There are two main ways to contribute to the project — submitting issues and submitting fixes/changes/improvements via pull requests.
Both bug reports and feature requests are welcome. Submit issues here.
- Search for existing issues to avoid reporting duplicates.
- When submitting a bug report:
- Test it against the most recently released version. It might have been already fixed.
- By default, we assume that your problem is reproduced in a Kotlin/JVM project with the Kover Coverage Tool. Please, mention if the problem is specific to Kotlin Multiplatform/Android or JaCoCo Tool.
- Include the code that reproduces the problem. Provide the complete reproducer code, yet minimize it as much as possible.
- However, don't put off reporting any weird or rarely appearing issues just because you cannot consistently reproduce them.
- If the bug is in behavior, then explain what behavior you've expected and what you've got.
- When submitting a feature request:
- Explain why you need the feature — what's your use-case, what's your domain.
- Explaining the problem you face is more important than suggesting a solution. Report your problem even if you don't have any proposed solution.
- If there is an alternative way to do what you need, then show the code of the alternative.
We love PRs. Submit PRs here. However, please keep in mind that maintainers will have to support the resulting code of the project, so do familiarize yourself with the following guidelines.
- All development (both new features and bug fixes) is performed in the
main
branch.- The
release
branch always contains sources of the most recently released version. - Base PRs against the
main
branch. - The
main
branch is pushed to therelease
branch during release.
- The
- If you make any code changes:
- Follow the Kotlin Coding Conventions. Use 4 spaces for indentation.
- Build the project to make sure it all works and passes the tests.
- If you fix a bug:
- Write the test that reproduces the bug.
- Fixes without tests are accepted only in exceptional circumstances if it can be shown that writing the corresponding test is too hard or otherwise impractical.
- Place a test for the functionality of one or more Kover plugin classes in unit tests directory
- Place in functional test directory the test that check the functionality of the Kover plugin by the Gradle runs
- Follow the style of writing tests that is used in this project:
name test functions as
test...
, don't use backticks in test names. Name test classes as...Tests
. - Fixes that, in addition to directly solving the bug, add a large piece of new functionality or change the existing one, will be considered as features
- If you introduce any new features or change the existing behavior:
- Comment on the existing issue if you want to work on it or create one beforehand. Ensure that the issue not only describes a problem, but also describes a solution that had received a positive feedback. Propose a solution if there isn't any. PRs with new features, but without a corresponding issue with a positive feedback about the proposed implementation are unlikely to be approved or reviewed.
- All new or modified features must come with tests.
- If you plan significant changes in the internal structure of the plugin without changing external behavior then please start by submitting an issue with the proposed design to receive community feedback.
- If you plan API changes, then please start by submitting an issue with the proposed API design
to gather community feedback. - Contact the maintainers to coordinate any big piece of work in advance.
- Drafts are used to demonstrate a prototype solution and discuss it with the community for further implementation
This plugin is built with Gradle.
- Run
./gradlew build
to build. It also runs all unit and functional tests. - Run
./gradlew functionalTest --tests "test.name"
to run specific functional test to speed things up during development.
- JDK >= 1.8 referred to by the
JAVA_HOME
environment variable.
- If something cannot be done, not convenient, or does not work — submit an issue.
- "How to do something" questions — StackOverflow.