The following is a set of guidelines for contributing to the NGINX Prometheus Exporter. We really appreciate that you are considering contributing!
To ask a question please use Github Discussions.
You can also join our Community Slack which has a wider NGINX audience.
Please reserve GitHub issues for feature requests and bugs rather than general questions.
Follow our Getting Started Guide to get the NGINX Prometheus Exporter up and running.
- This project has a
Dockerfile
that builds an image based on the official Alpine Linux image and adds the FIPS OpenSSL module.
To report a bug, open an issue on GitHub with the label bug
using the available bug report issue template. Please
ensure the issue has not already been reported.
To suggest an enhancement, please create an issue on GitHub with the label enhancement
using the available feature
issue template.
- Fork the repo, create a branch, submit a PR when your changes are tested and ready for review
- Fill in our pull request template
Note
If you’d like to implement a new feature, please consider creating a feature request issue first to start a discussion about the feature.
- When an issue or PR is created, it will be triaged by the core development team and assigned a label to indicate the type of issue it is (bug, feature request, etc) and to determine the milestone. Please see the Issue Lifecycle document for more information.
F5 requires all external contributors to agree to the terms of the F5 CLA (available here) before any of their changes can be incorporated into an F5 Open Source repository.
If you have not yet agreed to the F5 CLA terms and submit a PR to this repository, a bot will prompt you to view and agree to the F5 CLA. You will have to agree to the F5 CLA terms through a comment in the PR before any of your changes can be merged. Your agreement signature will be safely stored by F5 and no longer be required in future PRs.
- Keep a clean, concise and meaningful git commit history on your branch, rebasing locally and squashing before submitting a PR
- Follow the guidelines of writing a good commit message as described here https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/
and summarized in the next few points
- In the subject line, use the present tense ("Add feature" not "Added feature")
- In the subject line, use the imperative mood ("Move cursor to..." not "Moves cursor to...")
- Limit the subject line to 72 characters or less
- Reference issues and pull requests liberally after the subject line
- Add more detailed description in the body of the git message (
git commit -a
to give you more space and time in your text editor to write a good message instead ofgit commit -am
)