lbwww/site/git.md

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This is the core build system in libreboot. You could say that lbmk is libreboot! Download the Git repository:

git clone https://codeberg.org/libreboot/lbmk

The git command, seen above, will download the libreboot build system lbmk. You can then go into it like so:

cd lbmk

Make whatever changes you like, or simply build it. For instructions on how to build lbmk, refer to the build instructions.

Information about the build system itself, and how it works, is available in the lbmk maintenance guide.

lbwww and lbwww-img

The entire libreboot website and documentation is hosted in a Git repository. Download it like so:

git clone https://codeberg.org/libreboot/lbwww

Images are hosted on https://av.libreboot.org/ and available in a separate repository:

git clone https://codeberg.org/libreboot/lbwww-img

Make whatever changes you like. See notes below about how to send patches.

The entire website is written in Markdown, specifically the Pandoc version of it. The static HTML pages are generated with Untitled. Leah Rowe, the founder of libreboot, is also the founder of the Untitled static site generator project.

If you like, you can set up a local HTTP server and build your own local version of the website. Please note that images will still link to the ones hosted on https://av.libreboot.org/, so any images that you add to lbwww-img will not show up on your local lbwww site if you make the image links (for images that you add) link to av.libreboot.org. However, it is required that such images be hosted on av.libreboot.org.

Therefore, if you wish to add images to the website, please also submit to the lbwww-img repository, with the links to them being https://av.libreboot.org/path/to/your/new/image/in/lbwww-img for each one. When it is merged on the libreboot website, your images will appear live.

For development purposes, you might make your images local links first, and then adjust the URLs when you submit your documentation/website patches.

Instructions are on the Untitled website, for how to set up your local version of the website. Download untitled, and inside your untitled directory, create a directory named www/ then go inside the www directory, and clone the lbwww repository there. Configure your local HTTP server accordingly.

Again, instructions are available on the Untitled website for this purpose.

Name not required

Contributions that you make are publicly recorded, in a Git repository which everyone can access. This includes the name and email address of the contributor.

In Git, for author name and email address, you do not have to use identifying data. You can use libreboot Contributor and your email address could be specified as contributor@libreboot.org. You are permitted to do this, if you wish to maintain privacy. We believe in privacy. If you choose to remain anonymous, we will honour this.

Of course, you can use whichever name and/or email address you like.

Legally speaking, all copyright is automatic under the Berne Convention of international copyright law. It does not matter which name, or indeed whether you even declare a copyright (but we do require that certain copyright licenses are used - read more about that on this same page).

If you use a different name and email address on your commits/patches, then you should be fairly anonymous. Use git log and git show to confirm that before you push changes to a public Git repository.

Licenses (for contributors)

Make sure to freely license your work, under a libre license. Libreboot no longer sets arbitrary restrictions on what licenses are accepted, and many licenses out there already exist. We will audit your contribution and tell you if there are problems with it (e.g. no license).

Always declare a license on your work! Not declaring a license means that the default, restrictive copyright laws apply, which would make your work proprietary, subject to all of the same restrictions.

The MIT license is a good one to start with, and it is the preferred license for all new works in Libreboot, but we're not picky. Libreboot has historically used GNU licensing such as GPL; much of that remains, and is likely to remain. It's your work; obviously, if you're deriving from an existing work, it may make sense to use the same license on your contribution, for license compatibility.

You can find common examples of licenses here.

If you are deriving from an existing work, it's important that your license (for your contribution) be compatible with the licensing of the work from which yours was derived. The MIT license is good because it's widely compatible with many other licenses, and permits many freedoms (such as the freedom to sublicense) that other licenses do not:

https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT

Send patches

Make an account on https://codeberg.org/ and navigate (while logged in) to the repository that you wish to work on. Click Fork and in your account, you will have your own repository of libreboot. Clone your repository, make whatever changes you like to it and then push to your repository, in your account on NotABug. You can also do this on a new branch, if you wish.

In your Codeberg account, you can then navigate to the official libreboot repository and submit a Pull Request. The way it works is similar to other popular web-based Git platforms that people use these days.

You can submit your patches there. Alternative, you can log onto the libreboot IRC channel and notify the channel of which patches you want reviewed, if you have your own Git repository with the patches.

Once you have issued a Pull Request, the libreboot maintainers will be notified via email. If you do not receive a fast enough response from the project, then you could also notify the project via the #libreboot channel on Libera Chat.

Another way to submit patches is to email Leah Rowe directly: info@minifree.org is Leah's project email address.

However, for transparency of the code review process, it's recommended that you use Codeberg, for the time being.

Notabug repositories

OLD notabug repos are still pushed to as backup, but the codeberg mirror is considered to be main/official now, as of the announcement on 8 April 2023. See:

For sending patches, it is now preferred that you use codeberg. Technically, pull requests are still possible via Notabug. While Notabug still exists, Libreboot patches will continue be pushed there, mirroring what gets pushed on Notabug.

The Notabug repository also contains some historical git repositories, including the old Libreboot git repository from before build system, website and images were split into separate repos. Leah Rowe has copies of these and will push them to codeberg if Notabug ever goes down permanently. Same goes for osboot repositories, which were merged with Libreboot in November 2022.