# Contributing First, thank you for your interest in contributing to my project. Below is a list of requirements that everyone should follow. 1. To avoid wasting your time and effort, please ensure all ideas get discussed first. Either visit [the Ideas discussion board][ideas] and open a thread there, or create a new issue. I ask that you do this to avoid the potential of rejecting work already done in a pull request. 1. **For Markdown changes,** Any and all changes must pass configured [markdownlint] rules (see the `.markdownlint.json` files in this repository for project-specific adjustments to those rules). 1. **For C# changes,** code must conform to the project's style. My day to day coding is done in Jetbrains Rider. If using that IDE, doing a simple [Code Cleanup] on modified source files should be enough. If you're using Visual Studio or some other editor, you are on your own. Formatting rules are stored in `src/.editorconfig` and `src/TrashUpdater.sln.DotSettings`. [ideas]: https://github.com/recyclarr/recyclarr/discussions/categories/ideas [markdownlint]: https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint [Code Cleanup]: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/rider/Code_Cleanup__Index.html ## Docker Development The project's `Dockerfile` builds in two different mods: Development and production mode. ### Production Build This is the default build type for the image. Given a specific version number, it will grab the appropriate binary from the corresponding Github Release and install that into the image. ### Development Build This build allows you to make changes to Recyclarr and pull those into a local docker image build. This is especially useful if you want to test changes in Recyclarr before it is released, since the production mode of Recyclarr requires a Github release to pull from. To enable development builds, specify the build argument `BUILD_FROM_BRANCH`. The workflow I use goes something like this: 1. Create a branch to work out of: `git checkout -b docker origin/master`. 1. Make some C# code changes, commit, and **push to the remote repo**. 1. Build the docker image locally: ```sh docker compose build --no-cache --progress plain --build-arg BUILD_FROM_BRANCH=docker ``` 1. Execute it locally: ```sh docker compose run --rm recyclarr sonarr ``` ### Build Arguments - `RELEASE_TAG` (Default: `latest`)
The git tag (e.g. `v2.1.2`) that represents the Github Release in the upstream repository to grab binaries from. May also use `latest` to represent the latest Github Release. Only used in Production builds. - `TARGETPLATFORM` (Default: empty)
Required. Specifies the runtime architecture of the image and is used to pull the correct prebuilt binary from the specified Github Release. See the table in the Platform Support section for a list of valid values. - `REPOSITORY` (Default: `recyclarr/recyclarr`)
The Github repository name (either `user/repo` or `organization/repo` format) used to grab the prebuilt release from (in Production builds) or to clone (in Development builds). - `BUILD_FROM_BRANCH` (Default: empty)
If specified, Development build mode is enabled and the branch name specified here is used to compile Recyclarr and use its final binary in the resulting docker image. ### Platform Support | Docker Platform | Recyclarr Runtime | | --------------- | ------------------ | | `linux/arm/v7` | `linux-musl-arm` | | `linux/arm64` | `linux-musl-arm64` | | `linux/amd64` | `linux-musl-x64` |