# How to contribute Our software is open source so you can solve your own problems without needing help from others. And if you solve a problem and are so kind, you can upstream it for the rest of the world to use. Check out our [post about externalization](https://blog.comma.ai/a-2020-theme-externalization/). Development activity is coordinated through our GitHub Issues, [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/commaai/openpilot/discussions), and [Discord](https://discord.comma.ai). ### Getting Started * Setup your [development environment](../tools/) * Read about the [development workflow](WORKFLOW.md) * Join our [Discord](https://discord.comma.ai) * Docs are at https://docs.comma.ai and https://blog.comma.ai ## What contributions are we looking for? **openpilot's priorities are [safety](SAFETY.md), stability, quality, and features, in that order.** openpilot is part of comma's mission to *solve self-driving cars while delivering shippable intermediaries*, and **all** development is towards that goal. ### What gets merged? The probability of a pull request being merged is a function of its value to the project and the effort it will take us to get it merged. If a PR offers *some* value but will take lots of time to get merged, it will be closed. Simple, well-tested bug fixes are the easiest to merge, and new features are the hardest to get merged. All of these are examples of good PRs: * typo fix: https://github.com/commaai/openpilot/pull/30678 * removing unused code: https://github.com/commaai/openpilot/pull/30573 * simple car model port: https://github.com/commaai/openpilot/pull/30245 * car brand port: https://github.com/commaai/openpilot/pull/23331 ### What doesn't get merged? * **arbitrary style changes**: code is art, and it's up to the author to make it beautiful * **500+ line PRs**: clean it up, break it up into smaller PRs, or both * **PRs without a clear goal**: every PR must have a singular and clear goal * **UI design changes**: we do not have a good review process for this yet * **New features**: We believe openpilot is mostly feature-complete, and the rest is a matter of refinement and fixing bugs. As a result of this, most feature PRs will be immediately closed, however the beauty of open source is that forks can and do offer features that upstream openpilot doesn't. ### First contribution Check out any [good first issue](https://github.com/commaai/openpilot/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A%22good+first+issue%22) to get started. ### What do I need to contribute? A lot of openpilot work requires only a PC, and some requires a comma device. Most car-related contributions require access to that car, plus a comma device installed in the car. ## Pull Requests Pull requests should be against the master branch. If you're unsure about a contribution, feel free to open a discussion, issue, or draft PR to discuss the problem you're trying to solve. A good pull request has all of the following: * a clearly stated purpose * every line changed directly contributes to the stated purpose * verification, i.e. how did you test your PR? * justification * if you've optimized something, post benchmarks to prove it's better * if you've improved your car's tuning, post before and after plots * passes the CI tests ## Contributing without Code * Report bugs in GitHub issues. * Report driving issues in the `#driving-feedback` Discord channel. * Consider opting into driver camera uploads to improve the driver monitoring model. * Connect your device to Wi-Fi regularly, so that we can pull data for training better driving models. * Run the `nightly` branch and report issues. This branch is like `master` but it's built just like a release. * Annotate images in the [comma10k dateset](https://github.com/commaai/comma10k).