Thank you for your interest in improving the Go Bluetooth module.
We would like your help to make this project better, so we appreciate any contributions. See if one of the following descriptions matches your situation:
We'd love to get your feedback on getting started with the Go Bluetooth. Run into any difficulty, confusion, or anything else? You are not alone. We want to know about your experience, so we can help the next people. Please open a Github issue with your questions, or you can also get in touch directly with us on our Slack channel at https://gophers.slack.com/messages/CDJD3SUP6.
Please open a Github issue with your problem, and we will be happy to assist.
We probably have not implemented it yet. Your pull request adding the functionality would be greatly appreciated.
Please open a Github issue. We want to help, and also make sure that there is no duplications of efforts. Sometimes what you need is already being worked on by someone else.
If your contribution includes a new API (one that does not exist yet for any BLE stack), please make sure it is portable:
- Ideally, add support for it to two different Bluetooth APIs at the same time, for example CoreBluetooth and BlueZ.
- If you are unable to do so, please explain (with links to documentation!) why this feature also fits a different API.
The release
branch of this repo will always have the latest released version of the Go Bluetooth module. All of the active development work for the next release will take place in the dev
branch. The Go Bluetooth module will use semantic versioning and will create a tag/release for each release.
Here is how to contribute back some code or documentation:
- Fork repo
- Create a feature branch off of the
dev
branch - Make some useful change
- Make sure the tests still pass
- Submit a pull request against the
dev
branch. - Be kind
To run the bare metal tests:
make smoketest-tinygo
To run tests for a specific operating system:
make smoketest-linux
or
make smoketest-macos
or
make smoketest-windows
You should be able to run the tests for your own operating system. Note that cross-compilation may or may not work, depending on which tools you have installed.