nosqlbench/CONTRIBUTING.md
2021-02-04 17:46:44 -06:00

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NoSQLBench is an ambitious project. It aims to solve long-standing problems in distributed systems
testing. There are *many* ways you can contribute! Please take a moment to review this document
in order to make the contribution process easy and effective for everyone involved.
## Code of Conduct
This project follows a [CODE_OF_CONDUCT](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Please read
through it at least once if you are going to contribute to NoSQLBench.
## Licensing
All source code in this repository is licensed exclusively under
[Apache License, Version 2.0](http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0).
## Jumping Right In
Some quick how-to docs have been written for some of the subject-matter
areas in NoSQLBench. If you need an onramp that is not listed, here let us
know!
[I am a developer and I want to contribute a driver.]
(devdocs/devguide/drivers/README.md)
[I am a user and I want to improve the documentation.](devdocs/devguide/nb_docs.md)
[I am a user and I want to contribute built-in scenarios.](devdocs/devguide/adding_scenarios.md)
[I am a UI developer and I want to improve the NoSQLBench UI (NBUI)](devdocs/devguide/nbui/README.md)
## Contribution Ideas
There are lots of ways to contribute to the project. Some ideas on how to
get started are described here.
### Feedback
- reporting issues - If you find an issue while using NoSQLBench, please let us know!
- reproducing issues - For some non-trivial bugs, it helps to have someone reproduce the issue.
This can be helpful to help us understand better what conditions cause the issue to occur. If want to help
address a non-trivial issue that has been reported, you can follow the steps that the original user
reported. Updating issues with such findings is immensely helpful to the maintainers.
### Pull Requests
All contributions to this project are made in the form of pull requests, including:
- Easy Picks - Any issue labeled `easy pick` is a good first issue for new contributors. These are tagged
by the maintainers specifically to provide a gentle on-ramp for those joining our endeavor.
- Fixing bugs - Bug fixes are awesome! If you submit a pull request with a bug fix, we will review it
and provide feedback if refinements are needed. Otherwise we'll merge it in for the next release.
- Testing Improvements - Often, a good test is the best form of documentation. Test coverage can always
be improved. Writing tests is also a great way to get familiar with the project up close.
- Writing documentation - Our users need good documentation. Good documentation is, however, a community
effort. If you have used NoSQLBench and want to improve the journey for others, good documentation
with examples is really helpful.
- Writing web apps - The doc system that is bunded with NoSQLBench is a web application. This is just
the first web app, but we expect there will be more. If you are interested in helping with this part,
please reach out to the maintainers or file an issue describing your ideas.
- Working on the core - The core machinery of nosqlbench needs maintenance just like any code base. If you
want to help implement new core features, manage project dependencies, address technical debt, or help
with internal architecture, there is work to be done. This is on the more advanced end of contribution,
and requires some study of the codebase. If you take the time to understand the code a bit before submitting
pull requests, then the maintainers will take the time to help you make your pull requests better.
### Maintainers
We are looking for more community ownership in this project. That means that we will be supportive of
new project contributors who wish to build a sense of trust with the maintainers.
- Reviewing Pull Requests - If you are a maintainer on this project, then
you may be called on to review pull requests. Unless requested directly,
pull requests will be allocated to reviewers automatically.
- Enforcing Conduct - You may be called up on as a maintainer of this
project to enforce the code of conduct as it is written.
- Developing Maintainers - It is important that there be a solid core of
project maintainers who can depend on one another and whom the project
user base can depend on do govern the project fairly and equitably. As a
project maintainer, you will be expected to help guide contributors as
they learn about the project. You may be responsible for choosing
maintainers or voting on maintainer membership.
- Documenting APIs - The developer docs are pretty lean right now. We need
some examples of building activity types, adapting statement templates
and so on. This level of contribution requires an intimate awareness of
how the core engine works, but it is also some of the most valuable work
that you can do in terms of expanding the nosqlbench ecosystem.
Contributions are welcome here!
## Outreach
Help us get the word out on NoSQLBench. It is a newly opened project in its current form, and we
are eager to get it into the hands of users who need it.
- Writing blog posts - A blog post that helps others see the good in
NoSQLBench is a service to our community. This is even better when it
comes from a new user who has seen the merit of the tooling. We
appreciate any help.
- Helping other users - Helping new users get to a productive state is a
great way to build bridges in the community. The more community
advocates we have helping each other the better!
- Community Development - The NoSQLBench project endeavors to build a
strong, inclusive, and robust support system around users and
contributors alike. This takes on many forms. It is essential that we
keep looking for ways to connect the NoSQLBench community, doing more of
what works and less of what doesn't. If you want to help with community
development, please join our slack channel and raise your hand!