Want to contribute? Great! First, read this page (including the small print at the end).
See also: Dart's code of conduct
Before we can use your code, you must sign the Google Individual Contributor License Agreement (CLA), which you can do online. The CLA is necessary mainly because you own the copyright to your changes, even after your contribution becomes part of our codebase, so we need your permission to use and distribute your code. We also need to be sure of various other things—for instance that you‘ll tell us if you know that your code infringes on other people’s patents. You don‘t have to sign the CLA until after you’ve submitted your code for review and a member has approved it, but you must do it before we can put your code into our codebase.
Before you start working on a larger contribution, you should get in touch with us first through the issue tracker with your idea so that we can help out and possibly guide you. Coordinating up front makes it much easier to avoid frustration later on.
All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review.
All files in the project must start with the following header.
// Copyright (c) 2018, the Dart project authors. Please see the AUTHORS file // for details. All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a // BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
Contributing code is easy.
https://github.com/dart-lang/linter
into your own GitHub account.git clone git@github.com:<your_name_here>/linter.git
cd linter
git remote add upstream git@github.com:dart-lang/linter.git
(So that you fetch from the main repository, not your clone, when running git fetch et al.)To start working on a patch:
git fetch upstream
git checkout upstream/main -b name_of_your_branch
dart format
on modified files; our build will fail if you don't!)git commit -a -m "<your informative commit message>"
git push origin name_of_your_branch
To send us a pull request:
git pull-request
(if you are using Hub) or go to https://github.com/dart-lang/linter
and click the “Compare & pull request” buttonPlease make sure all your checkins have detailed commit messages explaining the patch and if a PR is not ready to land, consider making it clear in the description and/or prefixing the title with “WIP”.
Once you've gotten an LGTM from a project maintainer, submit your changes to the main
branch using one of the following methods:
git push upstream name_of_your_branch:main
(requires commit access)AUTHORS
file.Contributions made by corporations are covered by a different agreement than the one above, the Software Grant and Corporate Contributor License Agreement.