This book is built as a Gitbook book. This is written using Markdown syntax. This is maintained under the InnerSource Commons' GitHub account in the Managing Inner Source Projects repository.
Thus you can follow the usual contribution process in GitHub through Pull Requests. You can see for instance the pull requests open and closed at this point in time and for this repository at https://github.com/innersourcecommons/managing-inner-source-projects/pulls .
If you want to share an idea, comment or feature request, you can also open an issue in the GitHub issues tracking for this repository.
Please be aware that all of your contributions will be opened by default and that those will be licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
This book uses the Goal-Question-Metric approach to documenting InnerSource metrics. Goals, questions, and metrics are kept in separate files with markdown links between them indicating which are related to one other. The full graph of relationships is visible in this graph.
Add in your scenarios by copying this goal template, question template, and/or metric template, filling them out, and submitting them in pull request. After successful merge, a Trusted Committer will manually1 add those to the graph. If interested, feel free to edit the MermaidJS source of the graph on your own!
By adding in your scenarios to the graph, you will be able to see how others approach and interact with them. You may get new ideas of what metrics answer the questions you have or what additional goals your questions can support.
When using titles in Markdown, use # for main title, ## for the second header title, etc. It's just to follow the same style :).