Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
100 lines (68 loc) · 4.96 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

100 lines (68 loc) · 4.96 KB

Contributing step templates

Have a great custom step that other Octopus users will love? Here's how to get it out there!

  1. Fork the Library repository
  2. Clone your fork into a directory on your own machine
  3. Export your template from the Octopus server
  4. Save the exported JSON to a file under /step-templates
  5. Check that the LastModifiedBy username is one you're happy to use on the site (ideally your plain GitHub username)
  6. Commit and push your changes to your fork
  7. View your fork in GitHub to create a pull request

Someone from the Octopus team will review your request and help to make the step consistent with the others in the library. Once it's ready we'll merge it into the main repository and publish it to the library site.

Here's a checklist to consider:

  • Is the template a minor variation on an existing one? If so, please consider improving the existing template if possible.
  • Is the name of the template consistent with the examples already in the library, in style ("Noun - Verb"), layout and casing?
  • Are all parameters in the template consistent with the examples here, including help text documented with Markdown?
  • Is the description of the template complete, correct Markdown?
  • Is the .json filename consistent with the name of the template?
  • Do scripts in the template validate required arguments and fail by returning a non-zero exit code when things go wrong?
  • Do scripts in the template produce worthwhile status messages as they execute?
  • Are you happy to contribute your template under the terms of the license? If you produced the template while working for your employer please obtain written permission from them before submitting it here.
  • Are the default values of parameters validly applicable in other user's environments? Don't use the default values as examples if the user will have to change them
  • For how to deal with parameters and testing take a look at the article Making great Octopus PowerShell step templates
  • For another example of how to test your step template script body before submitting a PR take a look at this gist

If you need help, feedback or a sanity check before investing time in a contribution, feel free to raise an issue on the tracker to discuss your idea first.

Licensing

The entire library is covered by this Apache 2.0 license. This site provides a good explanation of what this license provides for you as a contributor. By contributing to this library:

  • your contribution is automatically covered by this Apache 2.0 license without requiring a header in each file
  • your contribution is attributed to you (and your organisation) via commits and pull-requests
  • state changes are tracked automatically via commits and pull-requests

Contributing to the website

We also accept contributions to improve the library.octopusdeploy.com site. The process of contributing is similar to the process outlined for step templates above.

Get started

Pre-requisites

To build the library site you need to have nodejs installed on your system. If you don't already have gulp installed globally, run the following:

npm install -g gulp

Once you have gulp installed, run the below command from the root of the repository to install the build and runtime dependencies:

npm install

Congratulations, you are now ready to build and test the site locally.

Building and testing the site

From the root of the repository, run the following command:

gulp

This will build a debuggable version of the library site and output it to ./build/. To test the site, run the following command:

node build/server.js

This will start the express server and you can browse the site at the following URL http://localhost:9000.

While developing you can run the site in development mode so that as you make changes to the code your browser will refresh to reflect the changes you just made. To run the site in development mode, run the following command:

gulp watch

This will start a LiveServer that is used as a proxy for the express server running on http://localhost:9000 and gulp will watch for changes and when detected, refresh your browser window.

You can also test the site in production mode. Run the following command to build the site in production mode:

gulp --production

This will minify/uglify/concat the js/css files and output it to ./dist/. To test the site, run the following command:

node dist/server.js

Once you are happy with your changes, push them to your fork and create a pull request from the GitHub site.