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We appreciate and recognize all contributors.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
Table of Contents
Mission Statement
awesome-docker
is a hand-crafted list for high-quality information about Docker and its resources. It should be related or compatible with Docker. If it's just an image built on top of Docker, the project possibly belongs to other awesome lists. You can check the awesome-selfhosted list or the awesome-sysadmin list as well.
If it's a tutorial or a blog post, they get outdated really quickly so we don't really put them on the list but if it is on a very advanced and/or specific topic, we will consider it!
If something is awesome, share it (pull request or issue or chat), let us know why and we will help you!
Quality Standards
Note that we can help you achieve those standards, just try your best and be brave. We'll guide you to the best of our abilities.
To be on the list, it would be nice if entries adhere to these quality standards:
- Generally useful to the community.
- A project on GitHub with a well documented
README.md
file and plenty of examples is considered high quality. - Clearly stating if an entry is related to (Linux) containers and not to Docker. There is an awesome list for that.
- Clearly stating "what is it" i.e. which category it belongs to.
- Clearly stating "what is it for" i.e. mention a real problem it solves (even a small one). Make it clear for the next person.
- If it is a WIP (work in progress, not safe for production), please mention it. (Remember the time before Docker 1.0 ? ;-) )
- Always put the link to the GitHub project instead of the website!
To be on the list, the project must have:
- How to setup the project
- How to use the project (examples)
If your PR is not merged, we will tell you why so that you may be able to improve it. But usually, we are pretty relaxed people, so just come and say hi, we'll figure something out together.
Contribution Guidelines
I want to share a project, what should I do?
- Adding to the list: Submit a pull request or open an issue
- Removing from the list: Submit a pull request or open an issue
- Changing something else: Submit a pull request or open an issue
- Don't know what to do: Open an issue or join our chat, let us know what's going on.
join the chat:
or you can
ping us on Twitter:
Rules for Pull Request
- Each item should be limited to one link, no duplicates, no redirection (careful with
http
vshttps
!) - The link should be the name of the package or project or website
- Description should be clear and concise (read it out loud to be sure)
- Description should follow the link, on the same line
- If you want to add more than one link, please don't do all PR on the exact same line, it usually results in conflicts and your PR cannot be automatically merged...
Please contribute links to packages/projects you have used or are familiar with. This will help ensure high-quality entries.
Your commit message will be a tweet so write a good commit message, keep that in mind :)
New Collaborators
If you just joined the team of maintainers for this repo, first of all: WELCOME!
If it is your first time maintaining an open source project, read the best practice guides for maintainers.
Here are the few things you need to know:
- We don't push directly to the master branch. Every entry MUST be reviewed!
- Each entry should be in accordance to this quality standards and contribution guidelines.
- To ask a contributor to make a change, just copy paste this message here and change few things like names and stuff. The main idea is to help people making great projects.
- If something seems weird, i.e. if you don't understand what a project does or the documentation is poor, don't hesitate to (nicely) ask for more explanation (see previous point).
- Say thank you to people who contribute to this project! It may not seems like much but respect and gratitude are important :D