Contribution overview

    Thank you for your interest in Dapr! This document provides the guidelines for how to contribute to the through issues and pull-requests. Contributions can also come in additional ways such as engaging with the community in community calls, commenting on issues or pull requests and more.

    See the Dapr community repository for more information on community engagement and community membership.

    In most Dapr repositories there are usually 4 types of issues:

    • Issue/Bug: You’ve found a bug with the code, and want to report it, or create an issue to track the bug.
    • Issue/Discussion: You have something on your mind, which requires input form others in a discussion, before it eventually manifests as a proposal.
    • Issue/Proposal: Used for items that propose a new idea or functionality. This allows feedback from others before code is written.

    Before you submit an issue, make sure you’ve checked the following:

    1. Is it the right repository?
      • The Dapr project is distributed across multiple repositories. Check the list of if you aren’t sure which repo is the correct one.
    2. Check for existing issues
      • Before you create a new issue, please do a search in open issues to see if the issue or feature request has already been filed.
      • If you find your issue already exists, make relevant comments and add your . Use a reaction:
        • 👍 up-vote
        • 👎 down-vote
    3. For bugs
      • Check it’s not an environment issue. For example, if running on Kubernetes, make sure prerequisites are in place. (state stores, bindings, etc.)
      • You have as much data as possible. This usually comes in the form of logs and/or stacktrace. If running on Kubernetes or other environment, look at the logs of the Dapr services (runtime, operator, placement service). More details on how to get logs can be found here.
    1. Make sure there’s an issue (bug or proposal) raised, which sets the expectations for the contribution you are about to make.
    2. Fork the relevant repo and create a new branch
      • Some Dapr repos support to provide an instant environment for you to build and test your changes.
    3. Create your change
      • Code changes require tests
    4. Update relevant documentation for the change
    5. Commit and open a PR
    6. Wait for the CI process to finish and make sure all checks are green

    Use work-in-progress PRs for early feedback

    A good way to communicate before investing too much time is to create a “Work-in-progress” PR and share it with your reviewers. The standard way of doing this is to add a “[WIP]” prefix in your PR’s title and assign the do-not-merge label. This will let people looking at your PR know that it is not well baked yet.

    • Third-party code must include licenses.

    Please see the .