Hyperledger Labs provides a space (i.e., GitHub repos) where work can easily be started without the creation of a project. Please refer to the Hyperledger Labs wiki page for additional information.
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Fork the hyperledger-labs.github.io repository.
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Fill out the Proposal Template and save it into the labs subdirectory under the name of your lab, such as mynewlab.md. It is expected that your lab repository will have the same name so keep that in mind.
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In the Proposal Template, there is an entry for sponsor(s). The sponsor(s) are responsible for reviewing the proposal. Sponsors do not have a responsibility beyond this; ongoing work like contributing code or reviews is not tied to their role as sponsors. In reviewing the proposal, the sponsor(s) make sure that the proposal is cogent, and novel (in conception, proposed execution, or interested community). To find sponsors a. the proposers can use their connections to existing projects and ask maintainers b. find working groups or projects with affinities to the proposed lab and pitch the project (good to have the template already filled out) in associated channels and or mailing lists. The WG chairs emails, the maintainers contacts etc. can be found on the wiki or github. Make personal appeals if you can.
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Commit your changes with proper sign-off. This means that your commit log message must contain a line that looks like the following one, with your actual name and email address:
Signed-off-by: John Doe <[email protected]>
Adding the
-s
flag to yourgit commit
command will add that line automatically. You can also add it manually as part of your commit log message or add it afterwards withgit commit --amend -s
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Submit a Pull Request.
The labs stewards will then review your proposal.
By default the Lab stewards will create a new respository for you to start from but if you have an existing github repo you would like to bring to your proposed lab you have the option to request for that repo to be reused instead. This is however only possible if every commit in your existing repo is signed-off so there is no DCO related issues. If that is not the case, you will need to bring your code by squashing all of your commits into a single first commit made against your new lab repo with your sign-off.