3.5 KiB
Contributing
Reporting issues
If you find an issue in the client, you can use our Issue Tracker. Make sure that it hasn't yet been reported by searching first.
Remember to include the following information:
- Android version
- Device model
- F-Droid version
- Steps to reproduce the issue
- Logcat - see instructions
Translating
The strings are translated using Weblate. Follow these instructions if you would like to contribute.
Please do not send merge requests or patches modifying the translations. Use Weblate instead - it applies a series of fixes and suggestions, plus it keeps track of modifications and fuzzy translations. Applying translations manually skips all of the fixes and checks, and overrides the fuzzy state of strings.
Code Style
We follow the Android Java style. Some key points:
- Four space indentation
- UTF-8 source files
- Exactly one top-level class per file
- No wildcard imports
- One statement per line
- K&R spacings with braces and parenthesis
- Commented fallthroughs
- Braces are always used after if, for and while
The current code base doesn't follow it entirely, but new code should follow it.
Debugging
To get all the logcat messages by F-Droid, you can run:
adb logcat | grep `adb shell ps | grep org.fdroid.fdroid | cut -c10-15`
Building tips
- Use
gradle --daemon
if you are going to build F-Droid multiple times. - If you get a message like
Could not find com.android.support:support-...
, make sure that you have the latest Android support maven repository.
Running the test suite
In order to run the F-Droid test suite, you will need to have either a real device
connected via adb
, or an emulator running. Then, execute the following from the
command line:
gradle connectedCheck
Note that the CI already runs the tests on an emulator, so you don't necessarily have to do this yourself if you open a merge request as the tests will get run.
Versioning
Each stable version follows the X.Y
pattern. Hotfix releases - i.e. when a
stable has an important bug that needs immediate fixing - will follow the
X.Y.Z
pattern.
Before each stable release, a number of alpha releases will be released. They
will follow the pattern X.Y-alphaN
, where N
is the current alpha number.
These will usually include changes and new features that have not been tested
enough for a stable release, so use at your own risk. Testers and reporters
are very welcome.
The version codes use a number of digits per each of these keys: XYYZNN
.
So for example, 1.3.1 would be 103150
and 0.95-alpha13 would be 95013
(leading zeros are omitted).
Note that we use a trailing 50
for actual stable releases, so alphas are
limited to -alpha49
.
This is an example of a release process for 0.95:
- We are currently at stable 0.94
- 0.95-alpha1 is released
- 0.95-alpha2 is released
- 0.95-alpha3 is released
stable-v0.95
is branched and frozen- 0.95 is released
- A bug is reported on the stable release and fixed
- 0.95.1 is released with only that fix
As soon as a stable is tagged, master will move on to -alpha0
on the next
version. This is a temporary measure - until -alpha1
is released - so that
moving from stable to master doesn't require a downgrade. -alpha0
versions
will not be tagged nor released.