# Contributing We'd love your help making zap the very best structured logging library in Go! If you'd like to add new exported APIs, please [open an issue][open-issue] describing your proposal — discussing API changes ahead of time makes pull request review much smoother. In your issue, pull request, and any other communications, please remember to treat your fellow contributors with respect! We take our [code of conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) seriously. Note that you'll need to sign [Uber's Contributor License Agreement][cla] before we can accept any of your contributions. If necessary, a bot will remind you to accept the CLA when you open your pull request. ## Setup [Fork][fork], then clone the repository: ```bash mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/go.uber.org cd $GOPATH/src/go.uber.org git clone git@github.com:your_github_username/zap.git cd zap git remote add upstream https://github.com/uber-go/zap.git git fetch upstream ``` Make sure that the tests and the linters pass: ```bash make test make lint ``` ## Making Changes Start by creating a new branch for your changes: ```bash cd $GOPATH/src/go.uber.org/zap git checkout master git fetch upstream git rebase upstream/master git checkout -b cool_new_feature ``` Make your changes, then ensure that `make lint` and `make test` still pass. If you're satisfied with your changes, push them to your fork. ```bash git push origin cool_new_feature ``` Then use the GitHub UI to open a pull request. At this point, you're waiting on us to review your changes. We _try_ to respond to issues and pull requests within a few business days, and we may suggest some improvements or alternatives. Once your changes are approved, one of the project maintainers will merge them. We're much more likely to approve your changes if you: - Add tests for new functionality. - Write a [good commit message][commit-message]. - Maintain backward compatibility. [fork]: https://github.com/uber-go/zap/fork [open-issue]: https://github.com/uber-go/zap/issues/new [cla]: https://cla-assistant.io/uber-go/zap [commit-message]: http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html