Feathercoin is a Fork of the Bitcoin core project. It contains it's own set up of certain parameters, such as block times, extra features such as enhanced mining difficulty calculations and it's own encryption algorithm.
Like Bitcoin, Feathercoin is an open source project and additional changes and fixes to those in the source code are managed by the forum community as is, depending on the change or scale of release.
Development mailing list / Forum Thread :
http://forum.feathercoin.com/category/71/technical-development
Feathercoin is an experimental digital currency that enables instant payments to anyone, anywhere in the world. Feathercoin uses peer-to-peer technology to operate with no central authority: managing transactions and issuing money are carried out collectively by the network. Feathercoin Core is the name of open source software which enables the use of this currency.
For more information, as well as an immediately useable, binary version of the Feathercoin Core software, see these downloads.
Feathercoin Core is released under the terms of the MIT license. See COPYING for more information or see https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT.
The master-09
branch is regularly built and tested, but is not guaranteed to be
completely stable. Tags are created
regularly to indicate new official, stable release versions of Feathercoin Core.
The contribution workflow is described in CONTRIBUTING.md.
Testing and code review is the bottleneck for development; we get more pull requests than we can review and test on short notice. Please be patient and help out by testing other people's pull requests, and remember this is a security-critical project where any mistake might cost people lots of money.
Developers are strongly encouraged to write unit tests for new code, and to
submit new unit tests for old code. Unit tests can be compiled and run
(assuming they weren't disabled in configure) with: make check
There are also regression and integration tests of the RPC interface, written
in Python, that are run automatically on the build server.
These tests can be run (if the test dependencies are installed) with: qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py
The Travis CI system makes sure that every pull request is built for Windows, Linux, and OS X, and that unit/sanity tests are run automatically.
Changes should be tested by somebody other than the developer who wrote the code. This is especially important for large or high-risk changes. It is useful to add a test plan to the pull request description if testing the changes is not straightforward.