Contributing to the Selenium site & documentation

Information on improving documentation and code examples for Selenium

Selenium is a big software project, its site and documentation are key to understanding how things work and learning effective ways to exploit its potential.

This project contains both Selenium’s site and documentation. This is an ongoing effort (not targeted at any specific release) to provide updated information on how to use Selenium effectively, how to get involved and how to contribute to Selenium.

Contributions toward the site and docs follow the process described in the below section about contributions.


The Selenium project welcomes contributions from everyone. There are a number of ways you can help:

Report an issue

When reporting a new issues or commenting on existing issues please make sure discussions are related to concrete technical issues with the Selenium software, its site and/or documentation.

All of the Selenium components change quite fast over time, so this might cause the documentation to be out of date. If you find this to be the case, as mentioned, don’t hesitate to create an issue for that. It also might be possible that you know how to bring up to date the documentation, so please send us a pull request with the related changes.

If you are not sure about what you have found is an issue or not, please ask through the communication channels described at https://selenium.dev/support.

Contributions

The Selenium project welcomes new contributors. Individuals making significant and valuable contributions over time are made Committers and given commit-access to the project.

This guide will guide you through the contribution process.

Step 1: Fork

Fork the project on Github and check out your copy locally.

% git clone git@github.com:seleniumhq/seleniumhq.github.io.git
% cd seleniumhq.github.io

Dependencies: Hugo

We use Hugo and the Docsy theme to build and render the site. You will need the “extended” Sass/SCSS version of the Hugo binary to work on this site. We recommend to use Hugo 0.101.0 or higher.

Please follow the Install Hugo instructions from Docsy.

Step 2: Branch

Create a feature branch and start hacking:

% git checkout -b my-feature-branch

We practice HEAD-based development, which means all changes are applied directly on top of dev.

Step 3: Make changes

The repository contains the site and docs. Before jumping into making changes, please initialize the submodules and install the needed dependencies (see commands below). To make changes to the site, work on the website_and_docs directory. To see a live preview of your changes, run hugo server on the site’s root directory.

% git submodule update --init --recursive
% cd website_and_docs
% hugo server

See Style Guide for more information on our conventions for contribution

Step 4: Commit

First make sure git knows your name and email address:

% git config --global user.name 'Santa Claus'
% git config --global user.email 'santa@example.com'

Writing good commit messages is important. A commit message should describe what changed, why, and reference issues fixed (if any). Follow these guidelines when writing one:

  1. The first line should be around 50 characters or less and contain a short description of the change.
  2. Keep the second line blank.
  3. Wrap all other lines at 72 columns.
  4. Include Fixes #N, where N is the issue number the commit fixes, if any.

A good commit message can look like this:

explain commit normatively in one line

Body of commit message is a few lines of text, explaining things
in more detail, possibly giving some background about the issue
being fixed, etc.

The body of the commit message can be several paragraphs, and
please do proper word-wrap and keep columns shorter than about
72 characters or so. That way `git log` will show things
nicely even when it is indented.

Fixes #141

The first line must be meaningful as it’s what people see when they run git shortlog or git log --oneline.

Step 5: Rebase

Use git rebase (not git merge) to sync your work from time to time.

% git fetch origin
% git rebase origin/trunk

Step 6: Test

Always remember to run the local server, with this you can be sure that your changes have not broken anything.

Step 7: Push

% git push origin my-feature-branch

Go to https://github.com/yourusername/seleniumhq.github.io.git and press the Pull Request and fill out the form. Please indicate that you’ve signed the CLA (see Step 7).

Pull requests are usually reviewed within a few days. If there are comments to address, apply your changes in new commits (preferably fixups) and push to the same branch.

Step 8: Integration

When code review is complete, a committer will take your PR and integrate it on the repository’s trunk branch. Because we like to keep a linear history on the trunk branch, we will normally squash and rebase your branch history.

Communication

All details on how to communicate with the project contributors and the community overall can be found at https://selenium.dev/support

Last modified August 29, 2022: Fixes #1144 (0ef0bcd13c)