commit | 87d27a16765f621cf2b4242bf70d4ce63b371bb0 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Andrew Jeffery <andrew@aj.id.au> | Fri Oct 13 22:18:09 2017 +1030 |
committer | Andrew Jeffery <andrew@aj.id.au> | Fri Oct 13 22:18:09 2017 +1030 |
tree | a7539bc8625989a605d215d089aada7795182641 | |
parent | 2581388036ea7c35eea1db8343fbe51ff622ef71 [diff] | |
parent | 23da2739fc6fc375146d6fcf0e13de5eec8e6c0c [diff] |
Add 'geissonator/openbmc-events/' from commit '23da2739fc6fc375146d6fcf0e13de5eec8e6c0c' git-subtree-dir: geissonator/openbmc-events git-subtree-mainline: 2581388036ea7c35eea1db8343fbe51ff622ef71 git-subtree-split: 23da2739fc6fc375146d6fcf0e13de5eec8e6c0c
The goal of this repository is to collect the two-minute hacks you write to automate interactions with OpenBMC systems.
It's highly likely the scripts don't meet your needs - they could be undocumented, dysfunctional, utterly broken, or sometimes casually rm -rf ~
. Don't even think about looking for tests.
You have been warned.
Then this repository aims to be the default destination for your otherwise un-homed scripts. As such we are setting the bar for submission pretty low, and we aim to make the process as easy as possible:
However you want to send patches, we will probably cope:
Look, the rm -rf ~
thing was a joke, we will be keeping an eye on all of you for such shenanigans. But so long as your patches look sane with a cursory glance you can expect them to be applied. To be honest, even Perl will be considered moderately sane.
We don't ask for much, but you need to give us at least a Signed-off-by, and put your work under the Apache 2.0 license. Licensing everything under Apache 2.0 will just hurt our heads less. Lets keep the lawyers off our backs. ^
^ Any exceptions must be accompanied by a LICENSE file in the relevant subdirectory, and be compatible with Apache 2.0. You thought you would get away without any fine print?
Probably with difficulty. Don't expect the layout to remain static, or scripts to continue to exist from one commit to the next.