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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing Guidelines

Contributions are welcome via GitHub pull requests. This document outlines the process to help get your contribution accepted.

Sign off Your Work

The Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) is a lightweight way for contributors to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit the code they are contributing to the project. Here is the full text of the DCO. Contributors must sign-off that they adhere to these requirements by adding a Signed-off-by line to commit messages.

This is my commit message

Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <[email protected]>

See git help commit:

-s, --signoff
    Add Signed-off-by line by the committer at the end of the commit log
    message. The meaning of a signoff depends on the project, but it typically
    certifies that committer has the rights to submit this work under the same
    license and agrees to a Developer Certificate of Origin (see
    http://developercertificate.org/ for more information).

How to Contribute

  1. Fork this repository, develop, and test your changes
  2. Remember to sign off your commits as described above
  3. Submit a pull request

NOTE: In order to make testing and merging of PRs easier, please submit changes to multiple charts in separate PRs.

Technical Requirements

Once changes have been merged, the release job will automatically run to package and release changed charts.

Immutability

Chart releases must be immutable. Any change to a chart warrants a chart version bump even if it is only changed to the documentation.

Versioning

The chart version should follow semver.

Charts should start at 1.0.0. Any breaking (backwards incompatible) changes to a chart should:

  1. Bump the MAJOR version
  2. In the README, under a section called "Upgrading", describe the manual steps necessary to upgrade to the new (specified) MAJOR version

Pre-commit

This repo supports the pre-commit framework. By installing the framework (see docs) it is possible to perform the chart linting step before committing your code. This can help prevent linter issues in the pipeline. Note that this requires having Docker running on your development environment.