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Hacktoberfest Issue Mirror

Note: This repo has no real content, other than this README. Do not file issues or comments here. It simply mirrors our beginner friendly issues to make them discoverable. This guide should help you get started making your first PR!

Background

Puppet uses Jira for most of our issue tracking. This has the unfortunate side effect that the Hacktoberfest filters won't pick them up. This repository mirrors issues so that you can find them. You should use the Jira links to get back to the actual ticket to find more information about it, participate in discussions, or to file your PR.

Getting Started

When you see a Hacktoberfest issue that looks intriguing and within your skillset, you'll want to follow it back to the original Jira ticket. That will have any further discussion and links to other background tickets or other information. You'll use the project name to identify the repository to work in. For example:

Jira Project Github Repository
PUP puppetlabs/puppet
FACT puppetlabs/facter
PDK puppetlabs/pdk
puppetlabs/pdk-templates
rodjek/rspec-puppet
rodjek/puppet-lint
SERVER puppetlabs/puppetserver
PDOC puppetlabs/puppet-strings
PDB puppetlabs/puppetdb
RK puppetlabs/r10k
TK puppetlabs/trapperkeeper
MODULES various repositories named puppetlabs/puppetlabs-<modulename>

Getting Help

As you're getting into the codebase, you might run into things that don't make sense. Or you might need a little help understanding the architecture, or the execution model. In any case the community is here to help you out!

Making a Pull Request

  1. Make sure you have a Jira account.
    • You'll need this to participate in issue discussions.
  2. Make sure you have a GitHub account.
    • You'll need this to make the pull request.
  3. Make your code changes:
    • Fork the repository on GitHub.
    • Create a topic branch in your fork from the master branch.
      • git checkout -b <a_name_for_your_contribution> master
      • Please don't work directly on the master branch.
    • Make commits of logical and atomic units. This means that the commit contains an entire fix and nothing but that fix (and any docs/tests/etc that go along with it).
    • Check for unnecessary whitespace with git diff --check before committing.
    • Make sure your commit messages are in the proper format. See example below.
      (PUP-1234) Make the example in CONTRIBUTING imperative and concrete
      
      Without this patch applied the example commit message in the CONTRIBUTING
      document is not a concrete example. This is a problem because the
      contributor is left to imagine what the commit message should look like
      based on a description rather than an example. This patch fixes the
      problem by making the example concrete and imperative.
      
      The first line is a real-life imperative statement with a ticket number
      from our issue tracker. The body describes the behavior without the patch,
      why this is a problem, and how the patch fixes the problem when applied.
      
    • Make sure you have added the necessary tests for your changes. See the quickstart guide if you need help getting started with this.
  4. Sign the Contributor License Agreement.
  5. Commit and push your tested code changes to your topic branch in your fork of the repo.
  6. Submit a pull request to the parent repository.
  7. Update the Jira ticket to indicate that you're ready for it to be reviewed.
    • Status: Ready for Merge.
    • Include a link to the pull request in the ticket.
    • If feedback is given then make sure to update and address the feedback. Pull requests may be closed if there is no response.

Complete Contributor Guidelines

This document is streamlined to cover the common use case of the beginner friendly issues only. It doesn't cover other edge cases, such as targeting a release branch, all-in-one vendor packaging, or any other advanced use cases. Please see the complete CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.

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