# Contributing ## Adding a port Create a file in `modules//` with the name of the port. All ports should have the `catppuccin.enable` and `catppuccin.flavor` options, and optionally the `catppuccin.accent` option. `catppuccin.flavor` and `catppuccin.accent` should default to `config.catppuccin.flavor` and `config.catppuccin.accent`, respectively. When you're done, make sure to add your new file to the list in `modules//all-modules.nix` [npins](https://github.com/andir/npins) is used to track our upstream sources to use in modules. This allows us to easily access and auto-update all themes. You can add a new repository using a script in our subflake ```bash nix run ./dev#add-source -- port_name branch_if_not_main ``` Alternatively, you can run `npins add github --directory .sources` manually After creating your module, add the options to enable it in `test.nix` under the `nodes.machine` attrset. This will allow for your configuration to be tested along with the other modules in a VM automatically. Commits that add ports should be of the format ``` feat(): add support for ``` > **Note** > Unofficial ports will not be accepted; all sources must be from the > [Catppuccin](https://github.com/catppuccin) GitHub organization ## Commit messages This repository uses [Conventional Commits](https://conventionalcommits.org). Commit headers should be lowercase. Most commits should include a body that briefly describes the motivation and content of the commit. ### Commit types - `fix`: A bug fix that doesn't modify the public API - `feat`: A code change that modifies the public API - `refactor`: A code change that doesn't change behavior - `style`: A style fix or change - `docs`: Any change to documentation - `ci`: Any change to CI files - `revert`: A revert commit. The message should describe the reasoning and the commit should include the `Refs:` footer with the short hashes of the commits being reverted. - `chore`: catch-all type ### Commit scopes Available commit scopes are port names, `nixos`, `home-manager`, `modules`, and `tests`. If none of these apply, omit the scope. ### Breaking changes All breaking changes should be documented in the commit footer in the format described by Conventional Commits. Use the `!` syntax in order to distinguish breaking commits in the log, but include the footer to provide a better description for the changelog generator. ``` feat(bar)!: foo the bars BREAKING CHANGE: bars are now foo'ed ``` ## For Maintainers Use squash merges when reasonable. They don't pollute the log with merge commits, and unlike rebase merges, list the author as the committer as well.