-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
vsd #247
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
vsd #247
Conversation
|
❌ @weizhoublue the
📝 What should I do to fix it?All proposed commits should include a sign-off in their messages, ideally at the end. ❔ Why it is requiredThe Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) is a lightweight way for contributors to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit the code they are contributing to the project. Here is the full text of the DCO, reformatted for readability:
Contributors sign-off that they adhere to these requirements by adding a Git even has a |
|
❌ @weizhoublue the 📝 What should I do to fix it?All proposed commits should include a sign-off in their messages, ideally at the end. ❔ Why it is requiredThe Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) is a lightweight way for contributors to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit the code they are contributing to the project. Here is the full text of the DCO, reformatted for readability:
Contributors sign-off that they adhere to these requirements by adding a Git even has a |
|
❌ @weizhoublue the 📝 What should I do to fix it?All proposed commits should include a sign-off in their messages, ideally at the end. ❔ Why it is requiredThe Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) is a lightweight way for contributors to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit the code they are contributing to the project. Here is the full text of the DCO, reformatted for readability:
Contributors sign-off that they adhere to these requirements by adding a Git even has a |
|
❌ @weizhoublue the 📝 What should I do to fix it?All proposed commits should include a sign-off in their messages, ideally at the end. ❔ Why it is requiredThe Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) is a lightweight way for contributors to certify that they wrote or otherwise have the right to submit the code they are contributing to the project. Here is the full text of the DCO, reformatted for readability:
Contributors sign-off that they adhere to these requirements by adding a Git even has a |
Codecov Report
@@ Coverage Diff @@
## main #247 +/- ##
=====================================
Coverage 9.09% 9.09%
=====================================
Files 3 3
Lines 22 22
=====================================
Hits 2 2
Misses 20 20
Flags with carried forward coverage won't be shown. Click here to find out more. 📣 Codecov can now indicate which changes are the most critical in Pull Requests. Learn more |
Signed-off-by: weizhou.lan@daocloud.io weizhou.lan@daocloud.io