>Note: Issues on GitHub for Consul are intended to be related to bugs or feature requests.
>Questions should be directed to other community resources such as the: [Mailing List](https://groups.google.com/group/consul-tool/), [FAQ](https://www.consul.io/docs/faq.html), or [Guides](https://www.consul.io/docs/guides/index.html).
* Make sure you test against the latest released version. It is possible we
already fixed the bug you're experiencing. However, if you are on an older
version of Consul and feel the issue is critical, do let us know.
* Check existing issues (both open and closed) to make sure it has not been
reported previously.
* Provide a reproducible test case. If a contributor can't reproduce an issue,
then it dramatically lowers the chances it'll get fixed.
* Aim to respond promptly to any questions made by the Consul team on your
issue. Stale issues will be closed.
### Issue Lifecycle
1. The issue is reported.
2. The issue is verified and categorized by a Consul maintainer.
Categorization is done via tags. For example, bugs are tagged as "bug".
3. Unless it is critical, the issue is left for a period of time (sometimes many
weeks), giving outside contributors a chance to address the issue.
4. The issue is addressed in a pull request or commit. The issue will be
referenced in the commit message so that the code that fixes it is clearly
linked.
5. The issue is closed.
## Building Consul
If you wish to work on Consul itself, you'll first need [Go](https://golang.org)
installed (version 1.12 is _required_, and [version 1.13 is not yet supported](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/6879)). Make sure you have Go properly installed,