--- description: Overview of contributing keywords: open, source, contributing, overview title: FAQ for contributors --- This section contains some frequently asked questions and tips for troubleshooting problems in your code contribution. - [How do I set my signature?](FAQ.md#how-do-i-set-my-signature:cb7f612e17aad7eb26c06709ef92a867) - [How do I track changes from the docker repo upstream?](FAQ.md#how-do-i-track-changes-from-the-docker-repo-upstream:cb7f612e17aad7eb26c06709ef92a867) - [How do I format my Go code?](FAQ.md#how-do-i-format-my-go-code:cb7f612e17aad7eb26c06709ef92a867) - [What is the pre-pull request checklist?](FAQ.md#what-is-the-pre-pull-request-checklist:cb7f612e17aad7eb26c06709ef92a867) - [How should I comment my code?](FAQ.md#how-should-i-comment-my-code:cb7f612e17aad7eb26c06709ef92a867) - [How do I rebase my feature branch?](FAQ.md#how-do-i-rebase-my-feature-branch:cb7f612e17aad7eb26c06709ef92a867) ## How do I set my signature {#how-do-i-set-my-signature} 1. Change to the root of your `docker-fork` repository. ``` $ cd docker-fork ``` 2. Set your `user.name` for the repository. ``` $ git config --local user.name "FirstName LastName" ``` 3. Set your `user.email` for the repository. ``` $ git config --local user.email "emailname@mycompany.com" ``` ## How do I track changes from the docker repo upstream Set your local repo to track changes upstream, on the `docker` repository. 1. Change to the root of your Docker repository. ``` $ cd docker-fork ``` 2. Add a remote called `upstream` that points to `docker/docker` ``` $ git remote add upstream https://github.com/docker/docker.git ``` ## How do I format my Go code Run `gofmt -s -w filename.go` on each changed file before committing your changes. Most editors have plug-ins that do the formatting automatically. ## What is the pre-pull request checklist * Sync and cleanly rebase on top of Docker's `master`; do not mix multiple branches in the pull request. * Squash your commits into logical units of work using `git rebase -i` and `git push -f`. * If your code requires a change to tests or documentation, include code,test, and documentation changes in the same commit as your code; this ensures a revert would remove all traces of the feature or fix. * Reference each issue in your pull request description (`#XXXX`). ## How should I comment my code? The Go blog wrote about code comments, it is a single page explanation. A summary follows: - Comments begin with two forward `//` slashes. - To document a type, variable, constant, function, or even a package, write a regular comment directly preceding the elements declaration, with no intervening blank line. - Comments on package declarations should provide general package documentation. - For packages that need large amounts of introductory documentation: the package comment is placed in its own file. - Subsequent lines of text are considered part of the same paragraph; you must leave a blank line to separate paragraphs. - Indent pre-formatted text relative to the surrounding comment text (see gob's doc.go for an example). - URLs are converted to HTML links; no special markup is necessary. ## How do I rebase my feature branch? Always rebase and squash your commits before making a pull request. 1. Fetch any of the last minute changes from `docker/docker`. ``` $ git fetch upstream master ``` 3. Start an interactive rebase. ``` $ git rebase -i upstream/master ``` 4. Rebase opens an editor with a list of commits. ``` pick 1a79f55 Tweak some of images pick 3ce07bb Add a new line ``` If you run into trouble, `git --rebase abort` removes any changes and gets you back to where you started. 4. Squash the `pick` keyword with `squash` on all but the first commit. ``` pick 1a79f55 Tweak some of images squash 3ce07bb Add a new line ```` After closing the file, `git` opens your editor again to edit the commit message. 5. Edit and save your commit message. ``` $ git commit -s ``` Make sure your message includes your signature. 8. Push any changes to your fork on GitHub, using the `-f` option to force the previous change to be overwritten. ``` $ git push -f origin my-keen-feature ```