5.4 KiB
How to Contribute
So you want to contribute to the project. THIS IS GREAT NEWS! Seriously. We're all pretty happy about this.
Getting set up to contribute
Fork the homebrew-cask repository as per instructions in the GitHub help pages:
- Fork the repository in GitHub with the 'Fork' button
- Add your GitHub fork as a remote for your homebrew-cask Tap
github_user='<my-github-username>'
cd $(brew --prefix)/Library/Taps/phinze-cask
git remote add $github_user https://github.com/$github_user/homebrew-cask
Adding a Cask
Making a Cask is easy: a Cask is a Ruby file that is only eight lines long. Here's a Cask for Alfred.app as an example:
class Alfred < Cask
url 'http://cachefly.alfredapp.com/alfred_1.3.2_265.zip'
homepage 'http://www.alfredapp.com/'
version '1.3.2_265'
sha1 'e10f15a0ae758cae2a22557f14890fa5989260ce'
link 'Alfred.app'
end
To get started, use the handy dandy brew cask create
command.
brew cask create my-new-cask
This will open $EDITOR
with a template for your new cask. Note that the
convention is that hyphens in the name indicate casing in the class name, so
the Cask name 'my-new-cask' becomes MyNewCask
stored in my-new-cask.rb
. So
running the above command will get you a template that looks like this:
class MyNewCask < Cask
url ''
homepage ''
version ''
sha1 ''
link ''
end
Fill in the following fields for your Cask:
field | explanation |
---|---|
url |
URL to the .dmg /.zip /.tgz file that contains the application |
homepage |
application homepage;used for the brew cask home command |
version |
application version; determines the directory structure in the Caskroom |
sha1 |
SHA-1 Checksum of the file; checked when the file is downloaded to prevent any funny business |
link |
indicate which file(s) should be linked into the Applications folder on installation |
Good Things to Know
- In order to find out the checksum for the file, the easiest way is to leave it blank and attempt installation. The checksum will fail and tell you what the real sha1 should be.
- You can specify
link :none
if no files should be linked - If the application does not have versioned downloads, you can skip the
checksum by specifying
no_checksum
, which takes no arguments - We have some conventions for projects without version-specific URLs.
latest
is a common version for those, but you can grep through the existing casks for other examples
Testing your new Cask
Give it a shot with brew cask install my-new-cask
Did it install? If something went wrong, brew cask uninstall my-new-cask
and
edit your Cask to fix it.
If everything looks good, you'll also want to make sure you cask passes audit
with brew cask audit my-new-cask
If your application and homebrew-cask do not work well together, feel free to file an issue after checking out open issues.
Submitting your Changes
Hop into your Tap and check to make sure your new cask is there:
cd $(brew --prefix)/Library/Taps/phinze-cask
git status
# On branch master
# Untracked files:
# (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
#
# Casks/my-new-cask.rb
So far, so good. Now make a feature branch that you'll use in your pull request:
git checkout -b my-new-cask
Switched to a new branch 'my-new-cask'
Stage your Cask with git add Casks/my-new-cask.rb
. You can view the changes
that are to be committed with git diff --cached
.
Commit your changes with git commit -v
. Write your commit message with:
- the first line being commit summary, 50 characters or less,
- followed by an empty line
- and an explanation of the commit, wrapped to 72 characters.
See a note about git commit messages for a more thorough explanation.
Push your changes to your GitHub account:
github_user='<my-github-username>'
git push $github_user my-new-cask
Filing a pull request on GitHub
Now go to your GitHub repository at https://github.com/my-github-username/homebrew-cask, switch branch to your topic branch and click on 'Pull Request' button. You can then add further comments to your pull request.
Congratulations! You are done now, and your Cask should be pulled in or otherwise noticed in a while.
Cleaning up
After your Pull Request is away, you might want to get yourself back on master,
so that brew update
will pull down new Casks properly.
cd $(brew --prefix)/Library/Taps/phinze-cask
git checkout master
Neat and tidy!
Working on homebrew-cask itself
If you'd like to hack on the ruby code in the project itself, one way to play
with changes is to symlink the rubylib
folder to your Tap repository. So
assuming your fork is cloned at ~/homebrew-cask
you could do something like
this:
$ cd $(brew --prefix brew-cask)
$ mv rubylib{,.orig}
$ ln -s ~/homebrew-cask/lib rubylib
Now you can hack on ~/homebrew-cask
and use the cli to interact with the code.
Mind the test suite!
If you're making changes - please write some tests for them! Also be sure to run the whole test suite before submitting (if you forget Travis-CI will do that for you and embarass you in front of all your friends). :)