* Update contributing doc * Use better command
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Contributing
Issues
When opening an issue:
- include the full backtrace with your error
- include your Sidekiq initializer
- list versions you are using: Ruby, Rails, Sidekiq, OS, etc.
It's always better to include more info rather than less.
Code
It's always best to open an issue before investing a lot of time into a fix or new functionality. Functionality must meet my design goals and vision for the project to be accepted; I would be happy to discuss how your idea can best fit into Sidekiq.
Local development setup
You need Redis installed and a Ruby version that fulfills the requirements in
sidekiq.gemspec
. Then:
bundle install
And in order to run the tests and linter checks:
bundle exec rake
Beginner's Guide to Local Development Setup
1. Fork mperham/sidekiq project repository to your personal GitHub account
2. Click 'Clone or Download' button in personal sidekiq repository and copy HTTPS URL
3. On local machine, clone repository
git clone HTTPS-URL-FOR-PERSONAL-SIDEKIQ-REPOSITORY
4. Navigate to your local machine's sidekiq directory
cd sidekiq/
5. Set remote upstream branch
git remote add upstream https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq.git
6. Install necessary gems for development and start Redis server
bundle install
redis-server
7. Navivate to myapp (small Rails app inside Sidekiq repository used for development)
cd myapp/
8. Run required migration in order to launch Rails app
rake db:migrate
9. Launch Rails app
rails s
10. Create feature branch and start contributing!
git checkout -b new_feature_name
11. Keep your forked branch up to date with changes in main repo
git pull upstream main
Legal
By submitting a Pull Request, you disavow any rights or claims to any changes submitted to the Sidekiq project and assign the copyright of those changes to Contributed Systems LLC.
If you cannot or do not want to reassign those rights (your employment contract for your employer may not allow this), you should not submit a PR. Open an issue and someone else can do the work.
This is a legal way of saying "If you submit a PR to us, that code becomes ours". 99.9% of the time that's what you intend anyways; we hope it doesn't scare you away from contributing.