rqlite is software, and it goes without saying it can always be improved. It's by no means finished -- issues are tracked, and I plan to develop this project further. Pull requests are welcome, though larger proposals should be discussed first. The design and implementation of rqlite is somewhat opinionated conservative however, so feature and design changes may be slow to become part of rqlite.
If you open a pull request, please ensure the commit history is clean. Squash the commits into logical blocks, perhaps a single commit if that makes sense. What you want to avoid is commits such as "WIP" and "fix test" in the history. This is so we keep history on master clean and straightforward.
Please avoid using libaries other than those available in the standard library, unless necessary. This requirement is relaxed somewhat for software other than rqlite node software itself. To understand why this approach is taken, check out this [post](https://blog.gopheracademy.com/advent-2014/case-against-3pl/).
Note that the above commands build a dynamically-linked version of `rqlited`. When officially released, `rqlited` statically links all its requirements e.g. `libc`.
The process outlined above will work for Linux, OSX, and Windows. For Raspberry Pi, check out [this issue](https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite/issues/340).
It can be rather slow to rebuild rqlite, due to the repeated compilation of the SQLite source code. You can compile and install the SQLite libary once, so subsequent builds are much faster. To do so, execute the following commands:
If you wish to work with fork of rqlite, your own fork for example, you must still follow the directory structure above. But instead of cloning the main repo, instead clone your fork. You must fork the project if you want to contribute upstream.