> For your idea, perhaps submit a patch with one, or a few, tests and see where the > discussion goes to ensure it’s in line with what the community wants.
Here are a few tests I wrote today for the SignupForm. I'm hoping to eventually cover most of pgweb/account, then maybe pgweb/core or whatever else the community deems important.
Please let me know if I'm doing anything wrong. I'm here to learn.
On Sun, May 14, 2017 at 4:12 AM Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se> wrote:
> On 13 May 2017, at 05:21, Mac Chaffee <macchaffee88@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I'm new to the world of open source projects, but I've been working as a django developer and proud postgres user for 1 year now. > > Would you be interested if I wrote some tests for pgweb? > > It would help me familiarize myself with the codebase and it would help you prevent bugs in the future. The tests could also help ensure stability if you plan on upgrading to the next LTS release of django (1.11).
While not speaking for anyone but myself, I think that sounds interesting.
> Also, what's the normal process for contributing code? Someone in the IRC mentioned patching, but didn't go into specifics.
For the core database server the process is to start a discussion around the change on the -hackers mailinglist, submit a patch there and then add it to the CommitFest app. This process is described in detail at:
Since the website isn’t following a release schedule like the server (and there are fewer contributions), the process is a bit different. Generally a patch is posted to this mailinglist and is discussed here until applied or rejected without going via the CommitFest app.
Like for the main server, it is however recommended that any larger pieces of work are discussed on the mailinglist before too much time is invested. For your idea, perhaps submit a patch with one, or a few, tests and see where the discussion goes to ensure it’s in line with what the community wants.