This is the official repository of IDSA to provide a general overview of what is available on the IDS Open Source Landscape.
All content published here is provided and approved by the IDSA Head Office. You are very welcome to contribute to this repository when you find a bug, want to suggest an improvement, or have an idea for a useful feature. For this, always create an issue and a corresponding branch, and follow our style guides as described below.
Please note that we have a code of conduct that all contributors should stick to.
You always have to create an issue if you want to propose a correction, improvement, or feature. Briefly and clearly describe the purpose of your contribution in the corresponding issue. The pre-defined labels improve the understanding of your intentions and help to follow the scope of your changes.
Bug Report: As mentioned above, bug reports should be submitted as an issue. To give others the chance to reproduce the error in order to find a solution as quickly as possible, the report should at least include the following information:
- Description: What did you expect and what happened instead?
- Steps to reproduce (system specs included)
- Relevant logs and/or media (optional): e.g. an image
The labels are listed at the
issues.
There are two types of labels: one describes the content of the issue and should be used by the
developer that creates the issue. The other one, starting with status
, will be added from the
developer that takes on the issue. New issues should be initially marked with status:open
.
- Basic labels:
bug
,documentation
duplicate
,enhancement
,good first issue
,help wanted
,invalid
,question
,wontfix
bug
: Something isn't workingdocumentation
: Improvements or additions to documentationduplicate
: This issue or pull request already existsenhancement
: New feature or requestgood first issue
: Good for newcomershelp wanted
: Extra attention is neededinvalid
: This doesn't seem rightquestion
: Further information is requestedwontfix
: This will not be worked on
After creating an issue yourself or if you want to address an existing issue, you have to create a
branch with a unique number and name that assigns it to an issue. Therefore, follow the guidelines
at https://deepsource.io/blog/git-branch-naming-conventions/. After your changes, update the
README.md
, Wiki, and CHANGELOG.md
with necessary details. Then, create a pull request and note
that committing to the main branch is not allowed. Please use the feature linked issues
to
link issues and pull requests.
Pull requests have to be approved by the IDSA Head Office.
We encourage all contributors to stick to the commit convention following the specification on Conventional Commits. In general, use the imperative in the present tense. A quick overview of the schema:
<type>[optional scope]: <description>
[optional body]
[optional footer(s)]
Types: fix
, feat
, chore
, test
, refactor
, docs
, release
. Append !
for breaking
changes to a type.
An example of a very good commit might look like this: feat![login]: add awesome breaking feature
IDSA uses the SemVer for versioning. The release versions are tagged with their respective version.