Contributing ============ Corda is an open-source project and we welcome contributions. This guide explains how to contribute back to Corda. .. contents:: Identifying an area to contribute --------------------------------- There are several ways to identify an area where you can contribute to Corda: * Browse issues labelled as ``HelpWanted`` on the `Corda JIRA board `_ * Any issue with a ``HelpWanted`` label is considered ideal for open-source contributions * If there is a feature you would like to add and there isn't a corresponding issue labelled as ``HelpWanted``, that doesn't mean your contribution isn't welcome. Please reach out on the Corda Slack channel (see below) to clarify * Check the `Corda GitHub issues `_ * It's always worth checking in the Corda Slack channel (see below) whether a given issue is a good target for your contribution. Someone else may already be working on it, or it may be blocked by an on-going piece of work * Ask in the `Corda Slack channel `_ Making the required changes --------------------------- 1. Create a fork of the master branch of the `Corda repo `_ 2. Clone the fork to your local machine 3. Make the changes, in accordance with the :doc:`code style guide ` Testing the changes ------------------- Running the tests ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Your changes must pass the tests described :doc:`here `. Building against the master branch ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You may also want to test your changes against a CorDapp defined outside of the Corda repo. To do so, please follow the instructions :doc:`here `. Merging the changes back into Corda ----------------------------------- 1. Create a pull request from your fork to the master branch of the Corda repo 2. Complete the pull-request checklist in the comments box: * State that you have run the tests * State that you have included JavaDocs for any new public APIs * State that you have included the change in the :doc:`changelog ` and :doc:`release notes ` where applicable * State that you are in agreement with the terms of `CONTRIBUTING.md `_ 3. Request a review from a member of the Corda platform team via the `Corda Slack channel `_ 4. Wait for your PR to pass all four types of continuous integration tests (integration, API stability, build and unit) * Currently, external contributors cannot see the output of these tests. If your PR fails a test that passed locally, ask the reviewer for further details 5. Once a reviewer has approved the PR and the tests have passed, squash-and-merge the PR as a single commit