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Update contributor documentation
Summary: It's fairly common for people to show up and be interested in finding easy stuff to work on. This stuff basically doesn't exist and probably never will: it doesn't make much sense to deliberately leave easy bugs broken just because someone might show up and want to fix a couple of easy bugs. Almost all of the work that's valuable to us requires a depth or bredth of context which can't be acquired in a few hours here and there, and probably always will. I think it also always //should//, in that as long as we continue refactoring and clearing technical debt aggressively and having solid static analysis support tools, we should never have a large backlog of human-intelligence codebase tasks. The closest we've ever come were probably `pht()` and `phutil_tag()`, which both have a lot of subtleties and we mostly automated `phutil_tag()` anyway. These tasks are also //incredibly boring// to write and review. So, accept this as a reality and realign the contributor documentation to try to deal with this case: - Set expectations about starter tasks not existing and throwing a couple of hours at the project writing code being a hard path. - Suggest non-code contributions which anyone can do. - Segue into code contributions with context and suggestions. Test Plan: Generated and read documentation. Reviewers: btrahan, chad Reviewed By: chad Subscribers: epriestley Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8872
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Introduction to contributing to Phabricator, Arcanist and libphutil.
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= You Are Awesome =
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Overview
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========
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Contributors are awesome. If you're thinking about contributing, that means
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you're thinking about being awesome. That already makes you a little bit
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awesome. But if you contribute you'll definitely be really, seriously awesome.
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If you'd like to contribute to Phabricator, this document can guide you though
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ways you can help improve the project.
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Writing code is valuable, but often isn't the best or easiest way to contribute.
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In most cases we are pretty good at fixing easy stuff quickly, so we don't have
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a big pile of easy stuff sitting around waiting for new contributors.
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This can make it difficult to contribute code if you only have a little bit of
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time to spend since most of the work that needs to be done usually requires some
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heavy lifting.
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Without writing any code, learning the whole codebase, making a big time
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commitment, or having to touch PHP, here are some ways you can materially
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contribute to Phabricator:
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- Send us an email or drop by IRC just to say "thanks". A big part of the
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reason we build this software is to help people solve problems, and knowing
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that our efforts are appreciated is really rewarding. You can find ways to
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get in touch in @{article:Give Feedback! Get Support!}
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- Recommend Phabricator to people who you think might find it useful. Our
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most powerful growth channel is word of mouth, and mentioning or tweeting
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about Phabricator helps the project grow. If writing a tweet sounds like
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too much work, you can use one of these form tweets written by our PR
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department to quickly and easily shill on our behalf. Hail corporate!
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> Phabricator seems like it's pretty okay
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> I am not being paid to mention Phabricator in this extemporaneous, completely organic tweet
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> Phabricator is objectively the best thing. Source: I am a certified, internationally recognized expert.
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- Report bugs and request features. We may not always be able to fix or build
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things right away, but knowing about issues users are encountering or
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features they'd like to see improves our ability to plan and prioritize.
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For ways to do this, see @{article:Give Feedback! Get Support!}
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- Give us feedback on planned features. Most of what we'll build in the next
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6-12 months currently exists on the [[ Roadmap ]] or in Maniphest. Telling
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us about use cases you have can help us build better products when the time
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comes to write the code.
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- Hang out in IRC, and maybe answer a question or two. IRC is a completely
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legit place for serious hackers to hang out anyway, but while you're there
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you might see someone ask a question that you know the answer to. Helping
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them out (or pointing them to the right documentation) is a big help to us.
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You can find details about the IRC channel in
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@{article:Give Feedback! Get Support!}
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If all of this sounds nice but you really just want to write some code, that's
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awesome too. The rest of this document (and the other articles in this section
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of the documentation) can help you get started.
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= Legal Stuff =
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Before we can accept contributions, you need to submit a super fine and fancy
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legal document called a Facebook Contributor License Agreement, which you can
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find here:
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Before we can accept source code contributions, you need to submit a super fine
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and fancy legal document called a Facebook Contributor License Agreement, which
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you can find here:
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https://developers.facebook.com/opensource/cla
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= Not Sure Where To Get Started? =
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If you want to contribute but aren't sure how (or want to try submitting a small
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patch before you build something bigger) you can search the Phabricator
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development install for open tasks (these are pretty up-to-date) or come find
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us in IRC and ask for some pointers.
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Because we're usually quick to fix easy bugs and issues, we often don't have a
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very good backlog of starter tasks.
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You can try searching in Maniphest for tasks tagged with "Easy", which might
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have something, but a lot of time this list is small and the tasks on it aren't
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very fun or interesting even if they aren't technically too difficult.
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In general, the best way to contribute is to come to us with a problem you
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encountered or something you're interested in building, and then work with us
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to find a solution to it or a plan to build it. We can help turn a hacky patch
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into something that's upstreamable, and you'll get a fix or feature you want.
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You can also look though the rest of the open tasks for something more
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substantive that you're interested in. This will give you a better chance of
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finding something that's relevant to you, but many tasks are large or blocked
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by other large tasks.
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If you do find something, feel free to leave a comment like "I'm interested in
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working on this, is this something I could reasonably help with?". We're happy
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to walk through things, break larger tasks down into more detail, provide
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pointers to similar changes and the right places in the codebase to get started,
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and generally figure out how to attack a problem.
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You can also just come find us in IRC and ask how to get started.
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= Submitting Patches =
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To submit patches against libphutil, Arcanist or Phabricator, create a commit
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and use ##arc## to send it for review (probably with ##epriestley## as a
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reviewer):
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and use `arc` to send it for review (probably with `epriestley` as a reviewer):
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$ arc diff
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When your change is accepted, send a pull request on GitHub. (You can also
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just submit a pull request, but Differential is preferred for nontrivial
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changes.)
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You can also submit a pull request on GitHub, but Differential is strongly
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preferred.
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= Suggested Reading =
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You should read the relevant coding convention documents before you submit a
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change and make sure you're following the project guidelines:
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change. If you're a new contributor, you don't need to worry about this too
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much. Just try to make your code look similar to the code around it, and we
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can help you through the details during review.
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- @{article:General Coding Standards} (for all languages)
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- @{article:PHP Coding Standards} (for PHP)
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