Five for the Future is an initiative promoting the WordPress community’s contribution to the platform’s growth. As an open source project, WordPress is created by a diverse collection of people from around the world.
The program encourages organizations to contribute five percent of their resources to WordPress development, to maintain a "golden ratio" of contributors to users.
In order to contribute with code changes, you'll want to set up a local environment to test changes and then push the changes to a Pull Request on this Github Repository.
⚠️ Note: this repo does not use Yarn, it uses vanilla npm. You should be using Node 20 (LTS), for example at the time of writing, the current version is 20.17.0, which comes with npm 10.8.2. Modern versions of npm have workspace features similar to how we already use yarn.
Fork the five-for-the-future repository under your own Github account.
Run git clone git@github.com:[your username]/five-for-the-future.git wp-content
, replacing [your username]
with your github username to clone your forked repo.
Set up repo dependencies.
npm run setup:tools
Build the project.
npm run build:theme
Start the local environment.
npm run wp-env start
If you're using a different local environment, or don't want to use wp-env, you can skip that step and just replace wp-content
with this repo, so that the themes and plugins are in the correct places.
Settings > Permalinks
.Tools > Import
and select wp-content/.env/import.wxr
.Appearance > Menu
.Settings > Reading
.Five For the Future > Pledges admin
area.Five For the Future > Contributors
page and publish the post(s) via quick edit./pledges/
pages now.If you making changes to the theme's CSS, you can run npm start
at /wp-content/themes/wporg-5ftf
to watch for CSS changes and automatically compile.
If you are making changes to the plugins, you can run composer update
at /wp-content/plugins/wporg-5ftf
and then composer run test
to run the WP unit tests. Run composer test:watch
if you want to run the tests every time you change a file.
And lastly, you can run PHPCS for both the theme and the plugin at the root /wp-content/
folder by running composer install
there once, followed by composer run phpcs
when you want to code scan.
composer run lint
- Lint the entire codebasecomposer run lint -- -a themes/wporg-5ftf/
- Lint a specific folder, interactivelycomposer run lint $(pwd)/inc*/ac*
- List file(s) in the current directory without typing the full pathcomposer run format
- Fix linter warnings (when possible)composer run test
- Run unit testscomposer run test:watch
- Run unit tests after each file change.See the theme README for scripts specific to the theme.
The first thing you'll want to do before changing any code is create a new branch based on the production
branch. Then you can commit your code changes locally and push this new branch to your forked repository on Github. Then visit the official repository and you should see the option to open up a Pull Request based on the recently pushed branch on your fork.
Overtime your fork will fall out of date with what is on the main repository. What you'll want to do is keep your fork's production
branch synced with the upstream production
branch. To do this:
1) In the /wp-content/
folder, run git remote add upstream https://github.com/WordPress/five-for-the-future
2) Then git fetch upstream
to pull down the upstream changes.
3) Lastly, git checkout production && git merge upstream/production
to sync up the your local branch with the upstream branch.
This is why it's important to always create a branch on your local fork before making code changes. You want to keep the production
branch clean and in sync with the upstream repository.
This is only relevant for committers; contributors don't need to worry about syncing.
The canonical source for this project is github.com/WordPress/five-for-the-future. The contents are synced to the dotorg SVN repo to run on production, because we don't deploy directly from GitHub, for reliability reasons.
The plugin and theme lives in the private SVN repo instead of meta.svn.wordpress.org
, because the code is already open-sourced, and we don't want to clutter the Meta logs and Slack channels with noise from "Syncing w/ Git repository..." commits.
To sync to SVN, run bin/sync/5ftf.sh
from a w.org sandbox.