Contributing

Hi there! Interested in contributing to Jekyll? We’d love your help. Jekyll is an open source project, built one contribution at a time by users like you.

Where to get help or report a problemPermalink

See the support guidelines

Ways to contributePermalink

Whether you’re a developer, a designer, or just a Jekyll devotee, there are lots of ways to contribute. Here’s a few ideas:

  • Install Jekyll on your computer and kick the tires. Does it work? Does it do what you’d expect? If not, open an issue and let us know.
  • Comment on some of the project’s open issues. Have you experienced the same problem? Know a work around? Do you have a suggestion for how the feature could be better?
  • Read through the documentation, and click the “improve this page” button, any time you see something confusing, or have a suggestion for something that could be improved.
  • Browse through the Jekyll discussion forum, and lend a hand answering questions. There’s a good chance you’ve already experienced what another user is experiencing.
  • Find an open issue (especially those labeled help-wanted), and submit a proposed fix. If it’s your first pull request, we promise we won’t bite, and are glad to answer any questions.
  • Help evaluate open pull requests, by testing the changes locally and reviewing what’s proposed.

Submitting a pull requestPermalink

Pull requests generallyPermalink

  • The smaller the proposed change, the better. If you’d like to propose two unrelated changes, submit two pull requests.

  • The more information, the better. Make judicious use of the pull request body. Describe what changes were made, why you made them, and what impact they will have for users.

  • If this is your first pull request, it may help to understand GitHub Flow.

  • If you’re submitting a code contribution, be sure to read the code contributions section below.

Submitting a pull request via github.comPermalink

Many small changes can be made entirely through the github.com web interface.

  1. Navigate to the file within jekyll/jekyll that you’d like to edit.
  2. Click the pencil icon in the top right corner to edit the file
  3. Make your proposed changes
  4. Click “Propose file change”
  5. Click “Create pull request”
  6. Add a descriptive title and detailed description for your proposed change. The more information the better.
  7. Click “Create pull request”

That’s it! You’ll be automatically subscribed to receive updates as others review your proposed change and provide feedback.

Submitting a pull request via Git command linePermalink

  1. Fork the project by clicking “Fork” in the top right corner of jekyll/jekyll.
  2. Clone the repository locally git clone https://github.com/<you-username>/jekyll.
  3. Create a new, descriptively named branch to contain your change ( git checkout -b my-awesome-feature ).
  4. Hack away, add tests. Not necessarily in that order.
  5. Make sure everything still passes by running script/cibuild (see the tests section below)
  6. Push the branch up ( git push origin my-awesome-feature ).
  7. Create a pull request by visiting https://github.com/<your-username>/jekyll and following the instructions at the top of the screen.

Proposing updates to the documentationPermalink

We want the Jekyll documentation to be the best it can be. We’ve open-sourced our docs and we welcome any pull requests if you find it lacking.

How to submit changesPermalink

You can find the documentation for jekyllrb.com in the docs directory. See the section above, submitting a pull request for information on how to propose a change.

One gotcha, all pull requests should be directed at the master branch (the default branch).

Updating FontAwesome iconset for jekyllrb.comPermalink

We use a custom version of FontAwesome which contains just the icons we use.

If you ever need to update our documentation with an icon that is not already available in our custom iconset, you’ll have to regenerate the iconset using Icomoon’s Generator:

  1. Go to https://icomoon.io/app/.
  2. Click Import Icons on the top-horizontal-bar and upload the existing <jekyll>/docs/icomoon-selection.json.
  3. Click Add Icons from Library.. further down on the page, and add ‘Font Awesome’.
  4. Select the required icon(s) from the Library (make sure its the ‘FontAwesome’ library instead of ‘IcoMoon-Free’ library).
  5. Click Generate Font on the bottom-horizontal-bar.
  6. Inspect the included icons and proceed by clicking Download.
  7. Extract the font files and adapt the CSS to the paths we use in Jekyll:
    • Copy the entire fonts directory over and overwrite existing ones at <jekyll>/docs/.
    • Copy the contents of selection.json and overwrite existing content inside <jekyll>/docs/icomoon-selection.json.
    • Copy the entire @font-face {} declaration and only the new-icon(s)’ css declarations further below, to update the <jekyll>/docs/_sass/_font-awesome.scss sass partial.
    • Fix paths in the @font-face {} declaration by adding ../ before fonts/FontAwesome.* like so: ('../fonts/Fontawesome.woff?9h6hxj').

Adding pluginsPermalink

If you want to add your plugin to the list of plugins, please submit a pull request modifying the plugins page source file by adding a link to your plugin under the proper subheading depending upon its type.

Code ContributionsPermalink

Interesting in submitting a pull request? Awesome. Read on. There’s a few common gotchas that we’d love to help you avoid.

Tests and documentationPermalink

Any time you propose a code change, you should also include updates to the documentation and tests within the same pull request.

DocumentationPermalink

If your contribution changes any Jekyll behavior, make sure to update the documentation. Documentation lives in the docs/_docs folder (spoiler alert: it’s a Jekyll site!). If the docs are missing information, please feel free to add it in. Great docs make a great project. Include changes to the documentation within your pull request, and once merged, jekyllrb.com will be updated.

TestsPermalink

  • If you’re creating a small fix or patch to an existing feature, a simple test is more than enough. You can usually copy/paste from an existing example in the tests folder, but if you need you can find out about our tests suites Shoulda and RSpec-Mocks.

  • If it’s a brand new feature, create a new Cucumber feature, reusing existing steps where appropriate.

Code contributions generallyPermalink

  • Jekyll uses the Rubocop static analyzer to ensure that contributions follow the GitHub Ruby Styleguide. Please check your code using script/fmt and resolve any errors before pushing your branch.

  • Don’t bump the Gem version in your pull request (if you don’t know what that means, you probably didn’t).

  • You can use the command script/console to start a REPL to explore the result of Jekyll’s methods. It also provides you with helpful methods to quickly create a site or configuration. Feel free to check it out!

Running tests locallyPermalink

Test DependenciesPermalink

To run the test suite and build the gem you’ll need to install Jekyll’s dependencies by running the following command:

script/bootstrap

Before you make any changes, run the tests and make sure that they pass (to confirm your environment is configured properly):

script/cibuild

If you are only updating a file in test/, you can use the command:

script/test test/blah_test.rb

If you are only updating a .feature file, you can use the command:

script/cucumber features/blah.feature

Both script/test and script/cucumber can be run without arguments to run its entire respective suite.

A thank youPermalink

Thanks! Hacking on Jekyll should be fun. If you find any of this hard to figure out, let us know so we can improve our process or documentation!