Thanks for contributing to iperf3!
This page contains some guidelines for filing issues, pull requests, and other sorts of interactions with the iperf3 project. These are guidelines and not hard rules, and it is intended that common sense and good judgement will prevail.
iperf3 is officially supported on Linux (various distributions), FreeBSD, and macOS. Support may be provided on a best-effort basis to other UNIX-like platforms. We cannot provide support for building and/or running iperf3 on Windows, iOS, or Android.
Before asking for help, please use your favorite search engine or questions site (such as Stack Overflow) to see if your question might have been asked (and maybe even answered) before. https://fasterdata.es.net/ has some information on the use of various bandwidth measurement tools, including iperf3. The iperf3 documentation Web site at http://software.es.net/iperf/ contains various bits of helpful information, including a list of frequently-asked questions.
We specifically discourage the use of the issue tracker on the iperf3 GitHub project page for asking questions. Questions posted in the form of issues may go unanswered. Please use a questions site such as Stack Overflow to ask questions of the community or alternatively use the iperf3 mailing list at iperf-dev@googlegroups.com (posting requires joining the list).
If you have improvements or bugfixes to make to iperf3, we'd love to hear from you. We prefer changes to be submitted in the form of pull requests on GitHub, although we can (probably) accept simple patches as well. If in doubt, ask.
Before making any submission to the iperf3 project (whether it be code or documentation), we urge you to consult the iperf3 license, in particular the section quoted below:
You are under no obligation whatsoever to provide any bug fixes, patches, or upgrades to the features, functionality or performance of the source code ("Enhancements") to anyone; however, if you choose to make your Enhancements available either publicly, or directly to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, without imposing a separate written license agreement for such Enhancements, then you hereby grant the following license: a non-exclusive, royalty-free perpetual license to install, use, modify, prepare derivative works, incorporate into other computer software, distribute, and sublicense such enhancements or derivative works thereof, in binary and source code form.
If you‘re considering changes that will have an architectural impact, we strongly encourage discussing them with the iperf3 maintainers before doing a significant amount of work on the code. We might be able to provide some guidance. Also, we’re more likely to accept a submission if if it doesn‘t involve rewriting large sections of the code. Even if you’re going to fork the code and maintain your own changes privately (which you‘re perfectly welcome to do) we might able to give you guidance so that future iperf3 changes won’t conflict with your work.
We expect that iperf3 interactions via the issue tracker, mailing lists, and so forth will be conducted civilly. Language that is deemed appropriate or abusive may be removed, and we reserve the right to ban users from accessing the project for repeated offense.