This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
along with this program. If not, see
../docs/tasks.html. There is also a
../docs/maintain/index.html and ../docs/git/index.html."); ?>
Some people put their name on their work, for recognition, and it's OK if you want to do that; however, the libreboot project does not require this. Some projects (such as coreboot) require a legal name, which can be problematic for certain groups of people.
Using your legal name is not required when submitting patches to libreboot. For reasons why we have this policy, read this article. You can use a pseudonym (alternative name), or your company name (if you have one), if you want or need to do that. You can also submit patches without a name, if you want or need to do that (instructions are provided on this page). Also, read this article. Unfortunately, git appears to be stuck with these problems, when an author changes their name, and we don't have a concrete answer to it. As far as we know, publishing your legal name isn't even required for copyright purposes; in fact, "pen" names are commonly used by literary authors.
When submitting any kind of documentation, try not to use the terms him/her, she/he, his/her, or anything that is gender biased. Use their, they, them, those people, that person, and so on. You are making a huge difference.
copyleft preferred)."); ?> https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html. NOTE: not putting a copyright notice on a work does not mean it lacks copyright. Copyright is automatic in most countries. Not putting a license on a work also does not make that work free; you have to declare a free license, otherwise the default, restrictive copyright laws apply for those who wish to do anything with your work. Always put a license on your work!
Small technical note: libreboot is working to convert all documentation to texinfo, where it is currently written in HTML, directly. Therefore, please submit any new documentation under this format, during the transition period.
Information about maintainers to notify, when submitting patches, can be found on the project maintainers page. Generally speaking, libreboot uses a very informal review method for patches. Most patches are merged, unless they obviously have problems. We recommend submitting them to the libreboot development mailing list, linked to from the home page. There is also an IRC channel.
Libreboot development is facilitated by git, a distributed version control system. You will need to install git (most GNU/Linux distributions package it in their repositories).
git clone
Browse repository via web
git clone
Browse repository via web
Libreboot development is facilitated by git, a distributed version control system that is in wide use today. Git provides many practical benefits, making collective development of software very easy.
git documentation describes how to use git. The following notes include simple tips for how to use git, but it is a good idea to get fully acquainted with git."); ?>
$ git config --global user.name "Your Name"
$ git config --global user.email your@emailaddress.com
NOTE: you do not have to use your legal name; we don't care what name you use. Pseudonyms (alternative names) are OK. If you wish to be anonymous (no name), you can also use Libreboot Contributor as your name, and noname@libreboot.org as the email address. We will happily accept anonymous contributions in the libreboot project.
$ git config --global core.editor nano
$ git config --global color.status auto
$ git config --global color.branch auto
$ git config --global color.interactive auto
$ git config --global color.diff auto
NOTE: the above steps for colour make git use red/green font colours for showing diffs. If you are red/green colour-blind, please ignore the above steps. The default configuration in git is no-colour (all one colour, usually the default that your terminal uses). If you are colour-blind, git can display in other colours; refer to the git documentation.
$ git status
git add path/to/file. You should also add any other files that are listed as modified in the git status. If there are deleted files in the git status, you can use git rm path/to/file. As long as you have added all the untracked files, it is generally easier to use:"); ?>
$ git commit -a
git commit)"); ?>
$ git commit --amend
$ git commit -a --amend
If you wish to use a different author name for the commit command, add --author="Author's Name <author's email address>" at the end. This could be a pseudonym (alternative name), or it could be because you are submitting a patch on someone else's behalf. If you wish to be anonymous (no name), you can also use Libreboot Contributor as your name, and noname@libreboot.org as the email address. We will happily accept anonymous contributions in the libreboot project.
Check once more that everything you want is added. Use the git status command to check for untracked changes/files, and adapt accordingly.
Once you've committed everything, your changes will appear in a diff format, using this command:
$ git show
Use PgUp/PgDown to navigate the diff output. This uses the less utility, so all the features from that (e.g. keyword search) are also available.
$ git log
$ git config --global --add alias.lol "log --graph --decorate --pretty=oneline --abbrev-commit --all"
$ git lol
git log, but it's much better and shows branches, etc."); ?>