05-19-2016 04:28 AM
The Getting the Nuxeo source code documentation says:
Contributing to Nuxeo does not require cloning Nuxeo source code
But when I want to play around and modify things and possibly later send various pull requests, is not it best if I have forked the repositories beforehand? I usually commit/push and create branches liberally, which I can't do if I have no write access to the repositories.
After cloning https://github.com/nuxeo/nuxeo , building requires me to clone dozens of other repositories. Is there a recommended way to choose what repositories to clone and what repositories to use directly from upstream? I noticed that some of these repositories have barely ever been forked by anyone, so there must be an alternative to cloning them all?
05-19-2016 05:17 AM
Hi,
Choosing what to clone or not depends on the kind, the code location and the size of the contribution.
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See Contributing to Nuxeo.
Fork then Pull-Request is the GitHub preferred way for sending a patch. It's indeed an easy process.
If you want to contribute changes on an addon for instance, you can clone and/or fork only that repository.
When you build a module, the required dependencies are downloaded from the online Maven repositories.
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If you want to perform a full build starting from the source code root (https://github.com/nuxeo/nuxeo), then yes: you will need to locally retrieve the whole source code. You can easily do it with the helper clone.py
script.
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Clone and fork is not the same thing: you can clone the whole source code (all repositories) and fork only the repository(ies) you want to contribute to.
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