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ee26e282cc
Make my feelings about bug reporting by screencast known.
268 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
268 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
# Contribution guidelines
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Thank you for considering contributing to the GTK project!
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These guidelines are meant for new contributors, regardless of their level
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of proficiency; following them allows the maintainers of the GTK project to
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more effectively evaluate your contribution, and provide prompt feedback to
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you. Additionally, by following these guidelines you clearly communicate
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that you respect the time and effort that the people developing GTK put into
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managing the project.
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GTK is a complex free software GUI toolkit, and it would not exist without
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contributions from the free and open source software community. There are
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many things that we value:
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- bug reporting and fixing
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- documentation and examples
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- tests
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- new features
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Please, do not use the issue tracker for support questions. If you have
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questions on how to use GTK effectively, you can use:
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- the `#gtk` IRC channel on irc.gnome.org
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- the [gtk tag on the GNOME Discourse instance](https://discourse.gnome.org/tag/gtk)
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You can also look at the GTK tag on [Stack
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Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/gtk).
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The issue tracker is meant to be used for actionable issues only.
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## How to report bugs
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### Security issues
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You should not open a new issue for security related questions.
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When in doubt, send an email to the [security](mailto:security@gnome.org)
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mailing list.
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### Bug reports
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If you're reporting a bug make sure to list:
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0. which version of GTK are you using?
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0. which operating system are you using?
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0. the necessary steps to reproduce the issue
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0. the expected outcome
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0. a description of the behavior; screenshots are also welcome
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0. a small, self-contained example exhibiting the behavior; if this
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is not available, try reproducing the issue using the GTK examples
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or interactive tests
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If the issue includes a crash, you should also include:
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0. the eventual warnings printed on the terminal
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0. a backtrace, obtained with tools such as GDB or LLDB
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It is fine to include screenshots of screen recordings to demonstrate
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an issue that is best to understand visually, but please don't just
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dump screen recordings without further details into issues. It is
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essential that the problem is described in enough detail to reproduce
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it without watching a video.
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For small issues, such as:
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- spelling/grammar fixes in the documentation
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- typo correction
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- comment clean ups
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- changes to metadata files (CI, `.gitignore`)
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- build system changes
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- source tree clean ups and reorganizations
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You should directly open a merge request instead of filing a new issue.
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### Features and enhancements
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Feature discussion can be open ended and require high bandwidth channels; if
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you are proposing a new feature on the issue tracker, make sure to make
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an actionable proposal, and list:
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0. what you're trying to achieve
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0. prior art, in other toolkits or applications
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0. design and theming changes
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If you're proposing the integration of new features it helps to have
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multiple applications using shared or similar code, especially if they have
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iterated over it various times.
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Each feature should also come fully documented, and with tests.
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## Your first contribution
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### Prerequisites
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If you want to contribute to the GTK project, you will need to have the
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development tools appropriate for your operating system, including:
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- Python 3.x
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- Meson
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- Ninja
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- Gettext (19.7 or newer)
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- a [C99 compatible compiler](https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GLib/CompilerRequirements)
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Up-to-date instructions about developing GNOME applications and libraries
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can be found on [the GNOME Developer Center](https://developer.gnome.org).
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The GTK project uses GitLab for code hosting and for tracking issues. More
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information about using GitLab can be found [on the GNOME
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wiki](https://wiki.gnome.org/GitLab).
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### Dependencies
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In order to get GTK from Git installed on your system, you need to have the
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required versions of all the software dependencies required by GTK; typically,
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this means a recent version of GLib, Cairo, Pango, and ATK, as well as the
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platform-specific dependencies for the windowing system you are using (Wayland,
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X11, Windows, or macOS).
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The core dependencies for GTK are:
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- [GLib, GObject, and GIO](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib)
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- [Cairo](http://cairographics.org)
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- [Pango](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/pango)
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- [GdkPixbuf](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gdk-pixbuf)
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- [Epoxy](https://github.com/anholt/libepoxy)
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- [ATK](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/atk)
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- [Graphene](https://github.com/ebassi/graphene)
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GTK will attempt to download and build some of these dependencies if it
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cannot find them on your system.
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Additionally, you may want to look at projects that create a development
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environment for you, like [jhbuild](https://wiki.gnome.org/HowDoI/Jhbuild)
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and [gvsbuild](https://github.com/wingtk/gvsbuild).
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### Getting started
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You should start by forking the GTK repository from the GitLab web UI, and
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cloning from your fork:
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```sh
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$ git clone https://gitlab.gnome.org/yourusername/gtk.git
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$ cd gtk
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```
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**Note**: if you plan to push changes to back to the main repository and
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have a GNOME account, you can skip the fork, and use the following instead:
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```sh
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$ git clone git@gitlab.gnome.org:GNOME/gtk.git
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$ cd gtk
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```
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To compile the Git version of GTK on your system, you will need to
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configure your build using Meson:
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```sh
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$ meson _builddir .
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$ cd _builddir
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$ ninja
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```
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Typically, you should work on your own branch:
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```sh
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$ git checkout -b your-branch
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```
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Once you've finished working on the bug fix or feature, push the branch
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to the Git repository and open a new merge request, to let the GTK
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maintainers review your contribution.
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### Code reviews
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Each contribution is reviewed by the core developers of the GTK project.
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The [CODEOWNERS](./docs/CODEOWNERS) document contains the list of core
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contributors to GTK and the areas for which they are responsible; you
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should ensure to receive their review and signoff on your changes.
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### Commit messages
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The expected format for git commit messages is as follows:
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```plain
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Short explanation of the commit
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Longer explanation explaining exactly what's changed, whether any
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external or private interfaces changed, what bugs were fixed (with bug
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tracker reference if applicable) and so forth. Be concise but not too
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brief.
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Closes #1234
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```
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- Always add a brief description of the commit to the _first_ line of
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the commit and terminate by two newlines (it will work without the
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second newline, but that is not nice for the interfaces).
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- First line (the brief description) must only be one sentence and
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should start with a capital letter unless it starts with a lowercase
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symbol or identifier. Don't use a trailing period either. Don't exceed
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72 characters.
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- The main description (the body) is normal prose and should use normal
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punctuation and capital letters where appropriate. Consider the commit
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message as an email sent to the developers (or yourself, six months
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down the line) detailing **why** you changed something. There's no need
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to specify the **how**: the changes can be inlined.
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- When committing code on behalf of others use the `--author` option, e.g.
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`git commit -a --author "Joe Coder <joe@coder.org>"` and `--signoff`.
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- If your commit is addressing an issue, use the
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[GitLab syntax](https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/user/project/issues/automatic_issue_closing.html)
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to automatically close the issue when merging the commit with the upstream
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repository:
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```plain
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Closes #1234
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Fixes #1234
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Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1234
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```
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- If you have a merge request with multiple commits and none of them
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completely fixes an issue, you should add a reference to the issue in
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the commit message, e.g. `Bug: #1234`, and use the automatic issue
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closing syntax in the description of the merge request.
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### Commit access to the GTK repository
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GTK is part of the GNOME infrastructure. At the current time, any
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person with write access to the GNOME repository can merge changes to
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GTK. This is a good thing, in that it encourages many people to work
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on GTK, and progress can be made quickly. However, GTK is a fairly
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large and complicated project on which many other things depend, so to
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avoid unnecessary breakage, and to take advantage of the knowledge
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about GTK that has been built up over the years, we'd like to ask
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people committing to GTK to follow a few rules:
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0. Ask first. If your changes are major, or could possibly break existing
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code, you should always ask. If your change is minor and you've been
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working on GTK for a while it probably isn't necessary to ask. But when
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in doubt, ask. Even if your change is correct, somebody may know a
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better way to do things. If you are making changes to GTK, you should
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be subscribed to the [gtk-devel](https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-devel-list)
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mailing list; this is a good place to ask about intended changes.
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The `#gtk` IRC channel on irc.gnome.org is also a good place to find GTK
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developers to discuss changes, but if you live outside of the EU/US time
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zones, an email to the gtk-devel mailing list is the most certain and
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preferred method.
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0. Ask _first_.
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0. Always write a meaningful commit message. Changes without a sufficient
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commit message will be reverted.
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0. Never push to the `master` branch, or any stable branches, directly; you
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should always go through a merge request, to ensure that the code is
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tested on the CI infrastructure at the very least. A merge request is
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also the proper place to get a comprehensive code review from the core
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developers of GTK.
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If you have been contributing to GTK for a while and you don't have commit
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access to the repository, you may ask to obtain it following the [GNOME account
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process](https://wiki.gnome.org/AccountsTeam/NewAccounts).
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