Help Wanted and Good First Issue Labels
Overview
We use two labels to identify issues that have been specifically created or selected for new contributors: help wanted and good first
issue. The good first issue
label is a subset of the help wanted
label, indicating that members have committed to providing extra assistance for
new contributors. All good first issue
items also have the help wanted
label.
We also have some suggestions for using these labels to help grow and improve our community.
Help Wanted
Items marked with the help wanted
label need to ensure that they meet these criteria:
Low Barrier to Entry It should be easy for new contributors. Documentation on how that type of change should be made should already exist.
Clear Task The task is agreed upon and does not require further discussions in the community. Call out if that area of code is untested and requires new fixtures.
API and CLI behavior should be decided and included in the OP issue, for example: “The new command syntax is
svcat unbind NAME [--orphan] [--timeout 5m]
”, with expected validations called out.Goldilocks priority The priority should not be so high that a core contributor should do it, but not too low that it isn’t useful enough for a core contributor to spend time reviewing it, answering questions, helping get it into a release, etc.
Up-To-Date Often these issues become obsolete and have already been completed, are no longer desired, no longer make sense, or have changed priority or difficulty.
A good example of a Help Wanted issue description can be found here: kubernetes/test-infra#21356 (comment).
These commands can be used with GitHub issues to manage the help wanted
label:
/help
: Adds thehelp wanted
label to an issue./remove-help
: Removes thehelp wanted
label from an issue. If thegood first issue
label is present, it is removed as well.
Good First Issue
Items marked with the good first issue
label are intended for first-time
contributors. It indicates that members will keep an eye out for these pull
requests and shepherd it through our processes.
New contributors should not be left to find an approver, ping for reviews, decipher prow commands, or identify that their build failed due to a flake. It is important to make new contributors feel welcome and valued. We should assure them that they will have an extra level of help with their first contribution.
After a contributor has successfully completed one or two good first issue
items, they
should be ready to move on to help wanted
items.
All good first issue
items need to follow the guidelines for help wanted
items in addition to meeting the following criteria:
No Barrier to Entry The task is something that a new contributor can tackle without advanced setup or domain knowledge.
Solution Explained The recommended solution is clearly described in the issue.
Provides Context If background knowledge is required, this should be explicitly mentioned and a list of suggested readings included.
Gives Examples Link to examples of similar implementations so new contributors have a reference guide for their changes.
Identifies Relevant Code The relevant code and tests to be changed should be linked in the issue.
Ready to Test There should be existing tests that can be modified, or existing test cases fit to be copied. If the area of code doesn’t have tests, before labeling the issue, add a test fixture. This prep often makes a great
help wanted
task!
A good example of a good first issue
description can be found here: kubernetes/kubernetes#68231.
These commands can be used in the GitHub issue comments to control the good first issue
label:
/good-first-issue
: Adds thegood first issue
label to an issue. Also adds thehelp wanted
label, if not already present./remove-good-first-issue
: Removes thegood first issue
label from an issue.
Suggestions for Experienced Community Members
We encourage our more experienced members to help new contributors, so that the Kubernetes community can continue to grow and maintain the kind, inclusive community that we all enjoy today.
The following suggestions go a long way toward preventing “drive-by” PRs, and ensure that our investment in new contributors is rewarded by returning contributors.
- Provide extra assistance during reviews on
good first issue
pull requests. - Answer questions and identify useful docs.
- Offer advice such as “One way to reproduce this in a cluster is to do X and then you can use kubectl to poke around,” or “Did you know that you can use fake clients to setup and test this easier?”
- Help new contributors learn enough about the project, setting up their
environment, running tests, and navigating this area of the code so that they
can tackle a related
help wanted
issue next time.
If you make someone feel like a part of our community, they will know that it is safe to ask questions, that people will let them know the rules, and that their contributions are helpful and appreciated. They will stick around! 🌈
- Encourage new contributors to seek help on the appropriate slack channels, introduce them, and include them in your conversations.
- Invite them to the SIG meetings.
- Give credit to new contributors so that others get to know them: “Hey, would someone help give a second LGTM on @newperson’s first PR on chocolate bunnies?” Mention them in the SIG channel and meeting, and thank them on Twitter or #shoutouts.
- Use all the emoji in your approve or lgtm comment. 💖 🚀
- Let them know that their
good first issue
is getting extra attention to make the first one easier and help them find a follow-up issue. - Suggest a related
help wanted
so that can build up experience in an area. - People are more likely to continue contributing when they know what to expect. They want to know the acceptable way to ask for people to review a PR, and how to nudge things along when a PR is stalled. Show them how we operate by helping move their first PR along.
- If you have time, let the contributor know that they can DM you with questions that they aren’t yet comfortable asking the wider group.
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