Thank you for your interest in contributing to the Vega Protocol. There are always bugs to find, bugs to fix, improvements to documentation, and more work to be done.
Please read the Code of Conduct; it is expected all project participants to adhere to it.
The project development follows the Vega Protocol engineering roadmap. All engineering work happens directly in GitHub. Bugs committed to be resolved are triaged, assigned to a developer and are in the current, or next, iteration. This can be seen on the team project board.
Other bugs are fair game, however, if you are not familiar with the project get up-to-speed with the:
Also ask in Discord or Discussions before working on a particular bug.
Once up-to-speed with the protocol, fork the repositories (as per the git workflow) and get set up using the getting started information.
Create an issue for the feature, bugfix or enhancement and assign to yourself. Start a discussion, pull in relevant people and build a technical design.
If possible, issues should be linked back to a feature in the protocol specs repo.
- Fork the repositories required
- Perform a
git clone
to get a copy on your local machine - When ready publish a local commit to your own public repository
- When the change has been sufficiently self-tested file a pull request with the main repository
- Ask for review on Discord, discuss suggestions and get the branch merged.
This flow allows the project team to know that an update is ready to be integrated. Pairing and early review is highly encouraged.
Policy: If work is being started on a new engine, have a short workshop so that questions (on technical implementation) can be asked. The output of the workshop is a README, to go in the engine subdirectory, containing the questions and answers that came up during the workshop.
The aim for overall test coverage to go up.
All software development work should be tested locally and at a bare minimum unit tests and basic end-to-end tests written, more information can be found in the team definition of done.
Policy: Write tests that cover edge/corner cases, and/or document assumptions, so that if an assumption is later invalidated, a test fails.
Before code changes are accepted the project team will conduct a full code review.
Policy: For contributors outside of the project team before any pull requests can be accepted you will need to sign a Contributor Licence Agreement (CLA) or something similar.