We are always looking to promote good contributors to be maintainers and provide them a front-row seat to serverless innovation.
If you would like to be a maintainer for the Serverless Framework or any of our plugins, please get started with making code contributions and engaging with open issues/PRs. Also, please reach out to any of Serverless organization members to express your interest.
We'd love to collaborate closely with amazing developers as we drive the development of this open technology into the future.
Welcome, and thanks in advance for your help!
First, the preferred node version for development is v14; While v12 is supported on the client-side, developing in v12 can be unexpectdly tricky (see: 11250).
Then, to begin development fork repository and run npm install
in its root folder.
A good first step is to search for open issues. Issues are labeled, and some good issues to start with are labeled: good first issue and help wanted.
Please make sure there is an open issue discussing your contribution before jumping into a Pull Request! There are just a few situations (listed below) in which it is fine to submit PR without a corresponding issue:
- Documentation update
- Obvious bug fix
- Maintenance improvement
In all other cases please check if there's an open an issue discussing the given proposal, if there is not, create an issue respecting all its template remarks.
In non-trivial cases please propose and let us review an implementation spec (in the corresponding issue) before jumping into implementation.
Do not submit draft PRs. Submit only finalized work which is ready for merge. If you have any doubts related to implementation work please discuss in the corresponding issue.
Once a PR has been reviewed and some changes are suggested, please ensure to re-request review after all new changes are pushed. It's the best and quietest way to inform maintainers that your work is ready to be checked again.
Note: Please write a quick comment in the corresponding issue and ask if the feature is still relevant and that you want to jump into the implementation.
Check out our help wanted or good first issue labels to find issues we want to move forward with your help.
We will do our best to respond/review/merge your PR according to priority. We hope that you stay engaged with us during this period to ensure QA. Please note that the PR will be closed if there hasn't been any activity for a long time (~ 30 days) to keep us focused and keep the repo clean.
Another really useful way to contribute to Serverless is to review other people's Pull Requests. Having feedback from multiple people is helpful and reduces the overall time to make a final decision about the Pull Request.
Our documentation lives on GitHub in the docs directory. Do you see a typo or other ways to improve it? Feel free to edit it and submit a Pull Request!
The easiest thing you can do to help us move forward and make an impact on our progress is to simply provide support to other people having difficulties with their Serverless projects.
You can do that by replying to issues on GitHub, chatting with other community members in our Community Slack, or helping with questions in our Forum, or GitHub Discussions.
We aim for a clean, consistent code style. We're using Prettier to confirm one code formatting style and ESlint helps us to stay away from obvious issues that can be picked via static analysis.
Ideally, you should have Prettier and ESlint integrated into your code editor, which will help you not think about specific rules and be sure you submit the code that follows guidelines.
npm run prettier-check
npm run lint
- Minimize lodash usage - resort to it, only if given part of logic cannot be expressed easily with native language constructs
- When writing asynchronous code, ensure to take advantage of async functions and native
Promise
API. Do not rely on Bluebird even though still large parts of old code rely on it. We're looking forward to drop this dependency in the near future.
Ideally, all breaking changes should be first (before being shipped with next major) communicated with deprecation logs.
Deprecation log can be configured with the following steps:
- Write a deprecation log with help of
serverless._logDeprecation
util.
This log should be written only if deprecated functionality is used. If applicable (to a given case) the deprecation log should be reported, after service configuration is fully resolved, but before any command logic is run. This can be achieved by attaching to the initialize
hook (example).
serverless._logDeprecation
accepts two arguments:
code
(e.g.DEPRECATED_FEATURE_NAME
). Created to identify the log programmatically. This is also used to construct a link on the documentation page.message
Deprecation message to be displayed to the user.
- Document introduced deprecations at
docs/deprecations.md
. New deprecation should be listed as first and follow the format of other documented deprecations.
Example PRs with configured deprecations:
All newly introduced configuration properties should be covered by proper changes to configuration schema. For more details about configuration validation, please see docs/configuration-validation.
See test/README
Finally, to make sure you have a pleasant experience while being in our welcoming community, please read our code of conduct. It outlines our core values and beliefs and will make working together a happier experience.
Thanks again for being a contributor to the Serverless Community 🎉!
Cheers,
The ⚡ Serverless Team