Create an issue describing the motivation for your changes. Are you fixing a bug? Improving documentation? Optimizing some slow code?
Pull Requests without associated Issues may still be accepted, if the motivation is obvious. However, this will help speed up code review if there's any uncertainty.
Create a fork and make your code changes.
All pull requests must have 90% coverage in the changed code. Check the code coverage with your IDE or external tools.
Bugfixes should include a regression test which prevents that bug from being re-introduced in the future.
Documentation for the project is stored in the docs directory. If your feature requires docs updates, those updates must be submitted in the same Pull Request as the code changes.
- docs/endpoints describes the Prebid Server API. For example, the endpoint
host:port/openrtb2/auction
is described by docs/endpoints/openrtb2/auction.md - docs/developers contains docs intended for Developers. These assume that the reader is technical, and describe the mechanics of features.
When you're ready, submit a Pull Request
against the master
branch of our GitHub repository.
If the tests pass locally, but fail on your PR, update your fork with the latest code from master
.