Files
CHORUS/vendor/github.com/godbus/dbus/v5/CONTRIBUTING.md
anthonyrawlins 9bdcbe0447 Integrate BACKBEAT SDK and resolve KACHING license validation
Major integrations and fixes:
- Added BACKBEAT SDK integration for P2P operation timing
- Implemented beat-aware status tracking for distributed operations
- Added Docker secrets support for secure license management
- Resolved KACHING license validation via HTTPS/TLS
- Updated docker-compose configuration for clean stack deployment
- Disabled rollback policies to prevent deployment failures
- Added license credential storage (CHORUS-DEV-MULTI-001)

Technical improvements:
- BACKBEAT P2P operation tracking with phase management
- Enhanced configuration system with file-based secrets
- Improved error handling for license validation
- Clean separation of KACHING and CHORUS deployment stacks

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-09-06 07:56:26 +10:00

1.4 KiB

How to Contribute

Getting Started

  • Fork the repository on GitHub
  • Read the README for build and test instructions
  • Play with the project, submit bugs, submit patches!

Contribution Flow

This is a rough outline of what a contributor's workflow looks like:

  • Create a topic branch from where you want to base your work (usually master).
  • Make commits of logical units.
  • Make sure your commit messages are in the proper format (see below).
  • Push your changes to a topic branch in your fork of the repository.
  • Make sure the tests pass, and add any new tests as appropriate.
  • Submit a pull request to the original repository.

Thanks for your contributions!

Format of the Commit Message

We follow a rough convention for commit messages that is designed to answer two questions: what changed and why. The subject line should feature the what and the body of the commit should describe the why.

scripts: add the test-cluster command

this uses tmux to setup a test cluster that you can easily kill and
start for debugging.

Fixes #38

The format can be described more formally as follows:

<subsystem>: <what changed>
<BLANK LINE>
<why this change was made>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>

The first line is the subject and should be no longer than 70 characters, the second line is always blank, and other lines should be wrapped at 80 characters. This allows the message to be easier to read on GitHub as well as in various git tools.