Rust by Example contribution guidelines
Thank you for your interest in making Rust by Example (also known as RBE)
better! We’d love to have your contribution. We expect all contributors to
abide by the Rust code of conduct, which you can find at that link or in theCODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
file in this repository.
License
RBE is dual licenced under the MIT and Apache 2.0 licenses, and so are all
contributions. Please see the LICENSE-MIT
and LICENSE-APACHE
files in
this directory for more details.
Pull Requests
To make changes to RBE, please send in pull requests on GitHub to the master
branch. We’ll review them and either merge or request changes. Travis CI tests
everything as well, so you may get feedback from it too.
If you make additions or other changes to a pull request, feel free to either amend
previous commits or only add new ones, however you prefer. We may ask you to squash
your commits before merging, depending.
Issue Tracker
You can find the issue tracker on
GitHub. If you’ve found a
problem with RBE, please open an issue there.
We use the following labels:
enhancement
: This is for any request for new sections or functionality.bug
: This is for anything that’s in RBE, but incorrect or not working.discussion
: A discussion about improving something in RBE; this may lead to new
enhancement or bug issues.E-mentor
: This issue has someone dedicated to helping a new contributor fix it!
Can apply to both enhancement or bug issues.
Development workflow
To build RBE, install Rust, and then:
$ git clone https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-by-example
$ cd rust-by-example
$ cargo install mdbook
$ mdbook build
The files will be in the book
directory at the top-level; mdbook serve
will
open the contents in your web browser.
To run the tests:
$ mdbook test
If you’re adding a new chapter, you’ll need to edit src\SUMMARY.md
to add it. If
you’re tweaking an existing example, you’ll need to edit the corresponding file; checksrc\SUMMARY.md
to see a mapping of where chapters go to files.