-*- mode: org; coding: utf-8; -*- #+TITLE: Hacking GNU Guix and Its Incredible Distro Copyright © 2012, 2013, 2014 Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> Copyright © 2015 Mathieu Lirzin <mthl@openmailbox.org> Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. * Contributing See the manual for useful hacking informations, either by running info -f doc/guix.info "(guix) Contributing" or by checking the [[http://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/guix.html#Contributing][web copy of the manual]]. * Commit Access For frequent contributors, having write access to the repository is convenient. When you deem it necessary, feel free to ask for it on the mailing list. When you get commit access, please make sure to follow the policy below (discussions of the policy can take place on guix-devel@gnu.org.) Non-trivial patches should always be posted to guix-devel@gnu.org (trivial patches include fixing typos, etc.) For patches that just add a new package, and a simple one, it’s OK to commit, if you’re confident (which means you successfully built it in a chroot setup, and have done a reasonable copyright and license auditing.) Likewise for package upgrades, except upgrades that trigger a lot of rebuilds (for example, upgrading GnuTLS or GLib.) We have a mailing list for commit notifications (guix-commits@gnu.org), so people can notice. Before pushing your changes, make sure to run ‘git pull --rebase’. All commits that are pushed to the central repository on Savannah should be signed with a PGP key, and the public key should be uploaded to your user account on Savannah. For anything else, please post to guix-devel@gnu.org and leave time for a review, without committing anything. If you didn’t receive any reply after two weeks, and if you’re confident, it’s OK to commit. That last part is subject to being adjusted, allowing individuals to commit directly on non-controversial changes on parts they’re familiar with.