4.5 KiB
New Maintainer Checklist
This is a guide used by existing maintainers to invite new maintainers. You might find it interesting but there's nothing here users should have to know.
There's someone who has been making consistently high-quality contributions to Homebrew for a long time and shown themselves able to make slightly more advanced contributions than just e.g. formula updates? Let's invite them to be a maintainer!
First, send them the invitation email:
The Homebrew team and I really appreciate your help on issues, pull requests and
your contributions around $THEIR_CONTRIBUTIONS.
We would like to invite you to have commit access and be a Homebrew maintainer.
If you agree to be a maintainer, you should spend a significant proportion of
the time you are working on Homebrew fixing user-reported issues, resolving any
issues that arise from your code in a timely fashion and reviewing user
contributions. You should also be making contributions to Homebrew every month
unless you are ill or on vacation (and please let another maintainer know if
that's the case so we're aware you won't be able to help while you are out).
You will need to watch Homebrew/brew and/or Homebrew/homebrew-core. If you're
no longer able to perform all of these tasks, please continue to contribute to
Homebrew, but we will ask you to step down as a maintainer.
A few requests:
- please make pull requests on any changes to Homebrew/brew code or any
non-trivial (e.g. not a test or audit improvement or version bump) changes
to formulae code and don't merge them unless you get at least one approval
and passing tests.
- use `brew pull` for formulae changes that require new bottles or change
multiple formulae and let it auto-close issues wherever possible (it may
take ~5m). When this isn't necessary use GitHub's "Merge pull request"
button in "create a merge commit" mode for Homebrew/brew or "squash and
merge" for a single formulae change. If in doubt, check with e.g. GitX that
you've not accidentally added merge commits
- still create your branches on your fork rather than in the main repository.
Note GitHub's UI will create edits and reverts on the main repository if you
make edits or click revert on the Homebrew/brew repository rather than your
own fork.
- if still in doubt please ask for help and we'll help you out
- please read:
- https://docs.brew.sh/Brew-Test-Bot-For-Core-Contributors
- https://docs.brew.sh/Maintainer-Guidelines
- anything else you haven't read on https://docs.brew.sh
How does that sound?
Thanks for all your work so far!
If they accept, follow a few steps to get them set up:
- Invite them to the @Homebrew/maintainers team to give them write access to all repositories (but don't make them owners yet). They will need to enable GitHub's Two Factor Authentication.
- Ask them to sign in to Bintray using their GitHub account and they should auto-sync to Bintray's Homebrew organisation as a member so they can publish new bottles
- Add them to the Jenkins' GitHub Authorization Settings admin user names so they can adjust settings and restart jobs
- Add them to the Jenkins' GitHub Pull Request Builder admin list to enable
@BrewTestBot test this please
for them - Invite them to the
homebrew-maintainers
private maintainers mailing list - Invite them to the
machomebrew
private maintainers Slack (and ensure they've read the communication guidelines) - Invite them to the
homebrew
private maintainers 1Password - Invite them to Google Analytics
After a month-long trial period with no problems make them owners on the Homebrew GitHub organisation and add them to Homebrew's README. If there are problems, ask them to step down as a maintainer and revoke their access to the above.
Now sit back, relax and let the new maintainers handle more of our contributions.