Bug tracking system =================== Thunar uses the Xfce bug tracking system at https://gitlab.xfce.org/xfce/thunar, hosted and maintained by the Xfce project. Patches ======= Please submit merge requests to the Xfce GitLab instance. Your code must comply with the coding style described below. Please base on work against the master branch of this package. You can always clone the Thunar repository from https://gitlab.xfce.org/xfce/thunar Feature requests ================ Please file feature requests to the Xfce's GitLab (https://gitlab.xfce.org/xfce/thunar). Make sure that your feature request wasn't reported already before; requesting a feature several times won't increase the changed that it gets added! Coding Style ============ - GNU coding conventions, with GLib-like extensions, mostly the same as GTK+. - Always expand tabs. This differs from the GNU suggestion, but it is necessary to be independent from a given tab setting. - Do NOT ever misuse debugging macros like g_return_val_if_fail() or g_return_if_fail() to control program flow. They are solely useful to discover bugs, the final binary won't include code for these statements, and so any use of these macros to control program flow presents a bug! - Do NOT follow the philosophy "If it works, it's right" that most other open source projects follow, instead Thunar's philosophy is "It doesn't work unless it's right". Think carefully of what you want to do, don't just fire up your favourite editor and start hacking in the hope that it will evolve into something useful one day. - Maintainability goes over performance. If you have to choose between a maintainable and a fast solution, always prefer the former, as it's quite easy to optimize well-designed modules, but very hard and costly to make spaghetti-code readable. - Write ChangeLog entries. Whenever you commit a change or send a patch, write a good entry per change to the ChangeLog file, see the libexo ChangeLog for the exact format; it's very important to be descriptive and correct here, else you'll loose your commit bits or your patches won't be considered for inclusion. - Use GObject whenever possible. Object-oriented design and programming makes it easier to separate functionality and also aids in verification and testing, and GObject provides a very solid base. Release process =============== Refer to https://www.xfce.org/about/releasemodel