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Contributing
Thank you for your interest in contributing to BossRoom!
Here are our guidelines for contributing:
- Code of Conduct
- Ways to Contribute
- Issues and Bugs
- Feature Requests
- Improving Documentation
- Unity Contribution Agreement
- Pull Request Submission Guidelines
Code of Conduct
Please help us keep BossRoom open and inclusive. Read and follow our Code of Conduct.
Ways to Contribute
There are many ways in which you can contribute to the BossRoom.
Issues and Bugs
If you find a bug in the source code, you can help us by submitting an issue to our GitHub Repository. Even better, you can submit a Pull Request with a fix.
Feature Requests
You can request a new feature by submitting an issue to our GitHub Repository.
If you would like to implement a new feature then consider what kind of change it is:
-
Major Changes that you wish to contribute to the project should be discussed first with other developers. We will have a more formal process for this soon. For now submit your ideas as an issue.
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Small Changes can be directly submitted to the GitHub Repository as a Pull Request. See the section about Pull Request Submission Guidelines.
Documentation
We accept changes and improvements to our documentation through the Netcode for GameObjects Documentation repo.
Contributor License Agreements
When you open a pull request, you will be asked to enter into Unity's License Agreement which is based on The Apache Software Foundation's contribution agreement. We allow both individual contributions and contributions made on behalf of companies. We use an open source tool called CLA assistant. If you have any questions on our CLA, please submit an issue
Pull Request Submission Guidelines
We use the Gitflow Workflow for the development of BossRoom. This means development happens on the develop branch and Pull Requests should be submited to it.
Commit Message Guidelines
Always write a clear log message for your commits. One-line messages are fine for small changes, but bigger changes should look like this:
$ git commit -m "A brief summary of the commit
>
> A paragraph describing what changed and its impact."
Line Endings Guidelines
The project is using Unix-style line endings.
Follow the instructions in the official Git Configuration documentation, the Formatting and Whitespace section, to enable autocrlf
setting on your machine.