The MFEM team welcomes contributions at all levels: bugfixes; code improvements; simplifications; new mesh, discretization or solver capabilities; improved documentation; new examples and miniapps; HPC performance improvements; etc.
MFEM is distributed under the terms of the BSD-3 license. All new contributions must be made under this license.
Note also that MFEM has a Code of Conduct. By participating in the MFEM community, you agree to abide by its rules.
If you plan on contributing to MFEM, consider reviewing the
issue tracker first to check if a thread
already exists for your desired feature or the bug you ran into. Use a pull
request (PR) toward the mfem:master
branch to propose your contribution. If
you are planning significant code changes or have questions, you may want to
open an issue before issuing a PR. In
addition to technical contributions, we are also interested in your results and
simulation images, which you can share via a pull
request in the mfem/web repo.
See the Quick Summary section for the main highlights of our GitHub workflow. For more details, consult the following sections and refer back to them before issuing pull requests:
Contributing to MFEM requires knowledge of Git and, likely, finite elements. If you are new to Git, see the GitHub learning resources. To learn more about the finite element method, see our FEM page.
By submitting a pull request, you are affirming the Developer's Certificate of Origin at the end of this file.
- We encourage you to join the MFEM organization and create
development branches off
mfem:master
. - Please follow the developer guidelines, in particular with regards to documentation and code styling.
- Please do not commit large/binary files to the central repository (use a fork instead).
- Pull requests should be issued toward
mfem:master
. Make sure to check the items off the Pull Request Checklist and follow the MFEM PR Rules. - When your contribution is fully working and ready to be reviewed, add
the
ready-for-review
label. - PRs are treated similarly to journal submission with an "editor" assigning two reviewers to evaluate the changes.
- The reviewers have 3 weeks to evaluate the PR and work with the author to fix issues and implement improvements.
- During review there should be no force pushes/rewriting history in the branch.
- After approval, MFEM developers merge the PR manually in the mfem:next branch.
- After a week of testing in
mfem:next
, the original PR is merged inmfem:master
. - We use milestones to coordinate the work on different PRs toward a release.
- Don't hesitate to contact us if you have any questions.
The MFEM library uses object-oriented design principles which reflect, in code, the independent mathematical concepts of meshing, linear algebra and finite element spaces and operators.
The MFEM source code has the following structure:
.
├── config
│ ├── cmake
│ ├── docker
│ ├── githooks
│ └── vcpkg
├── data
├── doc
├── examples
│ ├── amgx
│ ├── caliper
│ ├── ginkgo
│ ├── hiop
│ ├── jupyter
│ ├── moonolith
│ ├── petsc
│ ├── pumi
│ ├── sundials
| └── superlu
├── fem
│ ├── ceed
│ ├── fe
│ ├── integ
│ ├── lor
│ ├── moonolith
│ ├── qinterp
│ └── tmop
├── general
├── linalg
│ └── simd
├── mesh
│ └── submesh
├── miniapps
│ ├── adjoint
│ ├── autodiff
│ ├── common
│ ├── dpg
│ ├── electromagnetics
│ ├── gslib
│ ├── hdiv-linear-solver
│ ├── hooke
│ ├── meshing
│ ├── mtop
│ ├── multidomain
│ ├── navier
│ ├── nurbs
│ ├── parelag
│ ├── performance
│ ├── shifted
│ ├── solvers
│ ├── spde
│ ├── tools
│ ├── toys
│ └── tribol
└── tests
├── benchmarks
├── convergence
├── gitlab
├── mem_manager
├── par-mesh-format
├── scripts
└── unit
The main directories are fem/
, mesh/
and linalg/
containing the C++
classes implementing the finite element, mesh and linear algebra concepts
respectively.
-
The main mesh classes are:
-
The main finite element classes are:
-
The main linear algebra classes and sources are
Operator
andBilinearForm
Vector
andLinearForm
DenseMatrix
andSparseMatrix
- Sparse smoothers and linear solvers
Parallel MPI objects in MFEM inherit their serial counterparts, so a parallel
mesh for example is just a serial mesh on each task plus the information on
shared geometric entities between different tasks. The parallel source files
have a p
prefix, e.g. pmesh.cpp
vs. the serial mesh.cpp
.
- The main parallel classes are
GPU and multi-core CPU support is based on device kernels supporting different backends (CUDA, OCCA, RAJA, OpenMP, etc.) and an internal lightweight device/host memory manager.
- The main device-relevant classes and sources are:
Device
MemoryManager
- the
mfem::forall
function - the
cuda.hpp
andocca.hpp
files
- The
general/
directory contains C++ classes that serve as utilities for communication, error handling, arrays, (Boolean) tables, timing, etc. - The
config/
directory contains build-related files, both for the plain Makefile and the CMake build options. - The
doc/
directory contains configuration for the Doxygen code documentation that can either be built locally or browsed online at https://docs.mfem.org.
examples
andminiapps
respectively gather simple and more fully-featured demonstrations of the usage on MFEM. They both rely ondata/
for the collection of meshes.- The
tests/
directory contains a unit test suite and will later contain more tests that run example codes.
See also the code overview section on the MFEM website.
The MFEM GitHub organization: https://github.com/mfem, is the main developer hub for the MFEM project.
If you plan to make contributions or would like to stay up-to-date with changes in the code, we strongly encourage you to join the MFEM organization.
This will simplify the workflow (by providing you additional permissions), and will allow us to reach you directly with project announcements.
Before you can start, you need a GitHub account, here are a few suggestions:
- Create the account at: github.com/join.
- For easy identification, please add your full name and maybe a picture of you at: https://github.com/settings/profile.
- To receive notification, set a primary email at: https://github.com/settings/emails.
- For password-less pull/push over SSH, add your SSH keys at: https://github.com/settings/keys.
- Contact us for an invitation to join the MFEM GitHub organization. You will receive an invitation email, which you can directly accept. Alternatively, after logging into GitHub, you can accept the invitation at the top of https://github.com/mfem.
- Consider making your membership public by going to https://github.com/orgs/mfem/people and clicking on the organization visibility drop box next to your name.
- Project discussions and announcements will be posted at https://github.com/orgs/mfem/teams/everyone.
- The MFEM source code is in the mfem repository.
- The website and corresponding documentation are in the web repository.
- The PyMFEM repository contains a Python wrapper for MFEM.
- The data repository contains additional (large) datafiles for MFEM.
-
A new feature should be important enough that at least one person, the author, is willing to work on it and be its champion.
-
The author creates a branch for the new feature (with suffix
-dev
), off themaster
branch, or another existing feature branch, for example:# Clone assuming you have setup your ssh keys on GitHub: git clone [email protected]:mfem/mfem.git # Alternatively, clone using the "https" protocol: git clone https://github.com/mfem/mfem.git # Create a new feature branch starting from "master": git checkout master git pull git checkout -b feature-dev # Work on "feature-dev", add local commits # ... # (One time only) push the branch to github and setup your local # branch to track the github branch (for "git pull"): git push -u origin feature-dev
-
We prefer that you create the new feature branch inside the MFEM organization as opposed to in a fork. This allows everyone in the community to collaborate in one central place.
-
If you prefer to work in your fork, please enable upstream edits.
-
Never use the
next
branch to start a new feature branch!
-
-
The typical feature branch name is
new-feature-dev
, e.g.pumi-dev
. While not frequent in MFEM, other suffixes are possible, e.g.-fix
,-doc
, etc.
-
Keep the code lean and as simple as possible
- Well-designed simple code is frequently more general and powerful.
- Lean code base is easier to understand by new collaborators.
- New features should be added only if they are necessary or generally useful.
- Introduction of language constructions not currently used in MFEM should be justified and generally avoided (to maintain portability to various systems and compilers, including early access hardware).
- We prefer basic C++ and the C++03 standard, to keep the code readable by a large audience and to make sure it compiles anywhere.
-
Keep the code general and reasonably efficient
- The main goal is fast prototyping for research and application development.
- When in doubt, generality wins over efficiency.
- Respect the needs of different users (current and/or future).
-
Keep things separate and logically organized
- General usage features go in MFEM (implemented in as much generality as possible), non-general features go into external apps.
- Inside MFEM, compartmentalize between linalg, fem, mesh, GLVis, etc.
- Contributions that are project-specific or have external dependencies are
allowed (if they are of broader interest), but should be
#ifdef
-ed and not change the code by default.
-
Code specifics
- All new public, protected, and private classes, methods, data members, and functions have Doxygen-style documentation in source comments.
- Math formulas can be included in the Doxygen comments either with standard
LaTeX (
$..$
and$$..$$
) for portions that need detailed explanation, or with Unicode or plain text when short or readable description is preferable. - In addition to arguments and functionality, documentation should include the current limitations of the code, any background information that is implicitly assumed in the implementation, and the ownership and lifetime of data.
- Consistent code styling is enforced with
make style
in the top-level directory. This requires Artistic Style (we specifically use version 3.1). See also the fileconfig/mfem.astylerc
. - Use
mfem::out
andmfem::err
instead ofstd::cout
andstd::cerr
in internal library code. (You can usestd
in examples and miniapps.) - When manually resolving conflicts during a merge, make sure to mention the conflicted files in the commit message.
- All significant new features and changes should be documented in CHANGELOG.
- New examples and miniapps should have documentation on the MFEM webpage.
- The general floating-point type
real_t
should be used, rather thanfloat
ordouble
, except in special cases where only one is possible.
-
When your branch is ready for other developers to review / comment on the code, create a pull request towards
mfem:master
. -
Pull request typically have titles like:
Description [new-feature-dev]
for example:
Parallel Unstructured Mesh Infrastructure (PUMI) integration [pumi-dev]
Note the branch name suffix (in square brackets).
-
Titles may contain a prefix in square brackets to emphasize the type of PR. Common choices are:
[DON'T MERGE]
,[WIP]
and[DISCUSS]
, for example:[DISCUSS] Hybridized DG [hdg-dev]
-
If the PR is still a work in progress, add the
WIP
label to it and optionally the[WIP]
prefix in the title. -
Add a description, appropriate labels and assign yourself to the PR. The MFEM team will add reviewers as appropriate.
-
List outstanding TODO items in the description, see PR #222 for an example.
-
When your contribution is fully working and ready to be reviewed, add the
ready-for-review
label. -
PRs are treated similarly to journal submission with an "editor" assigning two reviewers to evaluate the changes. The reviewers have 3 weeks to evaluate the PR and work with the author to implement improvements and fix issues.
-
Once the
ready-for-review
label has been applied and reviewers have been assigned, the PR is considered under review. To help with the review process there should be no force pushes/rewriting history in the branch. -
After approval, the PR is tested for a week with other approved PRs in the
mfem:next
branch. -
Consider manually running the tests in
tests/scripts
before merging inmfem:next
, see the README file in that directory for more details. -
Track the GitHub Actions and Appveyor continuous integration builds at the end of the PR. These should generally run clean, so address any errors as soon as possible. Please ask if you are unsure how to do that.
-
Note that some tests, such as the
branch-history
check in GitHub Actions are safeguards that are allowed to fail in certain cases. -
Other tests, such as the
code-style
,documentation
andgitignore
checks in GitHub Actions enforce MFEM-specific rules which are explained in the error messages and thetests/scripts
directory. -
Also note that the tests
branch-history
andrepos-checks
found in GitHub Actions can be triggered automatically before each push using git hooks. See the git hooks README for a detailed explanation. -
If triggered, track the status of the LLNL GitLab tests. If failing, ask one of the LLNL developers for details.
The Pull Request (PR) approval process in MFEM is similar to the approval of papers in a peer-reviewed journal. In particular:
-
There is an MFEM board of "editors" that evaluates new PRs and assigns "reviewers" for each PR.
-
The assigned reviewers are responsible to carefully review and test the proposed PR.
-
A PR can be (manually) merged in the next branch only if 2 of the assigned reviewers have approved it and it has passed internal testing. This merge can be performed by any of the assigned reviewers or by any of the editors.
-
A PR can be merged in the master branch only if it has been tested successfully for a week in next and an editor has (optionally) taken a final look. This merge can be performed only by one of the editors.
The current list of MFEM editors is:
- @v-dobrev (Veselin Dobrev)
- @tzanio (Tzanio Kolev)
- @pazner (Will Pazner)
- @mlstowell (Mark Stowell)
The responsibilities of the editors are:
-
To assign appropriate milestone and labels for new PRs, e.g. bugfix, minor, api-change, high-impact, etc.
-
To assign at least 2 reviewers for new PRs. An editor can also be a reviewer. The editor, reviewers, and author should be listed as "Assignees" on the GitHub PR page. After assignment, the
in-review
label should be added. -
To complete the initial PR evaluation and assignments in a timely manner: 1 week from submission.
-
To assist reviewers when they need help with their reviews (but also to stay out of the way when they don't).
-
To remind the reviewers about timely completion of their review.
-
To take a final look and complete the PR merge in master. The final look step is optional and shouldn't take more than 3 days.
-
The assignment of bugfixes should be expedited proportional to their importance, e.g. in some cases the editor can assign much shorter review window.
Everyone on the MFEM team can be asked to serve as a reviewer on a PR in their area of expertise.
The responsibilities of the reviewers are:
-
To let the editors know if the proposed assignment is not a good match for them.
-
To communicate with the PR author, provide feedback and work with them to resolve issues.
-
To ensure the quality of the PR by making sure that the code adheres to the Developer Guidelines, e.g. all methods, data members, and functions have documentation, including data ownership and lifetime, new examples/miniapps have a corresponding PR in mfem/web, major features have
CHANGELOG
entries, etc. -
To seek help from the editors in case of difficulties.
-
To complete the review in a timely manner: 3 weeks from assignment.
-
To test the PR thoroughly before merging in next. The PR author is also encouraged to perform testing and inform the reviewers about the results.
-
To monitor the PR impact on the testing in the next branch and alert the editors that the PR is ready for merging in master.
-
The review of bugfixes should be expedited proportional to their importance. The review window can be much less than three weeks in such cases.
Authors should clearly indicate when a PR is ready for review (before that the PR should be marked as Draft
or [WIP]
).
The responsibilities of the authors are:
-
To follow the instructions and PR checklist in the
CONTRIBUTING.md
document in the MFEM repository. -
To respond to reviewer feedback in a timely manner.
-
Authors are encouraged to perform testing and inform the reviewers about the results.
-
Authors can use the "Reviewers" section of the GitHub PR page to suggest reviewers, but the "Assignees" section will show who the editor has assigned to do the reviews.
-
To indicate when the PR is ready for review by adding the
ready-for-review
label.
Before a PR can be merged, it should satisfy the following:
- Code builds.
- Code passes
make style
. - Update
CHANGELOG
:- Is this a new feature users need to be aware of? New or updated example or miniapp?
- Does it make sense to create a new section in the
CHANGELOG
to group with other related features?
- Update
INSTALL
:- Had a new optional library been added? If so, what range of versions of this library are required? (Make sure the external library is compatible with our BSD license, e.g. it is not licensed under GPL!)
- Have the version ranges for any required or optional libraries changed?
- Does
make
orcmake
have a new target? - Did the requirements or the installation process change? (rare)
- Update continuous integration server configurations if necessary (e.g. with new version requirements for each of MFEM's dependencies)
-
.github
-
.appveyor.yml
-
- Update
.gitignore
:- Check if
make distclean; git status
shows any files that were generated from the source by the project (not an IDE) but we don't want to track in the repository. - Add new patterns (just for the new files above) and re-run the above test.
- Check if
- New examples:
- All sample runs at the top of the example source file work.
- Update
examples/makefile
:- Add the example code to the appropriate
SEQ_EXAMPLES
andPAR_EXAMPLES
variables. - Add any files generated by it to the
clean
target. - Add the example binary and any files generated by it to the top-level
.gitignore
file.
- Add the example code to the appropriate
- Update
examples/CMakeLists.txt
:- Add the example code to the
ALL_EXE_SRCS
variable. - Make sure
THIS_TEST_OPTIONS
is set correctly for the new example.
- Add the example code to the
- List the new example in
doc/CodeDocumentation.dox
. - If new examples directory (e.g.
examples/pumi
), list it indoc/CodeDocumentation.conf.in
- Companion pull request for documentation in mfem/web repo:
- Update or add example-specific documentation, see e.g. the
src/examples.md
. - Add the description, labels and screenshots in
src/examples.md
andsrc/img
. - In
examples.md
, list the example under the appropriate categories, add new categories if necessary. - Add a short description of the example in the "Extensive Examples" section of
features.md
.
- Update or add example-specific documentation, see e.g. the
- New miniapps:
- All sample runs at the top of the miniapp source file work.
- Update top-level
makefile
andmakefile
in corresponding miniapp directory. - Add the miniapp binary and any files generated by it to the top-level
.gitignore
file. - Update CMake build system:
- Update the
CMakeLists.txt
file in theminiapps
directory, if the new miniapp is in a new directory. - Add/update the
CMakeLists.txt
file in the new miniapp directory. - Consider adding a new test for the new miniapp.
- Update the
- List the new miniapp in
doc/CodeDocumentation.dox
- If new miniapps directory (e.g.
miniapps/nurbs
), add it toMINIAPP_SUBDIRS
in themakefile
. - If new miniapps directory (e.g.
miniapps/nurbs
), list it indoc/CodeDocumentation.conf.in
- Companion pull request for documentation in mfem/web repo:
- Update or add miniapp-specific documentation, see e.g. the
src/meshing.md
andsrc/electromagnetics.md
files. - Add the description, labels and screenshots in
src/examples.md
andsrc/img
. - The miniapps go at the end of the page, and are usually listed only under a specific "Application (PDE)" category.
- Add a short description of the miniapp in the "Extensive Examples" section of
features.md
.
- Update or add miniapp-specific documentation, see e.g. the
- New capability:
- All new public, protected, and private classes, methods, data members, and functions have full Doxygen-style documentation in source comments. Documentation should include descriptions of member data, function arguments and return values, template parameters, and prerequisites for calling new functions.
- Pointer arguments and return values must specify whether ownership is being transferred or lent with the call.
- Any new functions should include descriptions of their intended use e.g. for internal use only, user-facing, etc., along with references to example code whenever possible/appropriate.
- Consider adding new sample runs in existing examples to highlight the new capability.
- Consider saving cool simulation pictures with the new capability in the Confluence gallery (LLNL only) or submitting them, via pull request, to the gallery section of the
mfem/web
repo. - If this is a major new feature, consider mentioning it in the short summary inside
README
(rare). - List major new classes in
doc/CodeDocumentation.dox
(rare).
- Update this checklist, if the new pull request affects it.
- Run
make unittest
to make sure all unit tests pass. - Run the tests in
tests/scripts
. - (LLNL only) After merging:
- Update internal tests to include the new features.
MFEM uses a master
/next
-branch workflow as described below:
-
The
master
branch should always be of release quality and changes should not be merged until they have been fully tested. This branch is protected, and changes can only be made through pull requests. -
After approval, a pull request is merged manually (by MFEM developers) in the
next
branch for testing and thein-next
label is added to the PR. This can be done as follows:# Pull the latest version of the "feature-dev" branch git checkout feature-dev git pull # Pull the latest version of the "next" branch git checkout next git pull # Merge "feature-dev" into "next", resolving conflicts, if necessary. # Use the "--no-ff" flag to create a new commit with merge message. git merge --no-ff feature-dev # Push the "next" branch to the server git push
-
After a week of testing in
next
(excluding bugfixes), both on GitHub, as well as internally at LLNL, the original PR is merged intomaster
(provided there are no issues). -
After the merge, the feature branch is deleted (unless it is a long-term project with periodic PRs).
-
The
next
branch is used just for integrated testing of all PRs approved for merging intomaster
to verify that each works individually and that all of them work as a group. This branch can be discarded at any time, though we typically do that only at the end of a release cycle.
-
Releases are just tags in the
master
branch, e.g. https://github.com/mfem/mfem/releases/tag/v3.3.2, and have a version that ends in an even "patch" number, e.g.v3.2.2
orv3.4
(by conventionv3.4
is the same asv3.4.0
.) Between releases, the version ends in an odd "patch" number, e.g.v3.3.3
. -
We use milestones to coordinate the work on different PRs toward a release, see for example the v3.3.2 release.
-
After a release is complete, the
next
branch is recreated, e.g. as follows (replace3.3.2
with current release):- Rename the current
next
branch tonext-pre-v3.3.2
. - Create a new
next
branch starting from thev3.3.2
release. - Local copies of
next
can then be updated withgit fetch origin next && git checkout -B next origin/next
.
- Rename the current
-
Update the MFEM version in the following files:
-
CHANGELOG
-
makefile
-
CMakeLists.txt
-
doc/CodeDocumentation.conf.in
-
-
Check that version requirements for each of MFEM's dependencies are documented in
INSTALL
and up-to-date -
Check that continuous integration server configurations reflect the dependency version requirements of the new release
-
.github
-
.appveyor.yml
-
-
Update the
CHANGELOG
to organize all release contributions -
Review the whole source code once over
-
Ask MFEM-based applications to test the pre-release branch
-
Test on additional platforms and compilers
-
Tag the repository:
git tag -a v3.1 -m "Official release v3.1" git push origin v3.1
-
Create the release tarball and push to
mfem/releases
. -
Recreate the
next
branch as described in previous section. -
Update and push documentation to
mfem/doxygen
. Update theREADME.md
file and thehtml
link in themfem/doxygen
repo. -
Update URL shortlinks:
- Create a shortlink at http://bit.ly/ for the release tarball, e.g. https://mfem.github.io/releases/mfem-3.1.tgz.
- (LLNL only) Add and commit the new shortlink in the
links
andlinks-mfem
files of the internalmfem/downloads
repo. - Add the new shortlinks to the MFEM packages in
spack
,homebrew/science
,VisIt
, etc.
-
Update website in
mfem/web
repo:- Update version and shortlinks in
src/index.md
andsrc/download.md
. - Use cloc-1.62.pl and
ls -lh
to estimate the SLOC and the tarball size insrc/download.md
.
- Update version and shortlinks in
-
The GitHub
master
andnext
branches are mirrored to the LLNL institutional Bitbucket repository asgh-master
andgh-next
. -
gh-master
is merged into LLNL's internalmaster
through pull requests; write permissions tomaster
are restricted to ensure this is the only way in which it gets updated. -
We never push directly from LLNL to GitHub.
-
Versions of the code on LLNL's internal server, from most to least stable:
- MFEM official release on mfem.org -- Most stable, tested in many apps.
mfem:master
-- Recent development version, guaranteed to work.mfem:gh-master
-- Stable development version, passed testing, you can use it to build your code between releases.mfem:gh-next
-- Bleeding-edge development version, may be broken, use at your own risk.
-
MFEM repository is also mirrored on the LLNL GitLab instance, in a semi-automated manner.
-
This instance is meant to complete CI testing with tests on Livermore Computing systems. GitLab pipeline status is reported in the corresponding GitHub pull request.
-
In GitLab pipelines, TPLs (dependencies) are built using Spack, driven by Uberenv.
-
No change to the MFEM repo can be made on this instance.
MFEM has several levels of automated testing running on GitHub, as well as on local Mac and Linux workstations, and Livermore Computing clusters at LLNL.
In addition, developers can set local git hooks to run some quick checks on
commit or push, see the README in the config/githooks
directory.
We use GitHub Actions to drive the default tests on the master
and next
branches. See the .github/workflows
files and the logs at
https://github.com/mfem/mfem/actions.
Testing using GitHub Actions should be kept lightweight, as there is a time constraint on jobs. Two virtual machines are configured - Mac (OS X) and Linux.
- Tests on the
master
branch are triggered whenever a PR is issued on this branch. - Tests on the
next
branch are currently scheduled to run each night.
We use Appveyor to test building with the MS Visual C++ compiler in a Windows
environment, as well as to test the CMake build. See the .appveyor
file and the
build logs at
https://ci.appveyor.com/project/mfem/mfem.
CMake is used to generate the MSVC Project files and drive the build. A release
and debug build is performed with a simple run of ex1
to verify the executable.
-
We mirror the
master
andnext
branches internally (togh-master
andgh-next
) and run longer nightly tests via cron. On the weekends, a more extensive test is run which extracts and executes all the different sample runs from each example. -
We also mirror PRs on the LLNL GitLab instance. PR mirroring can only be triggered by LLNL developers, but test status is publicly available. Only LLNL developers can access the detailed test report.
-
Contact the MFEM team by posting to the GitHub issue tracker. Please perform a search to make sure your question has not been answered already.
-
Email communications should be sent to the MFEM developers mailing list, [email protected].
By making a contribution to this project, I certify that:
(a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I have the right to submit it under the open source license indicated in the file; or
(b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source license and I have the right under that license to submit that work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part by me, under the same open source license (unless I am permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated in the file; or
(c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified it.
(d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution are public and that a record of the contribution (including all personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with this project or the open source license(s) involved.