fsnotify is derived from code in the [golang.org/x/exp](https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/exp) package and it may be included [in the standard library](https://github.com/fsnotify/fsnotify/issues/1) in the future. Therefore fsnotify carries the same [LICENSE](https://github.com/fsnotify/fsnotify/blob/master/LICENSE) as Go. Contributors retain their copyright, so you need to fill out a short form before we can accept your contribution: [Google Individual Contributor License Agreement](https://developers.google.com/open-source/cla/individual).
Before doing a pull request, please do your best to test your changes on multiple platforms, and list which platforms you were able/unable to test on.
To aid in cross-platform testing there is a Vagrantfile for Linux and BSD.
* Install [Vagrant](http://www.vagrantup.com/) and [VirtualBox](https://www.virtualbox.org/)
* Setup [Vagrant Gopher](https://github.com/nathany/vagrant-gopher) in your `src` folder.
* Run `vagrant up` from the project folder. You can also setup just one box with `vagrant up linux` or `vagrant up bsd` (note: the BSD box doesn't support Windows hosts at this time, and NFS may prompt for your host OS password)
Right now there is no equivalent solution for Windows and macOS, but there are Windows VMs [freely available from Microsoft](http://www.modern.ie/en-us/virtualization-tools#downloads).
Help maintaining fsnotify is welcome. To be a maintainer:
* Submit a pull request and sign the CLA as above.
* You must be able to run the test suite on Mac, Windows, Linux and BSD.
To keep master clean, the fsnotify project uses the "apply mail" workflow outlined in Nathaniel Talbott's post ["Merge pull request" Considered Harmful][am]. This requires installing [hub][].
All code changes should be internal pull requests.
Releases are tagged using [Semantic Versioning](http://semver.org/).