## Contributing to Rustlings
First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute!! ❤️
### Quick Reference
I want to...
_add an exercise! ➡️ [read this](#addex) and then [open a Pull Request](#prs)_
_update an outdated exercise! ➡️ [open a Pull Request](#prs)_
_report a bug! ➡️ [open an Issue](#issues)_
_fix a bug! ➡️ [open a Pull Request](#prs)_
_implement a new feature! ➡️ [open an Issue to discuss it first, then a Pull Request](#issues)_
### Working on the source code
`rustlings` is basically a glorified `rustc` wrapper. Therefore the source code
isn't really that complicated since the bulk of the work is done by `rustc`.
### Adding an exercise
The first step is to add the exercise! Name the file `exercises/yourTopic/yourTopicN.rs`, make sure to
put in some helpful links, and link to sections of the book in `exercises/yourTopic/README.md`.
Next make sure it runs with `rustlings`. The exercise metadata is stored in `info.toml`, under the `exercises` array. The order of the `exercises` array determines the order the exercises are run by `rustlings verify` and `rustlings watch`.
Add the metadata for your exercise in the correct order in the `exercises` array. If you are unsure of the correct ordering, add it at the bottom and ask in your pull request. The exercise metadata should contain the following:
```diff
...
+ [[exercises]]
+ name = "yourTopicN"
+ path = "exercises/yourTopic/yourTopicN.rs"
+ mode = "compile"
+ hint = """
+ Some kind of useful hint for your exercise."""
...
```
The `mode` attribute decides whether Rustlings will only compile your exercise, or compile and test it. If you have tests to verify in your exercise, choose `test`, otherwise `compile`. If you're working on a Clippy exercise, use `mode = "clippy"`.
That's all! Feel free to put up a pull request.
### Issues
You can open an issue [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustlings/issues/new).
If you're reporting a bug, please include the output of the following commands:
- `rustc --version`
- `rustlings --version`
- `ls -la`
- Your OS name and version
### Pull Requests
Opening a pull request is as easy as forking the repository and committing your
changes. There's a couple of things to watch out for:
#### Write correct commit messages
We follow the [Conventional Commits](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/)
specification.
This means that you have to format your commit messages in a specific way. Say
you're working on adding a new exercise called `foobar1.rs`. You could write
the following commit message:
```
feat: add foobar1.rs exercise
```
If you're just fixing a bug, please use the `fix` type:
```
fix(verify): make sure verify doesn't self-destruct
```
The scope within the brackets is optional, but should be any of these:
- `installation` (for the installation script)
- `cli` (for general CLI changes)
- `verify` (for the verification source file)
- `watch` (for the watch functionality source)
- `run` (for the run functionality source)
- `EXERCISENAME` (if you're changing a specific exercise, or set of exercises,
substitute them here)
When the commit also happens to close an existing issue, link it in the message
body:
```
fix: update foobar
closes #101029908
```
If you're doing simple changes, like updating a book link, use `chore`:
```
chore: update exercise1.rs book link
```
If you're updating documentation, use `docs`:
```
docs: add more information to Readme
```
If, and only if, you're absolutely sure you want to make a breaking change
(please discuss this beforehand!), add an exclamation mark to the type and
explain the breaking change in the message body:
```
fix!: completely change verification
BREAKING CHANGE: This has to be done because lorem ipsum dolor
```
#### Pull Request Workflow
Once you open a Pull Request, it may be reviewed or labeled (or both) until
the maintainers accept your change. Please be patient, it may take some time
for this to happen!