Verbatim mirror of the git.drupal.org repository for Drupal core. Please see the https://github.com/drupal/drupal#contributing. PRs are not accepted on GitHub.
Drupal is an open source content management platform supporting a variety of
websites ranging from personal weblogs to large community-driven websites. For
more information, visit the Drupal website, Drupal.org, and join
the Drupal community.
Drupal is developed on Drupal.org, the home of the international
Drupal community since 2001!
Drupal.org hosts Drupal’s GitLab repository,
its issue queue, and its documentation. Before
you start working on code, be sure to search the issue queue and
create an issue if your aren’t able to find an existing issue.
Every issue on Drupal.org automatically creates a new community-accessible fork
that you can contribute to. Learn more about the code contribution process on
the Issue forks & merge requests page.
For a brief introduction, see USAGE.txt. You can also find
guides, API references, and more by visiting Drupal’s documentation
page.
You can quickly extend Drupal’s core feature set by installing any of its
thousands of free and open source modules. With Drupal and its
module ecosystem, you can often build most or all of what your project needs
before writing a single line of code.
Drupal keeps detailed change records. You can search Drupal’s
changes for a record of every notable breaking change and new feature since
2011.
For a list of security announcements, see the Security advisories
page (available as an RSS feed). This
page also describes how to subscribe to these announcements via email.
For information about the Drupal security process, or to find out how to report
a potential security issue to the Drupal security team, see the Security team
page.
Visit the Support page or browse over a thousand Drupal
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hosting services.
Know your rights when using Drupal by reading Drupal core’s
license.
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