# How to contribute We definitely welcome your patches and contributions to gRPC! Please read the gRPC organization's [governance rules](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-community/blob/master/governance.md) and [contribution guidelines](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-community/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) before proceeding. If you are new to GitHub, please start by reading [Pull Request howto](https://help.github.com/articles/about-pull-requests/) ## Legal requirements In order to protect both you and ourselves, you will need to sign the [Contributor License Agreement](https://identity.linuxfoundation.org/projects/cncf). ## Guidelines for Pull Requests How to get your contributions merged smoothly and quickly. - Create **small PRs** that are narrowly focused on **addressing a single concern**. We often times receive PRs that are trying to fix several things at a time, but only one fix is considered acceptable, nothing gets merged and both author's & review's time is wasted. Create more PRs to address different concerns and everyone will be happy. - If you are searching for features to work on, issues labeled [Status: Help Wanted](https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+sort%3Aupdated-desc+label%3A%22Status%3A+Help+Wanted%22) is a great place to start. These issues are well-documented and usually can be resolved with a single pull request. - If you are adding a new file, make sure it has the copyright message template at the top as a comment. You can copy over the message from an existing file and update the year. - The grpc package should only depend on standard Go packages and a small number of exceptions. If your contribution introduces new dependencies which are NOT in the [list](https://godoc.org/google.golang.org/grpc?imports), you need a discussion with gRPC-Go authors and consultants. - For speculative changes, consider opening an issue and discussing it first. If you are suggesting a behavioral or API change, consider starting with a [gRFC proposal](https://github.com/grpc/proposal). - Provide a good **PR description** as a record of **what** change is being made and **why** it was made. Link to a GitHub issue if it exists. - If you want to fix formatting or style, consider whether your changes are an obvious improvement or might be considered a personal preference. If a style change is based on preference, it likely will not be accepted. If it corrects widely agreed-upon anti-patterns, then please do create a PR and explain the benefits of the change. - Unless your PR is trivial, you should expect there will be reviewer comments that you'll need to address before merging. We'll mark it as `Status: Requires Reporter Clarification` if we expect you to respond to these comments in a timely manner. If the PR remains inactive for 6 days, it will be marked as `stale` and automatically close 7 days after that if we don't hear back from you. - Maintain **clean commit history** and use **meaningful commit messages**. PRs with messy commit history are difficult to review and won't be merged. Use `rebase -i upstream/master` to curate your commit history and/or to bring in latest changes from master (but avoid rebasing in the middle of a code review). - Keep your PR up to date with upstream/master (if there are merge conflicts, we can't really merge your change). - **All tests need to be passing** before your change can be merged. We recommend you **run tests locally** before creating your PR to catch breakages early on. - `./scripts/vet.sh` to catch vet errors - `go test -cpu 1,4 -timeout 7m ./...` to run the tests - `go test -race -cpu 1,4 -timeout 7m ./...` to run tests in race mode - Exceptions to the rules can be made if there's a compelling reason for doing so.