Reviewing pull requests
Anyone can review a documentation pull request. Visit the pull requests section in the Kubernetes website repository to see open pull requests.
Reviewing documentation pull requests is a great way to introduce yourself to the Kubernetes community. It helps you learn the code base and build trust with other contributors.
Before reviewing, it's a good idea to:
- Read the content guide and style guide so you can leave informed comments.
- Understand the different roles and responsibilities in the Kubernetes documentation community.
Before you begin
Before you start a review:
- Read the CNCF Code of Conduct and ensure that you abide by it at all times.
- Be polite, considerate, and helpful.
- Comment on positive aspects of PRs as well as changes.
- Be empathetic and mindful of how your review may be received.
- Assume good intent and ask clarifying questions.
- Experienced contributors, consider pairing with new contributors whose work requires extensive changes.
Review process
In general, review pull requests for content and style in English.
-
Go to https://github.com/kubernetes/website/pulls. You see a list of every open pull request against the Kubernetes website and docs.
-
Filter the open PRs using one or all of the following labels:
cncf-cla: yes
(Recommended): PRs submitted by contributors who have not signed the CLA cannot be merged. See Sign the CLA for more information.language/en
(Recommended): Filters for english language PRs only.size/<size>
: filters for PRs of a certain size. If you're new, start with smaller PRs.
Additionally, ensure the PR isn't marked as a work in progress. PRs using the
work in progress
label are not ready for review yet. -
Once you've selected a PR to review, understand the change by:
- Reading the PR description to understand the changes made, and read any linked issues
- Reading any comments by other reviewers
- Clicking the Files changed tab to see the files and lines changed
- Previewing the changes in the Netlify preview build by scrolling to the PR's build check section at the bottom of the Conversation tab and clicking the deploy/netlify line's Details link.
-
Go to the Files changed tab to start your review.
- Click on the
+
symbol beside the line you want to comment on. - Fill in any comments you have about the line and click either Add single comment (if you have only one comment to make) or Start a review (if you have multiple comments to make).
- When finished, click Review changes at the top of the page. Here, you can add add a summary of your review (and leave some positive comments for the contributor!), approve the PR, comment or request changes as needed. New contributors should always choose Comment.
- Click on the
Reviewing checklist
When reviewing, use the following as a starting point.
Language and grammar
- Are there any obvious errors in language or grammar? Is there a better way to phrase something?
- Are there any complicated or archaic words which could be replaced with a simpler word?
- Are there any words, terms or phrases in use which could be replaced with a non-discriminatory alternative?
- Does the word choice and its capitalization follow the style guide?
- Are there long sentences which could be shorter or less complex?
- Are there any long paragraphs which might work better as a list or table?
Content
- Does similar content exist elsewhere on the Kubernetes site?
- Does the content excessively link to off-site, individual vendor or non-open source documentation?
Website
- Did this PR change or remove a page title, slug/alias or anchor link? If so, are there broken links as a result of this PR? Is there another option, like changing the page title without changing the slug?
- Does the PR introduce a new page? If so:
- Is the page using the right page content type and associated Hugo shortcodes?
- Does the page appear correctly in the section's side navigation (or at all)?
- Should the page appear on the Docs Home listing?
- Do the changes show up in the Netlify preview? Be particularly vigilant about lists, code blocks, tables, notes and images.
Other
For small issues with a PR, like typos or whitespace, prefix your comments with nit:
. This lets the author know the issue is non-critical.