The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#) https://grpc.io/
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Contributing to gRPC: A Step-By-Step Guide

Note: This document is not meant for Google employees.

Prerequisites

To contribute to the gRPC codebase, you need the following:

  1. An active GitHub account
  2. An understanding of Git and GitHub
  3. Knowledge of how to fork a repository, clone a repository, merge, rebase, resolve, push, pull, fetch etc.
  4. git installed and working on your machine
  5. Knowledge of the language being used, which can be C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, or C#.

Steps to Contribute gRPC C++ Code

The GitHub repository for the C-based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#) is at https://github.com/grpc/grpc.

Fork and Clone the Repository

If you want to contribute to the gRPC code base, you need to make a fork of the repository.

  1. Create your own fork from https://github.com/grpc/grpc.

    Screenshot of creating fork using a non-google account.

  2. Clone your fork on your local machine.

Prepare and Push Your Commit

  1. In your cloned repository, create a new branch from master.
  2. Then prepare a commit for the files that you want to contribute.
  3. Commit to this branch.
  4. Push the commit to your fork on GitHub.

Take care that your commits are aligned with these guidelines.

Prepare a Pull Request

After pushing your commit, visit https://github.com/grpc/grpc . If the forking, branch creation, commit and push have been successful, you will see the following message:

Screenshot of Github UI to help to create a pull request.

Take care to allow edits by maintainers. If there is a specific issue with your pull request, the maintainer can help if needed. This access to help will reduce the turnaround time for your submission.

Screenshot of Github UI to help to create a Pull Request.

Create a pull request.

Pull Request Status - Safe Review

Once the pull request is ready, you must wait for a reviewer to be assigned to your pull request.

If you see Not Covered in the EasyCLA screen, as shown in the following image, click on the mentioned link to start the authorization process.

Screenshot of waiting for safe review

You will see a series of screens:

  1. Select *Authorize LF-Engineering:

Screenshot of EasyCLA Step 1

  1. Select your contributor type:

Screenshot of EasyCLA Step 2

  1. Select SIGN CLA:

Screenshot of EasyCLA Step 3

Some time after you've digitally signed the document, the EasyCLA will appear as Covered.

Screenshot of EasyCLA Step 5

After a few hours, you will notice a new "assignee" assigned to the pull request. 

Screenshot after an assignee is added

After a reviewer is assigned to you, they will help with the next steps, which are as follows:

  1. You complete the code review and address the comments.
  2. Your reviewer may add a few labels as needed.

Pull Request Status - Green

Once you have approval from the reviewer, check if the tests are running. After the tests are complete, look at the status of all the tests. If everything is green, everything is good. But usually some failures exist. If there are failures, select each failure. The selection will take you to a page that has error details. Try to fix the issue.

Pull Request Approval

For pull requests that are non-trivial, there is a thorough code review process. You can read more about the process and requirements here.

After you fix the code review, you will finally get an approval. After getting approval, you can submit the pull request.

Pull request approved and labelled

Submission

You cannot do submission or merge of a pull request through Github.

Pull request approved and labelled

After you have approval from a reviewer, a Google employee will trigger the submission process. When the submission happens:

  1. A commit with your changes, along with a few additional formatting changes, will be committed to the grpc/master branch.
  2. The pull request you originally created will be closed.