How to contribute

There are lots of ways to contribute to the project. People with different expertise can help to improve the web content, the documentation, the code, and the tests. Even this README file is a result of collaboration of multiple people.

  • infrastructure-provisioning : Much of the logic of the project is in this module. Here's your chance to get elbow-deep into machine learning, Tensorflow, R, Jupiter, Apache Zeppelin, containers, and more.
  • integration-tests : A software project is as good as its tests are. Following this simple idea, we are trying to cover the integration capabilities with automated tests. If you're passionate about the quality - please consider chiming in.
  • maven : The build system - the heart of any project. If you think Maven is too old-fashioned, create a PR and move us to Gradle!
  • doc : Have you seen a project that doesn't need to improve its documentation?!
  • website : We are using GH pages to build and manage the site‘s content. If you’re interested in making it better, check-out gh-pages branch and dig in. If you are not familiar with the Github Pages - check it out, it's pretty simple yet powerful!
  • giving feedback : Tell us how you use DLab, what was great and what was not so much. Also, what are you expecting from it and what would you like to see in the future? Opening an issue will grab our attention. Seriously, this is the great way to contribute!

Roles

Much like projects in ASF, DLab recognizes a few roles. Unlike ASF's projects, our structure is a way simpler. There are only two types:

  • A Contributor is a user who contributes to a project in the form of code or documentation. Developers take extra steps to participate in a project, are active on the developer forums, participate in discussions, provide PRs (patches), documentation, suggestions, and criticism. Contributors are also known as developers.
  • A Committer is a developer that was given write access to the code repository. Not needing to depend on other people to commit their patches, they are actually making short-term decisions for the project. By submitting your code or other content to the project via PR or a patch, a Committer agrees to transfer the contribution rights to the Project. From time to time, the project's committership will go through the list of contributions and make a decision to invite new developers to become a project committer.

RTC model

DLab supports Review-Then-Commit model of development. The following rules are used in the RTC process:

  • a developer should seek peer-review and/or feedback from other developers through the PR mechanism (aka code review).
  • a developer should make a reasonable effort to test the changes before submitting a PR for review.
  • any non-document PR is required to be opened for at least 24 hours for community feedback before it gets committed unless it has an explicit +1 from a committer
  • any non-document PR needs to address all the comment and reach consensus before it gets committed without a +1 from other committers
  • a committer can commit documentation patches without explicit review process. However, we encourage you to seek the feedback.