one, the commit will usually be "squash-merged", so that only one commit is merged in. On occasion this is not appropriate and all commits will be kept separate when merging.
Help us review your PRs more quickly by following these guidelines.
-
Try not to touch a large number of files in a single PR if possible.
-
Don't change whitespace or line wrapping in parts of a file you are not editing for other reasons. Make sure your text editor is not configured to automatically reformat the whole file when saving.
-
A Netlify test runs for each PR that is against one of our long-lived branches like
master
and thevnext
branches, and deploys the result of your PR to a staging site. The URL will be available at the bottom of the PR in the Conversation view. Check the staging site for problems and fix them if necessary. Reviewers will check the staging site too.
If you can think of other ways we could streamline the review process, let us know.
Docker does not currently maintain a style guide. Use your best judgment, and try to follow the example set by the existing documentation.