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Yaets
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As an open-source project, we welcome and encourage the community to submit patches directly to the YAETS. In our collaborative open source environment, standards and methods for submitting changes help reduce the chaos that can result from an active development community.
This document explains how to participate in project conversations, log and track bugs and enhancement requests, and submit patches to the project so your patch will be accepted quickly in the codebase.
Licensing Licensing is very important to open source projects. It helps ensure the software continues to be available under the terms that the author desired.
Contributions should be made under the predominant license of that package. Entirely new packages should be made available under the Apache 2.0 license.
A license tells you what rights you have as a developer, as provided by the copyright holder. It is important that the contributor fully understands the licensing rights and agrees to them. Sometimes the copyright holder isn’t the contributor, such as when the contributor is doing work on behalf of a company.
To make a good faith effort to ensure licensing criteria are met, YAETS requires the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) process to be followed.
The DCO is an attestation attached to every contribution made by every developer. In the commit message of the contribution, (described more fully later in this document), the developer simply adds a Signed-off-by statement and thereby agrees to the DCO.
When a developer submits a patch, it is a commitment that the contributor has the right to submit the patch per the license. The DCO agreement is shown below and at http://developercertificate.org/.
The DCO requires that a sign-off message, in the following format, appears on each commit in the pull request:
The DCO text can either be manually added to your commit body, or you can add either -s or --signoff to your usual Git commit commands. If you forget to add the sign-off you can also amend a previous commit with the sign-off by running git commit --amend -s. If you’ve pushed your changes to GitHub already you’ll need to force push your branch after this with git push -f.
Note: The name and email address of the account you use to submit your PR must match the name and email address on the Signed-off-by line in your commit message.