Thank you for your interest in this project.
The Streamsheets code is stored in a git repository.
You can contribute bugfixes and new features by sending pull requests through GitHub.
In order for your contribution to be accepted, it must comply with the Eclipse Foundation IP policy.
Please read the Eclipse Foundation policy on accepting contributions via Git.
- Sign the Eclipse ECA
- Register for an Eclipse Foundation User ID. You can register here.
- Log into the Accounts Portal, and click on the 'Eclipse Contributor Agreement' link.
- Go to your account settings and add your GitHub username to your account.
- Make sure that you sign-off your Git commits in the following format:
Signed-off-by: John Smith <[email protected]>
This is usually at the bottom of the commit message. You can automate this by adding the '-s' flag when you make the commits. e.g.git commit -s -m "Adding a cool feature"
- Ensure that the email address that you make your commits with is the same one you used to sign up to the Eclipse Foundation website with.
- Fork the repository on GitHub
- Clone the forked repository onto your computer:
git clone https://github.com/<your username>/streamsheets.git
- If you are adding a new feature, then create a new branch from the latest
develop
branch withgit checkout -b YOUR_BRANCH_NAME origin/develop
- If you are fixing a bug, then create a new branch from the latest
fixes
branch withgit checkout -b YOUR_BRANCH_NAME origin/fixes
- Make your changes
- Ensure that all new and existing tests pass.
- Commit the changes into the branch:
git commit -s
Make sure that your commit message is meaningful and describes your changes correctly. - If you have a lot of commits for the change, squash them into a single / few commits.
- Push the changes in your branch to your forked repository.
- Finally, go to
https://github.com/eclipse/streamsheets
and create a pull request from your "YOUR_BRANCH_NAME" branch to the
develop
orfixes
branch as appropriate to request review and merge of the commits in your pushed branch.
What happens next depends on the content of the patch. If it is 100% authored by the contributor and is less than 1000 lines (and meets the needs of the project), then it can be pulled into the main repository. If not, more steps are required. These are detailed in the legal process poster.
Contact the project developers via the project's development mailing list.
This project uses Github to track ongoing development and issues.
Be sure to search for existing bugs before you create another one. Remember that contributions are always welcome!