Icard/angular-clarity-master(work.../node_modules/@clr/city/CONTRIBUTING.md

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2024-07-16 14:55:36 +00:00
# Contributing to Clarity City
The clarity-city project team welcomes contributions from the community. Before you start working with Clarity City, please
read our [Developer Certificate of Origin](https://cla.vmware.com/dco). All contributions to this repository must be
signed as described on that page. Your signature certifies that you wrote the patch or have the right to pass it on
as an open-source patch.
## Contribution Flow
This is a rough outline of what a contributor's workflow looks like:
- Create a topic branch from where you want to base your work
- Make commits of logical units
- Make sure your commit messages are in the proper format (see below)
- Push your changes to a topic branch in your fork of the repository
- Submit a pull request
Example:
``` shell
git remote add upstream https://github.com/vmware/clarity-city.git
git checkout -b my-new-feature master
git commit -a
git push origin my-new-feature
```
### Staying In Sync With Upstream
When your branch gets out of sync with the vmware/master branch, use the following to update:
``` shell
git checkout my-new-feature
git fetch -a
git pull --rebase upstream master
git push --force-with-lease origin my-new-feature
```
### Updating pull requests
If your PR fails to pass CI or needs changes based on code review, you'll most likely want to squash these changes into
existing commits.
If your pull request contains a single commit or your changes are related to the most recent commit, you can simply
amend the commit.
``` shell
git add .
git commit --amend
git push --force-with-lease origin my-new-feature
```
If you need to squash changes into an earlier commit, you can use:
``` shell
git add .
git commit --fixup <commit>
git rebase -i --autosquash master
git push --force-with-lease origin my-new-feature
```
Be sure to add a comment to the PR indicating your new changes are ready to review, as GitHub does not generate a
notification when you git push.
### Code Style
### Formatting Commit Messages
We follow the conventions on [How to Write a Git Commit Message](http://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/).
Be sure to include any related GitHub issue references in the commit message. See
[GFM syntax](https://guides.github.com/features/mastering-markdown/#GitHub-flavored-markdown) for referencing issues
and commits.
## Reporting Bugs and Creating Issues
When opening a new issue, try to roughly follow the commit message format conventions above.