Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
60 lines (40 loc) · 2.38 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

60 lines (40 loc) · 2.38 KB

Contributing to Spring REST Docs

Spring REST Docs is released under the Apache 2.0 license. If you would like to contribute something, or simply want to work with the code, this document should help you to get started.

Code of conduct

This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to [email protected].

Sign the contributor license agreement

Before we accept a non-trivial patch or pull request we will need you to sign the contributor's license agreement (CLA). Signing the contributor's agreement does not grant anyone commit rights to the main repository, but it does mean that we can accept your contributions, and you will get an author credit if we do.

Code conventions and housekeeping

None of these is essential for a pull request, but they will all help

  • Make sure all new .java files to have a simple Javadoc class comment with at least an @author tag identifying you, and preferably at least a paragraph on what the class is for
  • Add the ASF license header comment to all new .java files (copy from existing files in the project)
  • Add yourself as an @author to the .java files that you modify substantially (more than cosmetic changes)
  • Add some Javadocs
  • Add unit tests that covers and new or modified functionality
  • Whenever possible, please rebase your branch against the current main (or other target branch in the project)
  • When writing a commit message please follow these conventions Also, if you are fixing an existing issue please add Fixes gh-nnn at the end of the commit message (where nnn is the issue number)

Working with the code

Building from source

To build the source you will need Java 17 or later. The code is built with Gradle:

$ ./gradlew build

To build the samples, run the following command:

$ ./gradlew buildSamples

Importing into Eclipse

The project has Gradle's Eclipse plugin applied. Eclipse project and classpath metadata can be generated by running the eclipse task:

$ ./gradlew eclipse

The project can then be imported into Eclipse using File -> Import… and then selecting General -> Existing Projects into Workspace.