JBoss Central contains the key components/extensions for driving the JBoss Central editor/view and the project examples plus it currently contains the Maven extensions JBoss Tools provides on top of m2e.
Note:
- The JBoss Central Discovery feature is no longer needed and has been deleted.
- The JBoss Central Discovery plugin has moved here: https://github.com/jbosstools/jbosstools-discovery/
JBoss Central is part of JBoss Tools from which it can be downloaded and installed on its own or together with the full JBoss Tools distribution.
The easiest way to get started with the code is to create your own fork, and then clone your fork:
$ git clone [email protected]:<you>/jbosstools-central.git
$ cd jbosstools-central
$ git remote add upstream git://github.com/jbosstools/jbosstools-central.git
At any time, you can pull changes from the upstream and merge them onto your master:
$ git checkout master # switches to the 'master' branch
$ git pull upstream master # fetches all 'upstream' changes and merges 'upstream/master' onto your 'master' branch
$ git push origin # pushes all the updates to your fork, which should be in-sync with 'upstream'
The general idea is to keep your 'master' branch in-sync with the 'upstream/master'.
To build JBoss Central requires specific versions of Java (1.6+) and +Maven (3.1+). See this link for more information on how to setup, run and configure build. document will guide you through that setup.
This command will run the build:
$ mvn clean verify
If you just want to check if things compiles/builds you can run:
$ mvn clean verify -DskipTest=true
But do not push changes without having the new and existing unit tests pass!
JBoss Central is open source, and we welcome anybody that wants to participate and contribute!
If you want to fix a bug or make any changes, please log an issue in
the JBoss Tools JIRA
describing the bug or new feature and give it a component type of
central, maven or project examples
. Then we highly recommend making the changes on a
topic branch named with the JIRA issue number. For example, this
command creates a branch for the JBIDE-1234 issue:
$ git checkout -b jbide-1234
After you're happy with your changes and a full build (with unit tests) runs successfully, commit your changes on your topic branch (with good comments). Then it's time to check for any recent changes that were made in the official repository:
$ git checkout master # switches to the 'master' branch
$ git pull upstream master # fetches all 'upstream' changes and merges 'upstream/master' onto your 'master' branch
$ git checkout jbide-1234 # switches to your topic branch
$ git rebase master # reapplies your changes on top of the latest in master
(i.e., the latest from master will be the new base for your changes)
If the pull grabbed a lot of changes, you should rerun your build with tests enabled to make sure your changes are still good.
You can then push your topic branch and its changes into your public fork repository:
$ git push origin jbide-1234 # pushes your topic branch into your public fork of JBoss Central
And then generate a pull-request where we can review the proposed changes, comment on them, discuss them with you, and if everything is good merge the changes right into the official repository.