Contribution Guide
To encourage active collaboration, Laravel strongly encourages pull requests, not just bug reports. "Bug reports" may also be sent in the form of a pull request containing a failing test.
However, if you file a bug report, your issue should contain a title and a clear description of the issue. You should also include as much relevant information as possible and a code sample that demonstrates the issue. The goal of a bug report is to make it easy for yourself - and others - to replicate the bug and develop a fix.
Remember, bug reports are created in the hope that others with the same problem will be able to collaborate with you on solving it. Do not expect that the bug report will automatically see any activity or that others will jump to fix it. Creating a bug report serves to help yourself and others start on the path of fixing the problem.
The Laravel source code is managed on Github, and there are repositories for each of the Laravel projects:
You may propose new features or improvements of existing Laravel behavior in the Laravel Internals . If you propose a new feature, please be willing to implement at least some of the code that would be needed to complete the feature.
All bug fixes should be sent to the latest stable branch or to the current LTS branch (5.1). Bug fixes should never be sent to the branch unless they fix features that exist only in the upcoming release.
Minor features that are fully backwards compatible with the current Laravel release may be sent to the latest stable branch.
Major new features should always be sent to the branch, which contains the upcoming Laravel release.
If you are unsure if your feature qualifies as a major or minor, please ask Taylor Otwell in the channel of the Slack team.
Laravel follows the PSR-2 coding standard and the autoloading standard.
Below is an example of a valid Laravel documentation block. Note that the attribute is followed by two spaces, the argument type, two more spaces, and finally the variable name:
StyleCI
If your code style isn't perfect, don't worry! will automatically merge any style fixes into the Laravel repository after any pull requests are merged. This allows us to focus on the content of the contribution and not the code style.