Community involvement is essential to RubyGems. We want to keep it as easy as possible to contribute changes. There are a few guidelines that we need contributors to follow to reduce the time it takes to get changes merged in.
-
New features should be coupled with tests.
-
Ensure that your code blends well with ours:
- No trailing whitespace
- Match indentation (two spaces)
- Match coding style (run
rake rubocop
)
-
If any new files are added or existing files removed in a commit or PR, please update the
Manifest.txt
accordingly. This can be done by runningrake update_manifest
-
Don't modify the history file or version number.
-
If you have any questions, Feel free to join us on Slack, you can register by signing up at http://slack.bundler.io or file an issue here: http://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/issues
For more information and ideas on how to contribute to RubyGems ecosystem, see here: http://guides.rubygems.org/contributing/
$ rake setup
$ rake test
To run commands like gem install
from the repo:
$ ruby -Ilib bin/gem install
To run bundler test:
$ cd bundler
$ git submodule update --init --recursive
$ bin/rake spec:deps
$ bin/rspec spec
RubyGems uses labels to track all issues and pull requests. In order to provide guidance to the community this is documentation of how labels are used in the rubygems repository.
These labels are made to guide contributors to issue/pull requests that they
can help with. That are marked with a light gray contribution: *
- small - The issue described here will take a small amount of work to resolve, and is a good option for a new contributor
- unclaimed - The issue has not been claimed for work, and is awaiting willing volunteers!
Most Issues or pull requests will have a light green type: *
label, which
describes the type of the issue or pull request.
- bug report - An issue describing a bug in rubygems. This would be something that is broken, confusing, unexpected behavior etc.
- bug fix - A pull request that fixes a bug report.
- feature request - An issue describing a request for a new feature or enhancement.
- feature implementation - A pull request implementing a feature request.
- question - An issue that is a more of a question than a call for specific changes in the codebase.
- cleanup - Generally for a pull request that improves the code base without fixing a bug or implementing a feature.
- major bump - This issue or pull request requires a major version bump
- administrative - This issue relates to administrative tasks that need to take place as it relates to rubygems
- documentation - This issue relates to improving the documentation for in this repo. Note that much of the rubygems documentation is here: https://github.com/rubygems/guides
The light yellow status: *
labels that indicate the state of an issue,
where it is in the process from being submitted to being closed. These are
listed in rough progression order from submitted to closed.
- triage - This is an issue or pull request that needs to be properly labeled by by a maintainer.
- confirmed - This issue/pull request has been accepted as valid, but is not yet immediately ready for work.
- ready - An issue that is available for collaboration. This issue should have existing discussion on the problem, and a description of how to go about solving it.
- working - An issue that has a specific invidual assigned to and planning to do work on it.
- user feedback required - The issue/pull request is blocked pending more feedback from an end user
- blocked / backlog - the issue/pull request is currently unable to move forward because of some specific reason, generally this will be a reason that is outside RubyGems or needs feedback from some specific individual or group, and it may be a while before something it is resolved.
Reasons are why an issue / pull request was closed without being worked on or
accepted. There should also be more detailed information in the comments. The
closed reason labels are maroon closed: *
.
- duplicate - This is a duplicate of an existing bug. The comments must reference the existing issue.
- abandonded - This is an issue/pull request that has aged off, is no longer applicable or similar.
- declined - An issue that won't be fixed/implemented or a pull request that is not accepted.
- deprecated - An issue/pull request that no longer applies to the actively maintained codebase.
- discussion - An issue/pull that is no longer about a concrete change, and is instead being used for discussion.
These are aspects of the codebase, or what general area the issue or pull
request pertains too. Not all issues will have a category. All categorized
issues have a blue category: *
label.
- gemspec - related to the gem specification itself
- API - related to the public supported rubygems API. This is the code API, not a network related API.
- command - related to something in
Gem::Commands
- install - related to gem installations
- documentation - related to updating / fixing / clarifying documentation or guides
If an issue or pull request pertains to only one platform, then it should have
an appropriate purple platform: *
label. Current platform labels:
windows, java, osx, linux