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Contributing Guidelines

The following is a set of guidelines for contributing to NGINX Gateway Fabric. We really appreciate that you are considering contributing!

Table Of Contents

Ask a Question

Getting Started

Contributing

Code of Conduct

Contributor License Agreement

Ask a Question

To ask a question, use Github Discussions.

NGINX Community Slack has a dedicated channel for this project -- #nginx-gateway-fabric.

Reserve GitHub issues for feature requests and bugs rather than general questions.

Getting Started

Follow our Installation Instructions to get the NGINX Gateway Fabric up and running.

Project Structure

  • NGINX Gateway Fabric is written in Go and uses the open source NGINX software as the data plane.
  • The project follows a standard Go project layout
    • The main code is found at cmd/gateway/
    • The internal code is found at internal/
    • Build files for Docker are found under build/
    • Deployment yaml files are found at deploy/
    • External APIs, clients, and SDKs can be found under pkg/
  • We use Go Modules for managing dependencies.
  • We use Ginkgo and Gomega for our BDD style unit tests.

Contributing

Issues and Discussions

Open a Discussion

If you have any questions, ideas, or simply want to engage in a conversation with the community and maintainers, we encourage you to open a discussion on GitHub.

Report a Bug

To report a bug, open an issue on GitHub with the label bug using the available bug report issue template. Before reporting a bug, make sure the issue has not already been reported.

Suggest an Enhancement

To suggest an enhancement, open an idea on GitHub discussions. We highly recommend that you open a discussion about a potential enhancement before opening an issue. This enables the maintainers to gather valuable insights regarding the idea and its use cases, while also giving the community an opportunity to provide valuable feedback.

In some cases, the maintainers may ask you to write an Enhancement Proposal. For details on this process, see the Enhancement Proposal README.

Issue lifecycle

When an issue or PR is created, it will be triaged by the maintainers and assigned a label to indicate the type of issue it is (bug, proposal, etc) and to determine the milestone. See the Issue Lifecycle document for more information.

Development Guide

Before beginning development, familiarize yourself with the following documents:

  • Developer Quickstart: This guide provides a quick and easy walkthrough of setting up your development environment and executing tasks required when submitting a pull request.
  • Branching and Workflow: This document outlines the project's specific branching and workflow practices, including instructions on how to name a branch.
  • Implement a Feature: A step-by-step guide on how to implement a feature or bug.
  • Testing: The project's testing guidelines, includes both unit testing and manual testing procedures. This document explains how to write and run unit tests, and how to manually verify changes.
  • Pull Request Guidelines: A guide for both pull request submitters and reviewers, outlining guidelines and best practices to ensure smooth and efficient pull request processes.
  • Go Style Guide: A coding style guide for Go. Contains best practices and conventions to follow when writing Go code for the project.
  • Architecture: A high-level overview of the project's architecture.
  • Design Principles: An overview of the project's design principles.

Contributor License Agreement

Individuals or business entities who contribute to this project must have completed and submitted the F5® Contributor License Agreement prior to their code submission being included in this project. To submit, print out the F5® Contributor License Agreement, fill in the required sections, sign, scan, and send executed CLA to [email protected]. Make sure to include your github handle in the CLA email.