Open Source Development
The Open Charging Network is a community project by and for the Electric Vehicle Charging community. Its mission is to provide the EV Charging industry players an open, secure and decentralized network for digital interoperability. This is why the core components are developed open source under the Apache license Version 2.0.
The development of the Open Charging Network is driven and steered by the non-profit Energy We Foundation. Many users and community members are contributing to it in the form of feedback, raised issues, pull requests and dedicated working groups. This article should provide you with some guidance on how you can contribute to this project.
Access the full OCN technical documentation here.
Version Management
The production-ready version of every Open Charging Network component can be found in its MASTER BRANCH
Development of each component can be found in its DEVELOP BRANCH. Pull requests should therefore generally derive from the develop branch, which will be eventually merged into the master branch to coincide with the release of a new version.
Bare in mind that new features that are big enough may warrant their own feature branch so that multiple contributors can work on them before being merged into the development branch.
Maturity Model, Feature Roadmap and Releases
The current state of development is made transparent with a maturity model, which describes the current and planned feature set: Maturity Model, Feature Roadmap and Releases.
Monthly Developer Community Calls are being hosted to align the development of all software components. Anyone is invited to join. Learn more about it here.
Community support
If you need support in using or contributing to the Open Charging Network, use our Stack Overflow tag.
Reporting bugs and contribute with coding
Issues are raised, described and prioritized in our repositories on GitHub.
You can contribute fixes to bugs or new features by sending pull requests via the GitHub repository. Using the GitHub UI, a pull request can be initiated from a branch in a fork of repository.
Before we can include your contributions to the Open Charging Network code, you need to give us permission. As the author of any creative work (including source code, or documentation), you control the copyright for that work. Energy Web Foundation Foundation can’t legally use your contribution unless you allow us to.
To manage this process, we use a mechanism called a Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) popularized by The Linux Foundation. The DCO is a legally binding statement that asserts that you are the creator of your contribution, and that you license the work under the Apache License Version 2.0.
Please take the following steps so that we can include your work:
1. Each source file must include the following header:
2. Each commit must include your sign-off
Your sign-off certifies that you are either the author of the contribution or have the right to submit it under the Apache 2.0 license used by the Share&Charge project. The sign-off is done by adding the following line to your source code:
You must use your real name. Pseudonyms or anonymous contributions are not allowed.
If you set your user.name
and user.email
as part of your Git configuration, you can sign your commit automatically with git commit -s
.
More tips on how to sign-off your work with Git can be found on this website: DITA Open Toolkit
The full text of the DCO is:
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