diff --git a/site/index.html b/site/index.html
index ba201b5..26c6369 100644
--- a/site/index.html
+++ b/site/index.html
@@ -1029,30 +1029,62 @@ made, but the information there can be made more accurate by setting
MXID
to your Matrix ID, and DISPLAY_NAME
to
your real name in your environment, or the .env
file.
The Subject
should very briefly describe what the patch
-is about. Below these headers, write a more in-depth description of
-the patch.
+is about.
-Then, send the resulting patch file to
-#telodendria-patches:bancino.net
, so it can be
-discussed and reviewed by the community. If you don't have a Matrix
-account, and you really don't want to create one—ignoring
-how odd it is that you are trying to contribute to a Matrix
-homeserver project—you can email your patches to
-jordan@bancino.net. However,
-the preferred way of submitting patches is to the official Matrix room,
-so I will upload your patch there along with your email address. If you
-are going to send patches via email, they must be plain text emails,
-and the patch must be in the main body of the email. No MIME, base64, or
-printed-quotable garbage. I will silently reject emails that are not
-purely plain text. I should be able to write a raw copy of your message to
-an mbox
file, and then apply it onto my code right from
-there, with no further processing. If you're going to be a regular contributor,
-it would just be easier to create a Matrix account. It doesn't have to be
-on my public homeserver, but it certainly can be. Note that the discussion and
-ultimately the decision on what to do with your patch will all happen in
-the Matrix room, so if you submit patches using email, you'll miss out on
-any feedback.
+You'll also notice these lines:
+
+This is a checkbox that tells me whether or not you actually have +the rights to submit your patch, and that once you submit the patch, +your code is bound by the Telodendria license. The full text of the +developer certificate of origin is as follows: +
+
+After the headers, but before the checkbox, write a more thorough
+description of the patch and why it was created. Then, send the
+resulting patch file to #telodendria-patches:bancino.net
,
+so it can be discussed and reviewed by the community. If you don't
+have a Matrix account, and you really don't want to create
+one—ignoring how odd it is that you are trying to contribute
+to a Matrix homeserver project—you can email your
+patches to jordan@bancino.net.
+However, the preferred way of submitting patches is to the official
+Matrix room, so I will upload your patch there along with your email
+address. If you are going to send patches via email, they must
+be plain text emails, and the patch must be in the main body
+of the email. No MIME, base64, or printed-quotable garbage. I will
+silently reject emails that are not purely plain text. I should be
+able to write a raw copy of your message to an mbox
+file, and then apply it onto my code right from there, with no
+further processing. If you're going to be a regular contributor,
+it would just be easier to create a Matrix account. It doesn't have
+to be on my public homeserver, but it certainly can be. Note that
+the discussion and ultimately the decision on what to do with your
+patch will all happen in the Matrix room, so if you submit patches
+using email, you'll miss out on any feedback.
Try to keep your patches on topic—make one patch file per feature diff --git a/tools/bin/td b/tools/bin/td index 720b8e3..cb4ac72 100644 --- a/tools/bin/td +++ b/tools/bin/td @@ -234,6 +234,10 @@ recipe_patch() { echo "Date: $(date)" echo "Subject: " echo + echo "[ ] I have read the Telodendria Project developer certificate" + echo " of origin, and certify that I have permission to submit" + echo " this patch under the conditions specified in it." + echo cvs -q diff -uNp $PATCHSET | grep -v '^\? ' ) > "$PATCH_FILE"