Thanks for your interest in contributing to the Open Policy Agent (OPA) project!
If you have questions, comments, or requests feel free to post on the mailing list or create an issue on GitHub.
If you want to contribute code and you are new to the Go programming language, check out the DEVELOPMENT.md reference for help getting started.
We currently welcome contributions of all kinds. For example:
- Development of features, bug fixes, and other improvements.
- Documentation including reference material and examples.
- Bug and feature reports.
Small bug fixes (or other small improvements) can be submitted directly via a Pull Request on GitHub. You can expect at least one of the OPA maintainers to respond quickly.
Before submitting large changes, please open an issue on GitHub outlining:
- The use case that your changes are applicable to.
- Steps to reproduce the issue(s) if applicable.
- Detailed description of what your changes would entail.
- Alternative solutions or approaches if applicable.
Use your judgement about what constitutes a large change. If you aren't sure, send a message to the OPA slack or submit an issue on GitHub.
If you are contributing code, please consider the following:
-
Most changes should be accompanied with tests.
-
Commit messages should explain why the changes were made and should probably look like this:
Description of the change in 50 characters or less More detail on what was changed. Provide some background on the issue and describe how the changes address the issue. Feel free to use multiple paragraphs but please keep each line under 72 characters or so.
-
Related commits must be squashed before they are merged.
-
All tests must pass and there must be no warnings from the
make check
target.
Before a Pull Request is merged, it will undergo code review from other members of the OPA community. In order to streamline the code review process, when amending your Pull Request in response to a review, do not squash your changes into relevant commits until it has been approved for merge. This allows the reviewer to see what changes are new and removes the need to wade through code that has not been modified to search for a small change.
When adding temporary patches in response to review comments, consider formatting the message subject like one of the following:
Fixup into commit <commit ID> (squash before merge)
Fixed changes requested by @username (squash before merge)
Amended <description> (squash before merge)
The purpose of these formats is to provide some context into the reason the temporary commit exists, and to label it as needing squashed before a merge is performed.
It is worth noting that not all changes need be squashed before a merge is performed. Some changes made as a result of review stand well on their own, independent of other commits in the series. Such changes should be made into their own commit and added to the PR.
If your Pull Request is small though, it is acceptable to squash changes during the review process. Use your judgement about what constitutes a small Pull Request. If you aren't sure, send a message to the OPA slack or post a comment on the Pull Request.