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Contributing Guidelines
Thank you for your interest in contributing to our project. Whether it's a bug report, new feature, correction, or additional documentation, we greatly value feedback and contributions from our community.
Please read through this document before submitting any issues or pull requests to ensure we have all the necessary information to effectively respond to your bug report or contribution.
Reporting Bugs/Feature Requests
We welcome you to use the GitHub issue tracker to report bugs or suggest features.
When filing an issue, please check existing open, or recently closed, issues to make sure somebody else hasn't already reported the issue. Please try to include as much information as you can. Details like these are incredibly useful:
- A reproducible test case or series of steps
- The version of our code being used
- Any modifications you've made relevant to the bug
- Anything unusual about your environment or deployment
Contributing via Pull Requests
Contributions via pull requests are much appreciated. Before sending us a pull request, please ensure that:
- You are working against the latest source on the main branch.
- You check existing open, and recently merged, pull requests to make sure someone else hasn't addressed the problem already.
- You open an issue to discuss any significant work - we would hate for your time to be wasted. Alternatively, you may submit an RFC. You can learn about our RFC process here.
To send us a pull request, please:
- Fork the repository.
- Modify the source; please focus on the specific change you are contributing. If you also reformat all the code, it will be hard for us to focus on your change.
- Ensure local tests pass.
- Commit to your fork using clear commit messages.
- Send us a pull request, answering any default questions in the pull request interface. To create a changelog entry Markdown file in the
.changelog
directory, you can do either of the following:- Use the
new
subcommand of changelogger CLI (preferred) - Create one manually. Name the file
XXX.md
, whereXXX
can be any name you choose, as long as it is unique in the.changelog
directory. Ensure the contents follow Markdown syntax with the YAML front matter. For reference, see .example or other Markdown files in the.changelog
directory.
- Use the
- Pay attention to any automated CI failures reported in the pull request, and stay involved in the conversation.
- Ask maintainers to manually trigger canary and PR bot workflows using your pull request number. Those workflows cannot run in your fork and are always skipped as such.
GitHub provides additional document on forking a repository and creating a pull request.
Finding contributions to work on
Looking at the existing issues is a great way to find something to contribute on. As our projects, by default, use the default GitHub issue labels (enhancement/bug/duplicate/help wanted/invalid/question/wontfix), looking at any 'help wanted' issues is a great place to start.
Code of Conduct
This project has adopted the Amazon Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opensource-codeofconduct@amazon.com with any additional questions or comments.
Reporting a Vulnerability
If you discover a potential security issue in this project we ask that you notify AWS/Amazon Security via our vulnerability reporting page or directly via email to aws-security@amazon.com. Please do not create a public GitHub issue.
Licensing
See the LICENSE file for our project's licensing. We will ask you to confirm the licensing of your contribution.
More helpful information for contributors
Part of our design docs are dedicated to helpful information for contributors. Take a look.