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+# Contributing to dbus-gmain
+
+dbus-gmain is hosted by freedesktop.org. The source code repository,
+issue tracking and merge requests are provided by freedesktop.org's
+Gitlab installation, as a branch in the dbus-glib project:
+<https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/dbus/dbus-glib/tree/dbus-gmain>
+
+## Making changes
+
+If you are making changes that you wish to be incorporated upstream,
+please do as small commits to your local git tree that are individually
+correct, so there is a good history of your changes.
+
+The first line of the commit message should be a single sentence that
+describes the change, optionally with a prefix that identifies the
+area of the code that is affected.
+
+The body of the commit message should describe what the patch changes
+and why, and also note any particular side effects. This shouldn't be
+empty on most of the cases. It shouldn't take a lot of effort to write a
+commit message for an obvious change, so an empty commit message body is
+only acceptable if the questions "What?" and "Why?" are already answered
+on the one-line summary.
+
+The lines of the commit message should have at most 76 characters,
+to cope with the way git log presents them.
+
+See [notes on commit messages](https://who-t.blogspot.com/2009/12/on-commit-messages.html),
+[A Note About Git Commit Messages](https://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html)
+or [How to Write a Git Commit Message](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/)
+for recommended reading on writing high-quality commit messages.
+
+Your patches should also include a Signed-off-by line with your name and
+email address, indicating that your contribution follows the [Developer's
+Certificate of Origin](https://developercertificate.org/). If you're
+not the patch's original author, you should also gather S-o-b's by
+them (and/or whomever gave the patch to you.) The significance of this
+is that it certifies that you created the patch, that it was created
+under an appropriate open source license, or provided to you under those
+terms. This lets us indicate a chain of responsibility for the copyright
+status of the code.
+
+We won't reject patches that lack S-o-b, but it is strongly recommended.
+
+When you consider changes ready for merging to mainline:
+
+* create a personal fork of <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/dbus/dbus-glib>
+ on freedesktop.org Gitlab
+* push your changes to your personal fork as a branch
+* create a merge request at
+ <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/dbus/dbus-glib/merge_requests>,
+ and remember to specify `dbus-gmain` as the target branch
+
+## Automated tests
+
+For nontrivial changes please try to extend the test suite to cover it.
+dbus-gmain uses GLib's test framework; tests are in the `tests/`
+directory.
+
+Run `make check` to run the test suite.
+
+## Coding style
+
+Please match the existing code style (Emacs: "gnu").
+
+## Licensing
+
+Please match the existing licensing (a dual-license: AFL-2.1 or GPL-2+,
+recipient's choice). Entirely new modules can be placed under a more
+permissive license: to avoid license proliferation, our preferred
+permissive license is the variant of the MIT/X11 license used by the
+Expat XML library (for example see the top of tools/ci-build.sh).
+
+## Conduct
+
+As a freedesktop.org project, dbus follows the Contributor Covenant,
+found at: <https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/CodeOfConduct>
+
+Please conduct yourself in a respectful and civilised manner when
+interacting with community members on mailing lists, IRC, or bug
+trackers. The community represents the project as a whole, and abusive
+or bullying behaviour is not tolerated by the project.
+
+## (Lack of) versioning and releases
+
+dbus-gmain is currently set up to be a git subtree or git submodule,
+so it does not have releases in its own right. It gets merged or
+otherwise included in larger projects like dbus-glib and dbus-python
+instead.
+
+## Information for maintainers
+
+This section is not directly relevant to infrequent contributors.
+
+### Updating the copies of dbus-gmain in dbus-glib and dbus-python
+
+dbus-gmain is maintained via `git subtree`. To update one of the dependent
+projects, assuming you have a checkout of the dbus-gmain branch of the
+dbus-glib repository in ../dbus-gmain:
+
+ git subtree pull -P dbus-gmain ../dbus-gmain HEAD
+
+### Committing other people's patches
+
+If applying a patch from someone else that created them via
+"git-format-patch", you can use "git-am -s" to apply. Otherwise
+apply the patch and then use "git commit --author ..."
+
+Nontrivial patches should always go through Gitlab for peer review,
+so you should have an issue number or a merge request ID to refer to.