title: Information about sending patches for review x-toc-enable: true ...
Download Libreboot from the Git repository like so:
$ git clone https://notabug.org/libreboot/libreboot.git
You can submit your patches via Notabug pull requests.
Libreboot development is done using the Git version control system. Refer to the official Git documentation if you don't know how to use Git.
The website and documentation is inside the www
directory in the
Git repository, in
Pandoc flavoured Markdown. The website is generated into static HTML via Pandoc
with the following scripts in that directory:
Use any standard text editor (e.g. Vim, Emacs, Nano, Gedit) to edit the files, commit the changes and send patches.
Optionally, you can install a web server (e.g. lighttpd, nginx) locally and
set the document root to the www directory in your local Git repository.
With this configuration, you can then generate your local version of the
website and view it by typing localhost
in your browser's URL bar.
Contributions that you make are publicly recorded, in a Git repository which everyone can access. This includes the name and email address of the contributor.
In Git, for author name and email address, you do not have to use identifying data. You can use Libreboot Contributor and your email address could be specified as contributor@libreboot.org. You are permitted to do this, if you wish to maintain privacy. We believe in privacy. If you choose to remain anonymous, we will honour this.
Of course, you can use whichever name and/or email address you like.
For enhanced privacy, we recommend that you use a trustworthy VPN provider and route all of your traffic through Tor (on top of the VPN). The Tor website has instructions on it for routing traffic through the Tor network.
Legally speaking, all copyright is automatic under the Berne Convention of international copyright law. It does not matter which name, or indeed whether you even declare a copyright (but we do require that certain copyright licenses are used - read more about that on this same page).
If you use a different name and email address on your commits/patches, then you should be fairly anonymous. Use git log and git show to confirm that before you push changes to a public Git repository.
We require all patches to be submitted under a free license: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html.
Always declare a license on your work! Not declaring a license means that the default, restrictive copyright laws apply, which would make your work non-free.
GNU+Linux is generally recommended as the OS of choice, for Libreboot development.
Any member of the public can submit a patch. Members with push access must never push directly to the master branch; issue a Pull Request, and wait for someone else to merge. Never merge your own work!
Your patch will be reviewed for quality assurance, and merged if accepted.
In your terminal:
$ git clone https://notabug.org/libreboot/libreboot.git
A new directory named libreboot
will have been created, containing
libreboot.
Make an account on https://notabug.org/ and navigate (while logged in) to https://notabug.org/libreboot/libreboot. Click Fork and in your account, you will have your own repository of Libreboot. Clone your repository, make whatever changes you like to it and then push to your repository, in your account on NotABug.
Now, navigate to https://notabug.org/libreboot/libreboot/pulls and click New Pull Request.
You can submit your patches there. Alternative, you can log onto the Libreboot IRC channel and notify the channel of which patches you want reviewed, if you have your own Git repository with the patches.
Once you have issued a Pull Request, the Libreboot maintainers will be notified via email. If you do not receive a fast enough response from the project, then you could also notify the project via the #libreboot channel on Freenode.