Find an area you can help with and do it. Open source is about collaboration and open participation. Try to make your code look like what already exists and submit a pull request.
The list of issues is a good place to start, especially the ones tagged as "help wanted" (but don't let that stop you from looking at others). If you're looking for additional ideas, the code includes TODO
comments for minor to major improvements. Grep is your friend.
Additional tests are rewarded with an immense amount of positive karma.
More documentation or updates/fixes to existing documentation are also very welcome. However, if submitting a PR(Pull-Request) consisting of documentation changes only, please try to ensure that the change is significantly more substantial than one or two lines. For example, working through an install document and making changes and updates throughout as you find issues is worth a PR. For typos and other small changes, either contact one of the developers, or if you think it's a significant enough error to cause problems for other users, please feel free to open an issue.
If any help is needed during your effort to contribute on this project, please don't hesitate to contact us:
- Chat: Gitter.
- Forum
- Website
- Mailing list: join the ~MimbleWimble team and subscribe on Launchpad.
- News:
- Twitter for the Grin council: @grincouncil
- Twitter bot that scrapes headlines, mailing list, and reddit posts related to MimbleWinble/Grin: @grinmw
Note: [draft part! to be reviewed and discussed]
Please consider putting one of the following prefixes in the title of your pull-request:
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- docs: Documentation only changes
- style: Formatting, missing semi-colons, white-space, etc
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- test: Adding missing tests
- chore: Maintain. Changes to the build process or auxiliary tools/libraries/documentation
For example: fix: a panick on xxx when grin exiting
. Please don't worry if you can't find a suitable prefix, this's just optional, not mandatory.
Grin uses rustfmt
to maintain consistent formatting, and we're using the git commit hook as explained below.
You should use rustup. See build docs for more info.
rustup component add rustfmt-preview
rustup update
rustfmt --version
and verify you did get version rustfmt 0.99.1-stable (da17b689 2018-08-04)
or newer.
There is a basic git pre-commit hook in the repo, and this pre-commit hook will be automatically configured in this project, once you run cargo build
for the 1st time.
Or you can config it manually with the following command without building, and check it:
git config core.hooksPath ./.hooks
git config --list | grep hook
The output will be:
core.hookspath=./.hooks
Note: The pre-commit hook will not prevent commits if style issues are present, instead it will indicate any files that need formatting, and it will automatically run rustfmt
on your changed files, each time when you try to do git commit
.
You can run rustfmt (i.e. rustfmt-preview) on one file or on all files.
For example:
rustfmt client.rs
Notes:
-
Please add the rustfmt corrections as a separate commit at the end of your Pull Request to make the reviewers happy.
-
If you're still not sure about what should do on the format, please feel free to ignore it. Since
rustfmt
is just a tool to make your code having pretty formatting, your changed code is definitely more important than the format. Hope you're happy to contribute on this open source project! -
And anyway please don't use
if at all possible.cargo +nightly fmt
Even one word correction are welcome! Our objective is to encourage you to get interested in Grin and contribute in any way possible. Thanks for any help!