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[Repolinter] Open Source Policy Issues #1

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github-actions bot opened this issue Feb 16, 2023 · 0 comments
Open

[Repolinter] Open Source Policy Issues #1

github-actions bot opened this issue Feb 16, 2023 · 0 comments

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github-actions bot commented Feb 16, 2023

Repolinter Report

🤖This issue was automatically generated by repolinter-action, developed by the Open Source and Developer Advocacy team at New Relic. This issue will be automatically updated or closed when changes are pushed. If you have any problems with this tool, please feel free to open a GitHub issue or give us a ping in #help-opensource.

This Repolinter run generated the following results:

❗ Error ❌ Fail ⚠️ Warn ✅ Pass Ignored Total
0 2 1 4 0 7

Fail #

readme-starts-with-community-header #

The README of a community project should have a community project header at the start of the README. If you already have a community project header and this rule is failing, your header may be out of date, and you should update your header with the suggested one below. For more information please visit https://opensource.newrelic.com/oss-category/. Below is a list of files or patterns that failed:

  • README.md: The first 5 lines do not contain the pattern(s): Open source Community header (see https://opensource.newrelic.com/oss-category).
    • 🔨 Suggested Fix: prepend the latest code snippet found at https://github.com/newrelic/opensource-website/wiki/Open-Source-Category-Snippets#code-snippet-1 to file

readme-contains-forum-topic #

Doesn't contain a link to the appropriate forum.newrelic.com topic (README.md). New Relic recommends directly linking the your appropriate forum.newrelic.com topic in the README, allowing developer an alternate method of getting support. For more information please visit https://nerdlife.datanerd.us/new-relic/security-guidelines-for-publishing-source-code.

Warning #

Click to see rules

⚠️ third-party-notices-file-exists #

A THIRD_PARTY_NOTICES.md file can be present in your repository to grant attribution to all dependencies being used by this project. This document is necessary if you are using third-party source code in your project, with the exception of code referenced outside the project's compiled/bundled binary (ex. some Java projects require modules to be pre-installed in the classpath, outside the project binary and therefore outside the scope of the THIRD_PARTY_NOTICES). Please review your project's dependencies and create a THIRD_PARTY_NOTICES.md file if necessary. For JavaScript projects, you can generate this file using the oss-cli. For more information please visit https://docs.google.com/document/d/1y644Pwi82kasNP5VPVjDV8rsmkBKclQVHFkz8pwRUtE/view. Did not find a file matching the specified patterns. Below is a list of files or patterns that failed:

  • THIRD_PARTY_NOTICES*
  • THIRD-PARTY-NOTICES*
  • THIRDPARTYNOTICES*

Passed #

Click to see rules

license-file-exists #

Found file (LICENSE). New Relic requires that all open source projects have an associated license contained within the project. This license must be permissive (e.g. non-viral or copyleft), and we recommend Apache 2.0 for most use cases. For more information please visit https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vML4aY_czsY0URu2yiP3xLAKYufNrKsc7o4kjuegpDw/edit.

readme-file-exists #

Found file (README.md). New Relic requires a README file in all projects. This README should give a general overview of the project, and should point to additional resources (security, contributing, etc.) where developers and users can learn further. For more information please visit https://github.com/newrelic/open-by-default.

readme-contains-link-to-security-policy #

Contains a link to the security policy for this repository (README.md). New Relic recommends putting a link to the open source security policy for your project (https://github.com/newrelic/<repo-name>/security/policy or ../../security/policy) in the README. For an example of this, please see the "a note about vulnerabilities" section of the Open By Default repository. For more information please visit https://nerdlife.datanerd.us/new-relic/security-guidelines-for-publishing-source-code.

code-of-conduct-should-not-exist-here #

New Relic has moved the CODE_OF_CONDUCT file to a centralized location where it is referenced automatically by every repository in the New Relic organization. Because of this change, any other CODE_OF_CONDUCT file in a repository is now redundant and should be removed. Note that you will need to adjust any links to the local CODE_OF_CONDUCT file in your documentation to point to the central file (README and CONTRIBUTING will probably have links that need updating). For more information please visit https://docs.google.com/document/d/1y644Pwi82kasNP5VPVjDV8rsmkBKclQVHFkz8pwRUtE/view. Did not find a file matching the specified patterns. All files passed this test.

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