Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
236 lines (182 loc) · 9.03 KB

CONTRIBUTE.md

File metadata and controls

236 lines (182 loc) · 9.03 KB

Contributing to Moodle on Azure

The TL;DR version is:

  • We are a community project
  • We seek to make decisions through community consensus
  • We prefer debate through gradual improvement through pull requests to endless discussion about the "perfect" solution
  • We are a meritocracy, not a democracy
  • We welcome all your contributions including but not limited to feature requests, bug-reports, documentation and code

How the project is managed

This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Our goal is to work on Azure specific tooling for deploying and managing the open source Moodle learning management system on Azure. We do not work on Moodle itself here, instead we work upstream as appropriate.

The short version of how to contribute to this project is "just do it". Where "it" can be defined as any valuable contribution (and to be clear, asking questions is a valuable contribution):

  • ask questions
  • provide feedback
  • write or update documentation
  • help new users
  • recommend the project to others
  • test the code and report bugs
  • fix bugs and issue pull requests
  • give us feedback on required features
  • write and update the software
  • create artwork
  • translate to different languages
  • anything you can see that needs doing

Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.

When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.

Decision Making

This is a community project. Decisions are made through consensus building. All voices are equal and we welcome input from everyone.

That said, this is not a democracy. Consensus does not mean everyone has to agree. It merely means that nobody is objecting and offering an alternative.

What this means, in practive, is that she who does the work makes the decisions. We'd rather discuss how to improve imperfect code than argue over what would make perfect code. So if you have an objection to the way we are doing things issue a pull request.

In the unlikely event that we cannot reach consensus through consensus then the project maintainers (as identified by their having the admin bit on GitHub) will make a judgetment call. But normally their role is to guide the community to consensus action, not to make decisions on bhalf of the community.

Minimum Bar for Contributions

As the project matures we will add more thorough testing. It is expected that all contributions pass the currently available suite of tests. If they do not then they will be rejected.

It is also required that contributions which add features also bring at least basic testing of that feature.

Planning

This is an open source project. We have a few mantras to ensure efficient collaboration, these mostly boil down to ensuring good visibility into the communities goals. These include:

  • If it didn't happen in public, it didn't happen
  • Scratch your own itch

If it didn't happen in public, it didn't happen (aka full transparency)

The goal of this mantra is to ensure maximum visibility into our communities work in order to:

  1. Provide an opportunity for community feedback in order to ensure our plans are good
  2. Provide a clear indication of what will be done, what may be done and what won't be done

Both of these goals lead to the second mantra "Scratch your own itch".

Scratch your own itch (aka getting what you want)

This is an open source project. We welcome feature requests and, as a community, we will provide feedback on whether we intend to work on it or not. To this end we categories feature requests in one of 4 ways:

  • Priority 0 (will address)
  • Priority 1 (may address)
  • Priority 2 (maybe one day)
  • wontfix (out of scope)

Using these priorities it is easy for community members to decide where to spend their time. For example:

  • Priority 0 items are actively being worked on by at least one community member. Others are welcome to contribute as appropriate (reviews are particularly important)
  • Priority 1 items are seen as important and are likely to be worked on in the short to medium term, but there is no community member active on the project at this time. Community members are welcome to take ownership of these issues and propose a solution that they intend to implement. If the community accepts the proposal then it will become a Priority 0 issue.
  • Priority 2 items are seen as interesting proposals that are not in conflict with the projects goals but are unlikely to be worked on by any existing communty members. Community members who have a need for these items are strongly encouraged to identify themselves and offer a proposal for a solution. If there is enough support within the existing community this item can become a Priority 0 under your leadership.
  • Wontfix items are considered out of scope for this project. Community members should seek to solve the problem in different ways. Often this will mean contribution to Moodle itself or a plugin that is external to this community.

Community roles

This section outlines roles and responsibilities within the community.

Users

Users self-identify by using our software and documentation. Their responsibilities are to benefit from our work, but we welcome contributions from users, such as:

  • Ask questions
  • Answer questions
  • Feature requests
  • Bug reports
  • Design reviews
  • Planning reviews
  • Evangelize the project
  • and more...

Some users will become more involved with the project, those users become Contributors.

Contributors

Contributes self-identify by making longer term commitments to our project. Their responsibilities are to help the project be succesful by ensuring that our work matches the needs of our users. Possible contributions can include:

  • Everything a User might contribute
  • Remove blocks for users
  • Provide design input
  • Review pull requests
  • Implement features
  • Triage questions, feature requests and bug reports
  • and more...

Some contributors will become very engaged and therefore become an essential part of the community, these contributors will become Maintainers.

Maintainers

We are fans of efficient processes. Maintainers are people who insert themselves into our process to ensure they run well. The goal is to empower our contributors who in turn focus on delighting our users. Maintainers contributions may include:

  • Everyting Users and Contributors do
  • Merge pull requests where appropriate
  • Seek community consensus where conflict occurs
  • Remove blocks for contributors
  • and more...

Pull requests, Review and Merges

We like efficient processes. Anyone is welcome to issue pull requests. Everyone is encouraged to review pull requests. Maintainers are responsible for merging pull requests but they are not responsible for reviews, that is a community wide responsibility.

We operate under two models of review process as appropriate to each circumstance:

  • Merge then Review (our preferred model)
  • Review then Merge

Merge Then Review

In the "merge then review" model a maintainer will merge the pull request into with minimal review. Community members are still expected to review the code, but it is done after the fact.

The goal is to get the code into a shared repository as early as possible. This allows people, including advanced users, to start testing it. This ensures we have the maximum possible exposure to testing in real scenarios early in the process. Encouragin bug reports from the whole community ensures we have visibility into breaks as early as possible.

This model has its risks, however. If a PR is on the critical path or it is controversial in some way it is expected that maintainers will ensure it recieves a thorough review before merging (see next section on "Review then Merge". This decision is at the discretion of the maintainer who first triages the pull request.

Should a mistake be made and a bad merge be performed then it can often be easier and faster to fix it under the "Merge then Review" model than it is to provide feedback to the original author and await a fix from them. Should the mistake have a high impact and/or no easy fix is available we simply roll back the merge and provide feedback via the review process.

It should be noted that this model means that maintainers have the right to simply merge their own code and expect others to review it after. Maintainers are expected to use their best judgement when excercising this priviledge.

Review Then Merge

Where a change is on the critical path or it is potentiall contriversial maintainers should request reviews using the GitHub tooling. The last reviewer to sign-off on the pull request will merge the pull request.