Deck is a kanban style organization tool aimed at personal planning and project organization for teams integrated with Nextcloud.
- 📥 Add your tasks to cards and put them in order
- 📄 Write down additional notes in markdown
- 🔖 Assign labels for even better organization
- 👥 Share with your team, friends or family
- 🚀 Get your project organized
This app is supposed to work on Nextcloud version 12 or later.
You can download and install the latest release from the Nextcloud app store
If you want to run the latest development version from git source, you need to clone the repo to your apps folder:
git clone https://github.com/nextcloud/deck.git
cd deck
make install-deps
make
Please make sure you have installed the following dependencies: make, which, tar, npm, curl
Instead of setting everything up manually, you can just download the nightly builds instead. These builds are updated every 24 hours, and are pre-configured with all the needed dependencies.
Nothing to prepare, just dig into the code.
Deck requires running a make build-js
to install npm dependencies and build the JavaScript code using webpack. While developing you can also use make watch
to rebuild everytime the code changes.
You can use the provided Makefile to run all tests by using:
make test
Please read the Code of Conduct. This document offers some guidance to ensure Nextcloud participants can cooperate effectively in a positive and inspiring atmosphere, and to explain how together we can strengthen and support each other.
For more information please review the guidelines for contributing to this repository.
All contributions to this repository are considered to be licensed under the GNU AGPLv3 or any later version.
Contributors to the Deck app retain their copyright. Therefore we recommend to add following line to the header of a file, if you changed it substantially:
@copyright Copyright (c) <year>, <your name> (<your email address>)
For further information on how to add or update the license header correctly please have a look at our licensing HowTo.
We use the Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) as a additional safeguard for the Nextcloud project. This is a well established and widely used mechanism to assure contributors have confirmed their right to license their contribution under the project's license. Please read developer-certificate-of-origin. If you can certify it, then just add a line to every git commit message:
Signed-off-by: Random J Developer <random@developer.example.org>
Use your real name (sorry, no pseudonyms or anonymous contributions).
If you set your user.name
and user.email
git configs, you can sign your
commit automatically with git commit -s
. You can also use git aliases
like git config --global alias.ci 'commit -s'
. Now you can commit with
git ci
and the commit will be signed.