238 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
238 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: reference, dev
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stage: none
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group: Development
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Contribute to GitLab
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Thank you for your interest in contributing to GitLab. This guide details how
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to contribute to GitLab in a way that is easy for everyone.
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For a first-time step-by-step guide to the contribution process, see our
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[Contributing to GitLab](https://about.gitlab.com/community/contribute/) page.
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Looking for something to work on? See the
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[How to contribute](#how-to-contribute) section for more information.
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GitLab comes in two flavors:
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- GitLab Community Edition (CE), our free and open source edition.
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- GitLab Enterprise Edition (EE), which is our commercial edition.
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Throughout this guide you will see references to CE and EE for abbreviation.
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To get an overview of GitLab community membership, including those that would review or merge
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your contributions, visit [the community roles page](community_roles.md).
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If you want to know how the GitLab [core team](https://about.gitlab.com/community/core-team/)
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operates, see [the GitLab contributing process](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/PROCESS.md).
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GitLab Inc engineers should refer to the [engineering workflow document](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/workflow/).
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## Security vulnerability disclosure
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Report suspected security vulnerabilities in private to
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`support@gitlab.com`, also see the
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[disclosure section on the GitLab.com website](https://about.gitlab.com/security/disclosure/).
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WARNING:
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Do **NOT** create publicly viewable issues for suspected security vulnerabilities.
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## Code of conduct
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We want to create a welcoming environment for everyone who is interested in contributing.
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Visit our [Code of Conduct page](https://about.gitlab.com/community/contribute/code-of-conduct/) to learn more about our commitment to an open and welcoming environment.
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## Closing policy for issues and merge requests
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GitLab is a popular open source project and the capacity to deal with issues
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and merge requests is limited. Out of respect for our volunteers, issues and
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merge requests not in line with the guidelines listed in this document may be
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closed without notice.
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Treat our volunteers with courtesy and respect, it will go a long way
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towards getting your issue resolved.
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Issues and merge requests should be in English and contain appropriate language
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for audiences of all ages.
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If a contributor is no longer actively working on a submitted merge request,
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we can:
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- Decide that the merge request will be finished by one of our
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[Merge request coaches](https://about.gitlab.com/company/team/).
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- Close the merge request.
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We make this decision based on how important the change is for our product vision. If a merge
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request coach is going to finish the merge request, we assign the
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`~coach will finish` label.
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When a team member picks up a community contribution,
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we credit the original author by adding a changelog entry crediting the author
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and optionally include the original author on at least one of the commits
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within the MR.
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## Closing policy for inactive bugs
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GitLab values the time spent by contributors on reporting bugs. However, if a bug remains inactive for a very long period,
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it will qualify for auto-closure. Please refer to the [auto-close inactive bugs](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/quality/triage-operations/#auto-close-inactive-bugs) section in our handbook to understand the complete workflow.
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## Helping others
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Help other GitLab users when you can.
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The methods people use to seek help can be found on the [getting help page](https://about.gitlab.com/get-help/).
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Sign up for the mailing list, answer GitLab questions on StackOverflow or respond in the IRC channel.
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## How to contribute
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If you would like to contribute to GitLab:
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- Issues with the
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[`~Seeking community contributions` label](issue_workflow.md#label-for-community-contributors)
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are a great place to start.
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- Optimizing our tests is another great opportunity to contribute. You can use
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[RSpec profiling statistics](https://gitlab-org.gitlab.io/rspec_profiling_stats/) to identify
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slowest tests. These tests are good candidates for improving and checking if any of
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[best practices](../testing_guide/best_practices.md)
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could speed them up.
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- Consult the [Contribution Flow](#contribution-flow) section to learn the process.
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If you have any questions or need help visit [Getting Help](https://about.gitlab.com/get-help/) to
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learn how to communicate with GitLab. We have a [Gitter channel for contributors](https://gitter.im/gitlab/contributors),
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however we favor
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[asynchronous communication](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/communication/#internal-communication) over real time communication.
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Thanks for your contribution!
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### GitLab Development Kit
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The GitLab Development Kit (GDK) helps contributors run a local GitLab instance with all the
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required dependencies. It can be used to test changes to GitLab and related projects before raising
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a Merge Request.
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For more information, see the [`gitlab-development-kit`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit)
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project.
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### Contribution flow
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The general flow of contributing to GitLab is:
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1. [Create a fork](../../user/project/repository/forking_workflow.md#creating-a-fork)
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of GitLab. In some cases, you will want to set up the
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[GitLab Development Kit](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit) to
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[develop against your fork](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-development-kit/-/blob/main/doc/index.md#develop-in-your-own-gitlab-fork).
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1. Make your changes in your fork.
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1. When you're ready, [create a new merge request](../../user/project/merge_requests/creating_merge_requests.md).
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1. In the merge request's description:
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- Ensure you provide complete and accurate information.
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- Review the provided checklist.
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1. Assign the merge request (if possible) to, or [mention](../../user/discussions/index.md#mentions),
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one of the [code owners](../../user/project/code_owners.md) for the relevant project,
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and explain that you are ready for review.
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When you submit code to GitLab, we really want it to get merged! However, we always review
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submissions carefully, and this takes time. Code submissions will usually be reviewed by two
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[domain experts](../code_review.md#domain-experts) before being merged:
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- A [reviewer](../code_review.md#the-responsibility-of-the-reviewer).
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- A [maintainer](../code_review.md#the-responsibility-of-the-maintainer).
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Keep the following in mind when submitting merge requests:
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- When reviewers are reading through a merge request they may request guidance from other
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reviewers.
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- If the code quality is found to not meet GitLab standards, the merge request reviewer will
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provide guidance and refer the author to our:
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- [Documentation](../documentation/styleguide/index.md) style guide.
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- [Code style guides](style_guides.md).
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- Sometimes style guides will be followed but the code will lack structural integrity, or the
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reviewer will have reservations about the code's overall quality. When there is a reservation,
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the reviewer will inform the author and provide some guidance.
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- Though GitLab generally allows anyone to indicate
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[approval](../../user/project/merge_requests/approvals/index.md) of merge requests, the
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maintainer may require [approvals from certain reviewers](../code_review.md#approval-guidelines)
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before merging a merge request.
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- After review, the author may be asked to update the merge request. Once the merge request has been
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updated and reassigned to the reviewer, they will review the code again. This process may repeat
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any number of times before merge, to help make the contribution the best it can be.
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Sometimes a maintainer may choose to close a merge request. They will fully disclose why it will not
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be merged, as well as some guidance. The maintainers will be open to discussion about how to change
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the code so it can be approved and merged in the future.
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GitLab will do its best to review community contributions as quickly as possible. Specially
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appointed developers review community contributions daily. Look at the
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[team page](https://about.gitlab.com/company/team/) for the merge request coach who specializes in
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the type of code you have written and mention them in the merge request. For example, if you have
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written some front-end code, you should mention the frontend merge request coach. If
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your code has multiple disciplines, you may mention multiple merge request coaches.
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GitLab receives a lot of community contributions. If your code has not been reviewed within two
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working days of its initial submission, feel free to mention all merge request coaches with
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`@gitlab-org/coaches` to get their attention.
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When submitting code to GitLab, you may feel that your contribution requires the aid of an external
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library. If your code includes an external library, please provide a link to the library, as well as
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reasons for including it.
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Mention a maintainer in merge requests that contain:
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- More than 500 changes.
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- Any major [breaking changes](#breaking-changes).
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- External libraries.
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If you are not sure who to mention, the reviewer will do this for you early in the merge request process.
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#### Breaking changes
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A "breaking change" is any change that requires users to make a corresponding change to their code, settings, or workflow. "Users" might be humans, API clients, or even code classes that "use" another class. Examples of breaking changes include:
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- Removing a user-facing feature without a replacement/workaround.
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- Changing the definition of an existing API (by doing things like re-naming query parameters or changing routes).
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- Removing a public method from a code class.
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A breaking change can be considered "major" if it affects many users, or represents a significant change in behavior.
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#### Issues workflow
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This [documentation](issue_workflow.md) outlines the current issue workflow:
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- [Issue tracker guidelines](issue_workflow.md#issue-tracker-guidelines)
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- [Issue triaging](issue_workflow.md#issue-triaging)
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- [Labels](issue_workflow.md#labels)
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- [Feature proposals](issue_workflow.md#feature-proposals)
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- [Issue weight](issue_workflow.md#issue-weight)
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- [Regression issues](issue_workflow.md#regression-issues)
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- [Technical and UX debt](issue_workflow.md#technical-and-ux-debt)
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- [Technical debt in follow-up issues](issue_workflow.md#technical-debt-in-follow-up-issues)
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#### Merge requests workflow
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This [documentation](merge_request_workflow.md) outlines the current merge request process.
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- [Merge request guidelines](merge_request_workflow.md#merge-request-guidelines)
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- [Contribution acceptance criteria](merge_request_workflow.md#contribution-acceptance-criteria)
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- [Definition of done](merge_request_workflow.md#definition-of-done)
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- [Dependencies](merge_request_workflow.md#dependencies)
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## Style guides
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This [documentation](style_guides.md) outlines the current style guidelines.
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## Implement design & UI elements
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This [design documentation](design.md) outlines the current process for implementing design and UI
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elements.
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## Contribute documentation
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For information on how to contribute documentation, see GitLab
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[documentation guidelines](../documentation/index.md).
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## Getting an Enterprise Edition License
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If you need a license for contributing to an EE-feature, see
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[relevant information](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/marketing/community-relations/code-contributor-program/#for-contributors-to-the-gitlab-enterprise-edition-ee).
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