mirror of
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49 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext
49 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext
So, you want to hack on Supybot? Cool! I'm glad -- more developers
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means more users, and more users means better software (although I
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suppose more developers means better software even without the
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addition of more users :))
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Anyway, there are a few things you should know before you submit your
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code to be accepted into Supybot. The first, and most important
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thing is that we really do value your contribution. We may say that
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it's not appropriate for the core distribution and any number of
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varying reasons, but regardless, we're happy that you're hacking on
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Supybot and bending it to your will, and we'll be happy to post your
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patch as long as it applies cleanly.
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The second thing you should know is that, despite the fact that we're
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happy you want to contribute to Supybot, we're not afraid to piss you
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off by turning down your code. We won't hesitate to reject code
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because it's "bad" or because it doesn't fit our style guidelines
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(read docs/STYLE). We don't really care if it makes you angry or
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makes you use another IRC bot; we're in the practice of writing good
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software, not placating whiners. Despite this, we're not entirely
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heartless, and if you've done something we're interested in, we're
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willing to work with you and your code until such a time as it's
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ready to be accepted into the core. But if, at some point, we say,
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"This needs fixed" and you say, "I refuse to fix it," you can go put
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your code on the patch tracker; our time together is done. Supybot
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is #1 here -- we don't care about your feelings, we don't care about
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jamessan's feelings, we don't care about jemfinch's feelings if it
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means that the code quality and user experience of Supybot is to
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suffer.
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Anyway, the normal process is that you'll submit a few patches,
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jemfinch will review them and tell you what needs to happen for them
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to be accepted into the core, you'll fix those problems, jemfinch
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will review them again, that cycle will repeat a few times. When
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your code is to jemfinch's satisfaction, it'll be integrated into the
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core. For many people, this is the end of the line. For some
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others (perhaps you!), you'll continue to write patches for Supybot,
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and your coding ability and commitment will be obvious through
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those. If your code quality is consistently high enough that
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jemfinch (or other Supybot developers) don't have to spend a
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significant amount of time reviewing your code, you'll be added as a
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developer on the SF.net project and given commit access to our CVS
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repository. From then on, you can do what you want, but be aware
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that the other developers are watching what you do -- if you have a
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big architecture change, you should probably talk to them before you
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commit.
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So welcome aboard, and have fun hacking on Supybot!
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