contribute.dox 6.8 KB

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  1. // Copyright (C) 2013 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
  2. //
  3. // Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
  4. // purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
  5. // copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
  6. //
  7. // THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ISC DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH
  8. // REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
  9. // AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL ISC BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT,
  10. // INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM
  11. // LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE
  12. // OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR
  13. // PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
  14. /**
  15. @page contributorGuide BIND10 Contributor's Guide
  16. So you found a bug in BIND10 or plan to develop an extension and want to
  17. send a patch? Great! This page will explain how to contribute your
  18. changes and not get disappointed in the process.
  19. @section contributorGuideWritePatch Writing a patch
  20. Before you start working on a patch or a new feature, it is a good idea
  21. to discuss it first with BIND10 developers. You can post your questions
  22. to the \c bind10-dev mailing list
  23. (https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind10-dev) for general BIND10
  24. stuff or to the \c bind10-dhcp mailing list
  25. (https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind10-dhcp) for DHCP specific
  26. topics. If you prefer to get faster feedback, most BIND10 developers
  27. hang out in the \c bind10 jabber room
  28. (xmpp:bind10@conference.jabber.isc.org). Those involved in DHCP also use
  29. the \c dhcp chatroom (xmpp:dhcp@conference.jabber.isc.org). Feel free to
  30. join these rooms and talk to us. It is possible that someone else is
  31. working on your specific issue or perhaps the solution you plan to
  32. implement is not the best one. Often having a 10 minute talk could save
  33. many hours of engineering work.
  34. First step would be to get a source code from our GIT repository. The procedure
  35. is very easy and is explained here: http://bind10.isc.org/wiki/GitGuidelines.
  36. While it is possible to provide a patch against stable release, it makes
  37. the review process much easier if it is for latest code grom a git 'master' branch.
  38. Ok, so you have a patch? Great! Before you submit it, make sure that
  39. your code compiles. This may seem obvious, but it there's more to
  40. it. I'm sure you have checked that it compiles on your system, but
  41. BIND10 is a portable software. Besides Linux, it is being compiled on
  42. relatively uncommon systems, like OpenBSD or Solaris 11. Will your
  43. code compile there? Will it work? What about endianess? It is likely
  44. that you used regular x86, but the software is expected to run on many
  45. other architectures.
  46. Does your patch conforms to BIND10
  47. http://bind10.isc.org/wiki/CodingGuidelines? You still can submit
  48. a patch that does not adhere to it, but it will decrease your
  49. chances of being accepted. If the deviations are minor, ISC engineer
  50. that will do the review, will likely fix the issues. However,
  51. if there are lots of them, reviewer may simply reject the patch
  52. and ask you to fix it, before resubmitting.
  53. @section contributorGuideUnittests Running unit-tests
  54. One of the ground rules in BIND10 development is that every piece of
  55. code has to be tested. We now have an extensive set of unit-tests for
  56. almost every line of code. Even if you are fixing something small,
  57. like a single line fix, it is encouraged to write unit-test for that
  58. change. That is even more true for new code. If you write a new
  59. function, method or a class, you definitely should write unit-tests
  60. for it.
  61. BIND10 uses google test (gtest) framework as a base for our
  62. unit-tests. See http://code.google.com/p/googletest/ for details.
  63. You must have gtest installed or at least compiled before compiling
  64. BIND10 unit-tests. To enable unit-tests in BIND10
  65. @code
  66. ./configure --with-gtest=/path/to/your/gtest/dir
  67. @endcode
  68. or
  69. @code
  70. ./configure --with-gtest-source=/path/to/your/gtest/dir
  71. @endcode
  72. There are other useful switches passed to configure. It is always a good
  73. idea to use --enable-logger-checks, which does sanity checks on logger
  74. parameters. If you happen to modify anything in the documentation, use
  75. --enable-generate-docs. If you are modifying DHCP code, you are likely
  76. to be interested in MySQL backend for DHCP. Keep note that if the backend
  77. is not enabled, MySQL specific unit-tests are skipped, too. From that
  78. perspective, it is useful to use --with-dhcp-mysql parameter. For a
  79. complete list of all switches, use:
  80. @code
  81. ./configure --help
  82. @endcode
  83. Depending on how you compiled or installed (e.g. from sources or using
  84. some package management system) one of those two switches will find
  85. gtest. After that you make run unit-tests:
  86. @code
  87. make check
  88. @endcode
  89. If you happen to add new files or modified Makefiles, it is also a
  90. good idea to check if you haven't broken distribution process:
  91. @code
  92. make distcheck
  93. @endcode
  94. @section contributorGuideReview Going through a review
  95. Once all those are checked and working, feel free to create a ticket
  96. for your patch (http://bind10.isc.org) or attach your patch to the
  97. existing ticket if there is one. You may drop a note to bind10 or dhcp
  98. chatroom saying that you have submitted a patch. Alternatively, you
  99. may send a note to bind10-dev or bind10-dhcp lists.
  100. Here's the tricky part. One of BIND10 developers will review your
  101. patch, but it may not happen immediately. Unfortunately, developers
  102. are usually working under tight schedule, so any extra unplanned
  103. review work sometimes make take a while. Having said that, we value
  104. external contributions very much and will do whatever we can to
  105. review patches in a timely manner. Don't get discouraged if your
  106. patch is not accepted after first review. To keep the code quality
  107. high, we use the same review processes for internal code and for
  108. external patches. It may take several cycles of review/updated patch
  109. submissions before the code is finally accepted.
  110. Once the process is almost completed, the developer will likely ask
  111. you how you would like to be credited. The typical answers are by
  112. first,last name, by nickname, by company or anonymously. Typically we
  113. will add a note to ChangeLog. If the contributted feature is big or
  114. critical for whatever reason, it may be also mentioned in release
  115. notes.
  116. @section contributorGuideExtra Extra steps
  117. If you are interested in even more in-depth testing, you are welcome
  118. to visit BIND10 build farm: http://git.bind10.isc.org/~tester/builder/builder-new.html
  119. This is a life result page with all tests being run on various systems.
  120. Besides basic unit-tests, we also run them with valgrind (memory debugger),
  121. with cppcheck and scan-build (static code analyzers), Lettuce system tests
  122. and more. Although it is not possible for non ISC employees to run tests
  123. on that farm, it is possible that your contributed patch will end up there
  124. sooner or later.
  125. */