8.5 KiB
Contributing to Pico
Pico aims to be a high quality Content Management System (CMS) but at the same time wants to give contributors freedom when submitting fixes or improvements.
As such we want to encourage but not obligate you, the contributor, to follow these guidelines. The only exception to this are the guidelines elucidated in the Prevent merge-hell
section.
Having said that: we really appreciate it when you apply the guidelines in part or wholly as that will save us time which, in turn, we can spend on bugfixes and new features.
Issues
If you want to report an issue with Pico's core, please create a new Issue on GitHub. Concerning problems with plugins or themes, please refer to the website of the developer of this plugin or theme.
Before creating a new Issue on GitHub, please make sure the problem wasn't reported yet using GitHubs search engine. Please describe your issue as clear as possible and always include steps to reproduce the problem.
This is an example of what information to include with your issue.
Version
- Operating System and version
- Pico Version
- other installed software, plugins, if applicable
- hardware information, if applicable
Bug Description
- A concise description of what the problem is. Pure description, no narrative or conversational language.
Severity
- Trivial, Minor, Major, or Catastrophic
Steps to Reproduce
- Step by step instructions on how to reproduce this bug.
- Do not assume anything, the more detailed your list of instructions, the easier it is for the developer to track down the problem!
Actual Behavior
- Type what happens when you follow the instructions. This is the manifestation of the bug.
Expected Behavior
- Type what you expected to happen when you followed the instructions.
- This is important, because you may have misunderstood something or missed a step,
and knowing what you expected to see will help the developer recognize that.
Troubleshooting/Testing Steps Attempted
- Describe anything you did to try to fix it on your own.
Workaround
- If you found a way to make the program work in spite of the bug, describe how you did it here.
Contributing code
Once you decide you want to contribute to Pico's core (which we really appreciate!) you can fork the project from https://github.com/picocms/Pico. If you're interested in developing a plugin or theme for Pico, please refer to the development section of our website.
Prevent merge-hell
Please do not develop your contribution on the master
branch of your fork, but create a separate feature branch, that is based off the master
branch, for each feature that you want to contribute.
Not doing so means that if you decide to work on two separate features and place a pull request for one of them, that the changes of the other issue that you are working on is also submitted. Even if it is not completely finished.
To get more information about the usage of Git, please refer to the Pro Git book written by Scott Chacon and/or this help page of GitHub.
Pull Requests
Please keep in mind that pull requests should be small (i.e. one feature per request), stick to existing coding conventions and documentation should be updated if required. It's encouraged to make commits of logical units and check for unnecessary whitespace before committing (try git diff --check
). Please reference issue numbers in your commit messages where appropriate.
Coding Standards
Pico uses the PSR-2 Coding Standard as defined by the PHP Framework Interoperability Group (PHP-FIG).
For historical reasons we don't use formal namespaces. Markdown files in the content-sample
folder (the inline documentation) must follow a hard limit of 80 characters line length.
It is recommended to check your code using PHP_CodeSniffer using the PSR2
standard using the following command:
$ ./bin/phpcs --standard=PSR2 [file(s)]
With this command you can specify a file or folder to limit which files it will check or omit that argument altogether, in which case the current directory is checked.
Keep documentation in sync
Pico accepts the problems of having redundant documentation on different places (concretely Pico's inline user docs, the README.md
and the website) for the sake of a better user experience. When updating the docs, please make sure to keep them in sync.
If you update the README.md
or content-sample/index.md
, please make sure to update the corresponding files in the _docs
folder of the gh-pages
branch (i.e. Pico's website) and vice versa. Unfortunately this involves three (!) different markdown parsers. If you're experiencing problems, use Pico's erusev/parsedown-extra
as a reference. You can try to make the contents compatible to Redcarpet by yourself, otherwise please address the issues in your pull request message and we'll take care of it.
Versioning
Pico follows Semantic Versioning 2.0 and uses version numbers like MAJOR
.MINOR
.PATCH
. We will increment the:
MAJOR
version when we make incompatible API changes,MINOR
version when we add functionality in a backwards-compatible manner, andPATCH
version when we make backwards-compatible bug fixes.
For more information please refer to the http://semver.org website.
Branching
The master
branch contains the current development version of Pico. It is likely unstable and not ready for production use.
However, the master
branch always consists of a deployable (but not necessarily deployed) version of Pico. As soon as development of a new MAJOR
or MINOR
release starts, a separate branch (e.g. pico-1.1
) is created and a pull request is opened to receive the desired feedback.
Pico's actual development happens in separate development branches. Development branches are prefixed by:
feature/
for bigger features,enhancement/
for smaller improvements, andbugfix/
for non-trivial bug fixes.
As soon as development reaches a point where feedback is appreciated, a pull request is opened. After some time (very soon for bug fixes, and other improvements should have a reasonable feedback phase) the pull request is merged and the development branch will be deleted. Trivial bug fixes which will be part of the next PATCH
version will be merged directly into master
.
Build & Release process
This is work in progress. Please refer to #268 for details.
We're using Travis CI to automate the build & release process of Pico. It generates and deploys phpDoc class docs for new releases and on every commit to the master
branch. Travis also prepares new releases by generating Pico's pre-built packages and uploading them to GitHub.
It is important that each commit to master
is deployable. Once a feature/branch
or the master
branch have reached a point where the need for a version increase is necessary, you can trigger this process by pushing a new Git Tag. The tag references a (usually empty) commit which message follows the following template:
Example:
```
Pico Version 1.0.1
* [New] ...
* [Changed] ...
* [Removed] ...
* [Security] ...
```
After deploying a new release, you will need to amend the release information on GitHub with the release title (taken from changelog), and changelog itself.
Note
-
Releases will be available at: https://github.com/picocms/Pico/releases
-
Pico will be automatically updated on Packagist