Programs must be written for people to read, and only incidentally for machines to execute.
-- Harold Abelson, Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
Commit your changes using the following commit message format (with the same capitalization, spacing, and punctuation):
logging: Move function to module level
The first part of the message is the scope and the second part is a description of the change, written in the imperative tense.
Commits should be organized into logical units. Keep your git history clean by
rewriting it as
necessary using git rebase -i
(interactive rebase) and git push -f
(force
push). Commits addressing review comments and test failures should be squashed
if necessary.
Bug reports should include clear instructions to reproduce the bug. Include a stack trace if applicable.
Critical security bugs should be sent via email to security@21.co and should not be publicly disclosed. Eligible security disclosures are eligible, at our sole discretion, for a monetary bounty of up to $1000 based on severity.