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Contribute to GitLab
This guide details how to use pull requests and the issues to improve GitLab.
Closing deviating issues
Pull requests and issues not in line with the guidelines listed in this document will be closed with just a link to this paragraph. GitLab is popular open source project and the capacity to deal with issues and pull requests is limited. To get support for your problems please use other channels as detailed in the getting help section of the readme. Support subscriptions and consulting services are available from GitLab.com.
Pull requests
We welcome pull request with improvements to GitLab code and/or documentation. The issues we would really like a pull request for are listed with the status 'accepting merge/pull requests' on our feedback forum but other improvements are also welcome.
Pull request guidelines
If you can please submit a pull request with the fix including tests. The workflow to make a pull request is as follows:
- Fork the project on GitHub
- Create a feature branch
- Write tests and code
- If you have multiple commits please combine them into one commit by squashing them
- Push the commit to your fork
- Submit a pull request
We will accept pull requests if:
- The code has proper tests and all tests pass
- It can be merged without problems (if not please use: git rebase master)
- It doesn't break any existing functionality
- It's quality code that conforms to the Rails style guide and best practices
- The description includes a motive for your change and the method you used to achieve it
- It keeps the GitLab code base clean and well structured
- We think other users will need the same functionality
- If it makes changes to the UI the pull request should include screenshots
For examples of feedback on pull requests please look at already closed pull requests.
Issue tracker
The issue tracker is only for obvious bugs or misbehavior in the master branch of GitLab. When submitting an issue please conform to the issue submission guidelines listed below.
Please send a pull request with a tested solution or a pull request with a failing test instead of opening an issue if you can. If you're unsure where to post, post to the Support Forum first. There are a lot of helpful GitLab users there who may be able to help you quickly. If your particular issue turns out to be a bug, it will find its way from there.
Issue tracker guidelines
Search for similar entries before submitting your own, there's a good chance somebody else had the same issue or idea. Show your support with :+1:
and/or join the discussion.
- Summarize your issue in one sentence (what goes wrong, what did you expect to happen)
- Describe your issue in detail
- How can we reproduce the issue on the GitLab Vagrant virtual machine (start with: vagrant destroy && vagrant up && vagrant ssh)
- Add the last commit sha1 of the GitLab version you used to replicate the issue
- Add logs or screen shots when possible
- Link to the line of code that might be responsible for the problem
- Describe your setup (use relevant parts from
sudo -u gitlab -H bundle exec rake gitlab:env:info
)