# Find and claim an issue On this page, you choose the issue you want to work on. As a contributor, you can work on whatever you want. If you are new to contributing, you should start by working with our known issues. ## Understand the issue types An existing issue is something reported by a Docker user. As issues come in, our maintainers triage them. Triage is its own topic. For now, it is important for you to know that triage includes ranking issues according to difficulty. Triaged issues have one of these labels:
Label Experience level guideline
exp/beginner You have made less than ten contributions in your life time to any open source project.
exp/novice You have made more than ten contributions to an open source project or at least 5 contributions to Docker.
exp/proficient You have made more than five contributions to Docker which amount to at least 200 code lines or 1000 documentation lines.
exp/expert You have made less than 20 commits to Docker which amount to 500-1000 code lines or 1000-3000 documentation lines.
exp/master You have made more than 20 commits to Docker and greater than 1000 code lines or 3000 documentation lines.
These labels are guidelines. You might have written a whole plugin for Docker in a personal project and never contributed to Docker. With that kind of experience, you could take on an exp/expert or exp/master level issue. ## Claim a beginner or novice issue To claim an issue: 1. Go to the `docker/docker` repository. 2. Click the "Issues" link. A list of the open issues appears. ![Open issues](/project/images/issue_list.png) 3. From the "Labels" drop-down, select exp/beginner. The system filters to show only open exp/beginner issues. 4. Open an issue that interests you. The comments on the issues describe the problem and can provide information for a potential solution. 5. When you find an open issue that both interests you and is unclaimed, add a `#dibs` comment. Make sure that no other user has chosen to work on the issue. The project does not permit external contributors to assign issues to themselves. Read the comments to find if a user claimed the issue by leaving a `#dibs` comment on the issue. 7. Your issue # will be different depending on what you claimed. After a moment, Gordon the Docker bot, changes the issue status to claimed. The following example shows issue #11038. ![Easy issue](/project/images/easy_issue.png) 8. Make a note of the issue number; you will need it for later. ## Sync your fork and create a new branch If you have followed along in this guide, you forked the `docker/docker` repository. Maybe that was an hour ago or a few days ago. In any case, before you start working on your issue, sync your repository with the upstream `docker/docker` master. Syncing ensures your repository has the latest changes. To sync your repository: 1. Open a terminal on your local host. 2. Change directory to the `docker-fork` root. $ cd ~/repos/docker-fork 3. Checkout the master branch. $ git checkout master Switched to branch 'master' Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/master'. Recall that `origin/master` is a branch on your remote GitHub repository. 4. Make sure you have the upstream remote `docker/docker` by listing them. $ git remote -v origin https://github.com/moxiegirl/docker.git (fetch) origin https://github.com/moxiegirl/docker.git (push) upstream https://github.com/docker/docker.git (fetch) upstream https://github.com/docker/docker.git (push) If the `upstream` is missing, add it. $ git remote add upstream https://github.com/docker/docker.git 5. Fetch all the changes from the `upstream master` branch. $ git fetch upstream master remote: Counting objects: 141, done. remote: Compressing objects: 100% (29/29), done. remote: Total 141 (delta 52), reused 46 (delta 46), pack-reused 66 Receiving objects: 100% (141/141), 112.43 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done. Resolving deltas: 100% (79/79), done. From github.com:docker/docker * branch master -> FETCH_HEAD This command says get all the changes from the `master` branch belonging to the `upstream` remote. 7. Rebase your local master with the `upstream/master`. $ git rebase upstream/master First, rewinding head to replay your work on top of it... Fast-forwarded master to upstream/master. This command applies all the commits from the upstream master to your local master. 8. Check the status of your local branch. $ git status On branch master Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 38 commits. (use "git push" to publish your local commits) nothing to commit, working directory clean Your local repository now has all the changes from the `upstream` remote. You need to push the changes to your own remote fork which is `origin master`. 9. Push the rebased master to `origin master`. $ git push origin master Username for 'https://github.com': moxiegirl Password for 'https://moxiegirl@github.com': Counting objects: 223, done. Compressing objects: 100% (38/38), done. Writing objects: 100% (69/69), 8.76 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done. Total 69 (delta 53), reused 47 (delta 31) To https://github.com/moxiegirl/docker.git 8e107a9..5035fa1 master -> master 9. Create a new feature branch to work on your issue. Your branch name should have the format `XXXX-descriptive` where `XXXX` is the issue number you are working on. For example: $ git checkout -b 11038-fix-rhel-link Switched to a new branch '11038-fix-rhel-link' Your branch should be up-to-date with the `upstream/master`. Why? Because you branched off a freshly synced master. Let's check this anyway in the next step. 9. Rebase your branch from upstream/master. $ git rebase upstream/master Current branch 11038-fix-rhel-link is up to date. At this point, your local branch, your remote repository, and the Docker repository all have identical code. You are ready to make changes for your issue. ## Where to go next At this point, you know what you want to work on and you have a branch to do your work in. Go onto the next section to learn [how to work on your changes](/project/work-issue/).