diff --git a/software/cdist/man/VERSION b/software/cdist/man/VERSION index 2885db57..66cd3d8c 100644 --- a/software/cdist/man/VERSION +++ b/software/cdist/man/VERSION @@ -1 +1 @@ -1.6.0-39-gdfd0eef +1.6.0-60-gd39457b diff --git a/software/cdist/man/cdist-hacker.html b/software/cdist/man/cdist-hacker.html index 5e8b8d6c..02cab2c4 100644 --- a/software/cdist/man/cdist-hacker.html +++ b/software/cdist/man/cdist-hacker.html @@ -1,18 +1,20 @@ -
Table of Contents
Welcome dear hacker! I invite you to a tour of pointers to +
Table of Contents
Welcome dear hacker! I invite you to a tour of pointers to get into the usable configuration mangament system, cdist.
The first thing to know is probably that cdist is brought to you by people who care about how code looks like and who think twice before merging or implementing a feature: Less features -with good usability are far better than the opposite.
IF you are interested in how cdist internally works, you can open +with good usability are far better than the opposite.
If you believe you’ve found a bug and verified that it is +in the latest version, drop a mail to the cdist mailing list, +subject prefixed with "[BUG] ".
IF you are interested in how cdist internally works, you can open bin/cdist-config and bin/cdist-deploy-to in your favorite editor and read the scripts bin/cdist-deploy-to calls. The magnificent HACKERS_README -may be of great help as well.
If something should be better done or needs to fixed, add the word FIXME -nearby, so grepping for FIXME gives all positions that need to be fixed.
If something should be better done or needs to fixed, add the word FIXME +nearby, so grepping for FIXME gives all positions that need to be fixed.
If you did some cool changes to cdist, which you value as a benefit for everybody using cdist, you’re welcome to propose inclusion into upstream.
There are though some requirements to ensure your changes don’t break others work nor kill the authors brain:
As soon as your work meets these requirements, you can contact me (IRC, Mailinglist, Phone, RFC 1149) and I’ll check your code before -including it.
Submitting a type works as described above, with the additional requirement +including it.
Submitting a type works as described above, with the additional requirement that a corresponding manpage named man.text in asciidoc format with the manpage-name "cdist-type__NAME" is included in the type directory AND asciidoc is able to compile it (i.e. do NOT have to many "=" in the second -line).
This reference summarises