Welcome to the Clef for WordPress development repository!
Clef is the easy, and secure, way to log in to your WordPress sites. With Clef, you get the benefits of single sign on across all of your WordPress sites with the security of 2-factor authentication and public key cryptography — it's the best of both worlds. Replacing passwords, Clef identifies you with your phone — simply wave it in front of your computer and you're instantly logged in.
To install the latest stable build of Clef for WordPress, we recommend you download Clef for WordPress directly from the WordPress plugin repository.
To install, contribute to, and test the developer build, you should clone this repository.
Visit support.getclef.com to get support with the Clef plugin or experience.
If you find an issue, let us know in the issues section!
If you're interested in contributing to the Clef plugin for WordPress, translating is an easy way to get started. The easiest way to get involved is to join the Clef organization on Transifex and choose a new language to translate for. There's an easy online translation manager and you'll be done in no time!
The following users have contributed to translating Clef (if you've contributed and you're not on this list, let us know):
From the Rubinius contribution page:
Writing code and participating should be fun, not an exercise in perseverance. Stringent commit polices, for whatever their other qualities may bring, also mean longer turnaround times.
Submit a patch and once it’s accepted, you’ll get commit access to the repository. Feel free to fork the repository and send a pull request, once it’s merged in you’ll get added. If not, feel free to bug jessepollak about it.
git clone git://github.com/clef/wordpress.git
git checkout -b awesome_feature
git fetch && git rebase origin/master
.Once you’re ready:
git remote add your_remote your_repo
git push your_remote awesome_feature
Once it’s accepted:
git remote set-url origin git@github.com:clef/wordpress.git
Otherwise, you can continue to hack away in your own fork.
If you’re looking for things to hack on, please check GitHub Issues.
thanks to rubygems for inspiration of our guidelines