Mainroad welcomes contributions and corrections. Before contributing, please make sure you have read the guidelines below. If you're a newcomer to open source and you haven't contributed to other projects or used Git before, you should make yourself familiar before proceeding.
The issue tracker is the preferred channel for bug reports and features requests, but please respect the following restrictions:
General requirements
- Issue must be written in English.
- Please do not combine a few problems or feature requests in one issue. Create separate issues if needed.
- Please do not create an issue that contains only title. Write a clear title and useful description.
- Please do not use the issue tracker for personal support requests.
- Please do not post comments consisting solely of "+1" or emoji. The project maintainer reserve the right to delete such comments. Use GitHub's reactions feature instead.
- Search first before filing a new issue. Please check existing open or recently closed issues to make sure somebody else hasn't already reported the issue.
Reporting bugs
When creating a new bug issue make sure to include the following information:
- Your environment e.g. OS version, Hugo version, theme is up to date? Anything unusual about your environment or deployment.
- Specify the exact steps to reproduce the bug in as many details as possible with code examples. Include links to files or demo projects, or copy/pasteable snippets, which you use in those examples.
- Any message or error you get from Hugo, if you do.
- A screenshot of any visual bug.
Note: If you find a Closed issue that seems like it is the same bug that you're experiencing, open a new issue and include a link to the original issue in the body of your new one.
Proposing features
- Explain the proposed feature, what it should do, why it is useful, and alternatives considered if possible. Please note that the project maintainer may close this issue or ask you to create a Pull Request if this is not something that the project maintainer sees as a sufficiently high priority.
Following these guidelines helps maintainer and the community understand your suggestion and find related suggestions.
Please ask first before embarking on any significant pull request (e.g. implementing features or refactoring code), otherwise, you risk spending a lot of time working on something that the project maintainer might not want to merge into the project.
Please respect our Pull Request Acceptance Criteria. For larger changes, you will likely receive multiple rounds of comments and it may take some time to complete.
- Keep the change in a single PR as small as possible
- 1 PR = 1 FIX or FEATURE (do not combine things, send separate PR if needed)
- PR with irrelevant changes won't be merged. If you do want to fix formatting or style, do that in a separate PR
- Use a clear and descriptive branch name (e.g. NOT "patch-1" or "update")
- Don't create a Pull Request from master branch
- Provide a reasonable PR title and description
- PR must be written in English
- If the PR changes the UI it should include before-and-after screenshots or a link to a video
- Keep PR up to date with upstream/master
- Pay attention to any automated CI failures reported in the Pull Request
- PR solves a common use case that several users will need in their real-life projects, not only your specific problems
- If you've added or modify SVG, ensure that each SVG file:
- Be less than 2048 bytes
- Be minified to a single line with no formatting
- Not contain any JS or CSS section inside it
- Not contain any additional transformations (matrix, translate, scale)
- Сompatible with GPLv2 License
- Maintain clean commit history and use meaningful commit messages. Pull Requests with messy commit history (with commit messages like "update", "another update", etc) are difficult to review and won't be merged, even if the changes are good enough
- Be prepared to answer questions and make code changes. The project maintainer expect you to be reasonably responsive to those feedback, otherwise the PR will be closed after 2-4 weeks of inactivity
- You have Node & npm installed
- You have Hugo installed at v0.48.0+
- You are familiar with Git
- Fork the repository
- Clone down the repository to your local system
- Run
npm i
in the repository root - Create a new dedicated branch with descriptive name from
master
- Make your change and commit to the new branch from the previous step
- Write a clear commit message
- If you've added code that need documentation, update the README.md
- Make sure your code lints (
npm test
) - Push to your fork
- Submit a Pull Request (PR) to the upstream
By contributing to Mainroad, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under GPLv2 License.