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- // Copyright (C) 2013-2015 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
- //
- // This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
- // License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
- // file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
- /**
- @page contributorGuide Kea Contributor's Guide
- So you found a bug in Kea or plan to develop an extension and want to
- send a patch? Great! This page will explain how to contribute your
- changes smoothly.
- @section contributorGuideWritePatch Writing a patch
- Before you start working on a patch or a new feature, it is a good
- idea to discuss it first with Kea developers. You can post your
- questions to the \c kea-dev mailing list
- (https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/kea-dev) or kea-users
- (https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/kea-users). The kea-users list
- is intended for users who are not interested in the internal workings
- or development details of Kea: it is OK to ask for feedback regarding new
- design or the best proposed solution to a certain problem, but all
- the internal details should be discussed on kea-dev and not posted
- to kea-users.
- If you prefer to get
- faster feedback, most Kea developers hang out in the \c dhcp
- jabber room (xmpp:dhcp@conference.jabber.isc.org). Feel free to join this
- room and talk to us. It is possible that someone else is working on your
- specific issue or perhaps the solution you plan to implement is not
- the best one. Often having a 10 minute talk could save many hours of
- engineering work.
- The first step in writing the patch or new feature should be to get
- the source code from our Git repository. The procedure is very easy and
- is explained here: http://kea.isc.org/wiki/GitGuidelines. While it is
- possible to provide a patch against the latest stable release, it makes
- the review process much easier if it is for latest code from the Git \c
- master branch.
- OK, so you have written a patch? Great! Before you submit it, make sure
- that your code compiles. This may seem obvious, but there's more to
- it. You have surely checked that it compiles on your system, but Kea
- is portable software. Besides Linux, it is compiled and used on
- relatively uncommon systems like OpenBSD and Solaris 11. Will your code
- compile and work there? What about endianess? It is likely that you used
- a regular x86 architecture machine to write your patch, but the software
- is expected to run on many other architectures. You may take a look at
- system specific build notes (http://kea.isc.org/wiki/SystemSpecificNotes).
- For a complete list of systems we build on, you may take a look at the
- following build farm report: https://jenkins.isc.org/view/Kea_BuildFarm/ .
- Does your patch conform to Kea coding guidelines
- (http://kea.isc.org/wiki/CodingGuidelines)? You can submit a
- patch that does not adhere to them, but that will reduce its chances of
- being accepted. If the deviations are minor, the Kea engineer who
- does the review will likely fix the issues. However, if there are lots
- of issues, the reviewer may simply reject the patch and ask you to fix
- it before re-submitting.
- @section contributorGuideUnittests Running unit-tests
- One of the ground rules in Kea development is that every piece of
- code has to be tested. We now have an extensive set of unit-tests for
- almost every line of code. Even if you are fixing something small,
- like a single line fix, you are encouraged to write unit-tests for that
- change. That is even more true for new code: if you write a new
- function, method or a class, you definitely should write unit-tests
- for it.
- To ensure that everything is tested, ISC uses a development method
- called Test Driven Development (TDD). In TDD, a feature is developed
- alongside the tests, with the tests being written first. In detail,
- a test is written for a small piece of functionality and run against
- the existing code. (In the case where the test is a unit test for
- a function, it would be run against an empty (unimplemented)
- function.) The test should fail. A minimal amount of code is then
- written, just enough to get the test to pass. Then the process is
- repeated for the next small piece of functionality. This continues
- until all the functionality has been implemented.
- This approach has two advantages:
- - By writing a test first and then only enough code to pass the
- test, that code is fully tested. By repeating this process until
- the feature is fully implemented, all the code gets test coverage.
- You avoid the situation where not enough tests have been written
- to check all the code.
- - By running the test before the code implementing the function is
- written and observing the test fail, you can detect the situation
- where a bug in the test code will cause it to pass regardless of
- the code being tested.
- See @ref qaUnitTests for instructions on how to run unit-tests.
- If you happen to add new files or have modified any \c Makefile.am
- files, it is also a good idea to check if you haven't broken the
- distribution process:
- @code
- make distcheck
- @endcode
- There are other useful switches which can be passed to configure. It is
- always a good idea to use \c --enable-logger-checks, which does sanity
- checks on logger parameters. Use \c --enable-debug to enable various
- additional consistency checks that reduce performance but help during
- development. If you happen to modify anything in the
- documentation, use \c --enable-generate-docs. If you are modifying DHCP
- code, you are likely to be interested in enabling a non-default database
- backends for DHCP. Note that if the backend is not enabled,
- the database-specific unit-tests are skipped. To enable the MySQL backend,
- use the switch \c --with-dhcp-mysql; for PostgreSQL, use \c --with-dhcp-pgsql.
- A complete list of all switches can be obtained with the command:
- @code
- ./configure --help
- @endcode
- @section contributorGuideReview Going through a review
- Once everything is checked and working, feel free to create a ticket for
- your patch at http://kea.isc.org/ or attach your patch to an existing
- ticket if you have fixed it. It would be nice if you also join the
- \c dhcp chatroom saying that you have submitted a patch. Alternatively,
- you may send a note to the \c kea-dev mailing list.
- Here's the tricky part. One of Kea developers will review your patch,
- but it may not happen immediately. Unfortunately, developers are usually
- working under a tight schedule, so any extra unplanned review work may
- take a while sometimes. Having said that, we value external
- contributions very much and will do whatever we can to review patches in
- a timely manner. Don't get discouraged if your patch is not accepted
- after first review. To keep the code quality high, we use the same
- review processes for external patches as we do for internal code. It may take
- some cycles of review/updated patch submissions before the code is
- finally accepted. The nature of the review process is that it emphasizes
- areas that need improvement. If you are not used to the review process,
- you may get the impression that the feedback is negative. It is not: even
- the Kea developers seldom see reviews that say "All OK please merge".
- Once the process is almost complete, the developer will likely ask you
- how you would like to be credited. The typical answers are by first and
- last name, by nickname, by company name or anonymously. Typically we
- will add a note to the \c ChangeLog and also set you as the author of
- the commit applying the patch. If the contributed feature is big or
- critical for whatever reason, it may also be mentioned in release notes.
- @section contributorGuideExtra Extra steps
- If you are interested in knowing the results of more in-depth testing,
- you are welcome to visit the ISC Jenkins page: https://jenkins.isc.org
- (Our old Kea build farm http://git.kea.isc.org/~tester/builder/KEA-builder-new.html
- is being migrated to Jenkins). This is a
- live result page with all tests being run on various systems. Besides
- basic unit-tests, we also have reports from valgrind (memory debugger),
- cppcheck and clang-analyzer (static code analyzers), Lettuce system
- tests and more. Although it is not possible for non ISC employees to run
- tests on that farm, it is possible that your contributed patch will end
- up there sooner or later. We also have ISC Forge tests running, but currently
- the test results are not publicly available.
- */
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