Brave is optimized for maintenance vs flexibility. It prefers small features that have been asked for repeated times, that are insured with tests, and have clear use cases. This limits the lines of code and count of modules in Brave's repo.
Code design is opinionated including below:
- Classes and methods default to package, not public visibility.
- Changing certain implementation classes may be unsupported.
- 3rd-party dependencies, and gnarly apis like java.beans are avoided.
The best way to approach something not yet supported is to ask on gitter. Asking for the feature you need (like how to trace a lambda) vs a specific implementation (like making a private type public) will give you more options to accomplish your goal.
Advice usually comes in two parts: advice and workaround. Advice may be to change Brave's code, or to fork until the feature is more widely requested.
High quality pull requests that have clear scope and tests that reflect the intent of the feature are often merged and released in days. If a merged change isn't immediately released and it is of priority to you, nag (make a comment) on your merged pull request until it is released.
Changes to Brave's code are best addressed by the feature requestor in a pull request after discussing in an issue or on gitter. By discussing first, there's less chance of a mutually disappointing experience where a pull request is rejected. Moreover, the feature may be already present!
Albeit rare, some features will be deferred or rejected for inclusion in Brave's main repository. In these cases, the choices are typically to either fork the repository, or make your own repository containing the change.
Forking isn't bad. It is a natural place to experiment and vet a feature before it ends up in Brave's main repository. Large features or those which haven't satisfied diverse need are often deferred to forks or separate repositories (see Rule of Three).
If you look carefully, you'll notice Brave integrations are often less than 1000 lines of code including tests. Some features are rejected for inclusion solely due to the amount of maintenance. For example, adding some features might imply tying up maintainers for several days or weeks and resulting in a large percentage increase in the size of Brave.
Large integrations aren't bad, but to be sustainable, they need to be isolated where the maintenance of that feature doesn't endanger the maintainability of Brave itself. Brave has been going since 2013, without the need of full-time attention. This is largely because maintenance is low and approachable.
A good example of an external integration is dropwizard-zipkin. Dropwizard Zipkin is better off in its own repo, not just because of feature depth. It is also, better off because it is run by a core contributor to Dropwizard. This reduces the framework-specific knowledge needed by core Brave maintainers, and ensures the highest quality integration.