We really appreciate and value contributions to the Beefy repositories. Please take 5' to review the items listed below to make sure that your contributions are merged as soon as possible.
As a contributor, you are expected to fork this repository, work on your own fork and then submit pull requests. The pull requests will be reviewed and eventually merged into the main repo. See "Fork-a-Repo" for how this works.
- Make sure your fork is up to date with the main repository:
cd beefy-v2
git remote add upstream https://github.com/beefyfinance/beefy-v2.git
git fetch upstream
git pull --rebase upstream main
NOTE: The directory beefy-v2
represents your fork's local copy.
- Branch out from
main
intofix/some-bug-#123
: (Postfixing #123 will associate your PR with the issue #123 and make everyone's life easier =D)
git checkout -b fix/some-bug-#123
- Make your changes, add your files, commit, and push to your fork.
git add SomeFile.js
git commit "Fix some bug #123"
git push origin fix/some-bug-#123
-
Go to github.com/beefyfinance/beefy-v2 in your web browser and issue a new pull request.
-
Maintainers will review your code and possibly ask for changes before your code is pulled in to the main repository. We'll check that all tests pass, review the coding style, and check for general code correctness. If everything is OK, we'll merge your pull request and your code will be part of Beefy's App.
IMPORTANT Please pay attention to the maintainer's feedback, since its a necessary step to keep up with the standards Beefy attains to.
If you have any questions, feel free to post them to github.com/beefyfinance/beefy-v2/issues.
Finally, if you're looking to collaborate and want to find easy tasks to start, look at the issues we marked as "Good first issue".
Beefy wants to be a self-sustainable community. A portion of the fees that come from running the vaults at beefy.finance goes into a community managed treasury. The treasury is used to pay for marketing, community managers, developers, etc. We are learning together how to do this in a fair and effective way. When it comes to devs there are a few options:
- There are some issues that will have a "Treasury Bounty" tag and a dollar amount in the issue title. This means that the issue carries a reward to the dev that closes it.
- You can propose a bounty or budget to get something done by following our proposal guidelines
Thanks for your time and code!