Contribute ========== So you've got an awesome idea to throw into Jekyll. Great! Please keep the following in mind: * **Use https://talk.jekyllrb.com for non-technical or indirect Jekyll questions that are not bugs.** * **Contributions will not be accepted without tests or necessary documentation updates.** * If you're creating a small fix or patch to an existing feature, just a simple test will do. Please stay in the confines of the current test suite and use [Shoulda](https://github.com/thoughtbot/shoulda/tree/master) and [RSpec-Mocks](https://github.com/rspec/rspec-mocks). * If it's a brand new feature, make sure to create a new [Cucumber](https://github.com/cucumber/cucumber/) feature and reuse steps where appropriate. Also, whipping up some documentation in your fork's `site` would be appreciated, and once merged it will be transferred over to the main `site`, jekyllrb.com. * If your contribution changes any Jekyll behavior, make sure to update the documentation. It lives in `site/_docs`. If the docs are missing information, please feel free to add it in. Great docs make a great project! * Please follow the [GitHub Ruby Styleguide](https://github.com/styleguide/ruby) when modifying Ruby code. * Please do your best to submit **small pull requests**. The easier the proposed change is to review, the more likely it will be merged. * When submitting a pull request, please make judicious use of the pull request body. A description of what changes were made, the motivations behind the changes and [any tasks completed or left to complete](http://git.io/gfm-tasks) will also speed up review time. Test Dependencies ----------------- To run the test suite and build the gem you'll need to install Jekyll's dependencies. Jekyll uses Bundler, so a quick run of the bundle command and you're all set! $ bundle Before you start, run the tests and make sure that they pass (to confirm your environment is configured properly): $ bundle exec rake test $ bundle exec rake features Workflow -------- Here's the most direct way to get your work merged into the project: * Fork the project. * Clone down your fork ( `git clone git@github.com:/jekyll.git` ). * Create a topic branch to contain your change ( `git checkout -b my_awesome_feature` ). * Hack away, add tests. Not necessarily in that order. * Make sure everything still passes by running `rake`. * If necessary, rebase your commits into logical chunks, without errors. * Push the branch up ( `git push origin my_awesome_feature` ). * Create a pull request against jekyll/jekyll and describe what your change does and the why you think it should be merged. Updating Documentation ---------------------- We want the Jekyll documentation to be the best it can be. We've open-sourced our docs and we welcome any pull requests if you find it lacking. You can find the documentation for jekyllrb.com in the [site](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/tree/master/site) directory of Jekyll's repo on GitHub.com. All documentation pull requests should be directed at `master`. Pull requests directed at another branch will not be accepted. The [Jekyll wiki](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/wiki) on GitHub can be freely updated without a pull request as all GitHub users have access. Gotchas ------- * If you want to bump the gem version, please put that in a separate commit. This way, the maintainers can control when the gem gets released. * Try to keep your patch(es) based from the latest commit on jekyll/jekyll. The easier it is to apply your work, the less work the maintainers have to do, which is always a good thing. * Please don't tag your GitHub issue with [fix], [feature], etc. The maintainers actively read the issues and will label it once they come across it. Finally... ---------- Thanks! Hacking on Jekyll should be fun. If you find any of this hard to figure out, let us know so we can improve our process or documentation!