5.3 KiB
Contributing
Thank you for your interest in helping out the FabAccess system!
You found a bug, an exploit or a feature that doesn't work like it's documented? Please tell us about it, see Issues
You have a feature request? Great, check out the paragraph on Feature Requests
Issues
While we try to not have any bugs or exploits or documentation bugs we're not perfect either. Thanks for helping us out!
We have labels that help us sort issues better, so if you know what would be the correct ones, please tag your issue:
documentation
if it's an documentation issue, be it lacking docs or even worse wrong docs.bug
is for software bugs, unexpected behaviour, crashes and so on.exploit
for any bugs that may be used as RCE, to escalate priviledges or some-such. Don't worry if you aren't sure about the correct labels, an issue opened with no labels is much better than no knowing about the issue!
Especially for bugs and exploits, please mark your issue as "confidential" if you think it impacts
the stable
branch. If you're not sure, mark it as confidential anyway. It's easier to publish
information than it is to un-publish information.
If you found an exploit and it's high-impact enough that you do not want to open an issue but instead want direct contact with the developers, you can find public keys respectively fingerprints for GPG, XMPP+OMEMO and Matrix+MegOlm in the git repository as blobs with tags assigned to them.
You can import the gpg key for dequbed either from the repository like so:
$ git cat-file -p keys/dequbed/gpg | gpg --import-key
Or from your local trusted gpg keyserver, and/or verify it using keybase This key is also used to sign the other tags so to verify them you can run e.g.
$ git tag -v keys/dequbed/xmpp+omemo
Feature Requests
We also like new feature requests of course! But before you open an issue in this repo for a feature request, please first check a few things:
- Is it a feature that needs to be implemented in more than just the backend server? For example, is it something also having a GUI-component or something that you want to be able to do via the API? If so it's better suited over at the Lastenheft because that's where the required coordination for that will end up happening
- Who else needs that feature? Is this something super specific to your environment/application or something that others will want too? If it's something that's relevant for more people please also tell us that in the feature request.
- Can you already get partway or all the way there using what's there already? If so please also tell us what you're currently doing and what doesn't work or why you dislike your current solution.
Contributing Code
To help develop Difluoroborane you will need a Rust toolchain. I heavily recommend installing rustup even if your distribution provides a recent enough rustc, simply because it allows to easily switch compilers between several versions of both stable and nightly. It also allows you to download the respective stdlib crate, giving you the option of an offline reference.
We use a stable release branch / moving development workflow. This means that all new development
should happen on the development
branch which is regularly merged into stable
as releases. The
exception of course are bug- and hotfixes that can target whichever branch.
If you want to add a new feature please work off the development branch. We suggest you create
yourself a feature branch, e.g. using git switch development; git checkout -b feature/my-cool-feature
.
Using a feature branch keeps your local development
branch clean, making it easier to later rebase
your feature branch onto it before you open a pull/merge request.
When you want feedback on your current progress or are ready to have it merged upstream open a merge request. Don't worry we don't bite! ^^
Development Setup
Cross-compilation
If you want to cross-compile you need both a C-toolchain for your target and install the Rust stdlib for said target.
As an example for the target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
(64-bit ARMv8
running Linux with the glibc, e.g. a Raspberry Pi 3 or later with a 64-bit
Debian Linux installation):
- Install C-toolchain using your distro package manager:
- On Archlinux:
pacman -S aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu-gcc
- On Archlinux:
- Install the Rust stdlib:
- using rustup:
rustup target add aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
- using rustup:
- Configure your cargo config:
Configuring cargo
You need to tell Cargo to use your C-toolchain. For this you need to have
a block in your user cargo config setting at
least the paths to the gcc as linker
and ar as ar
:
[target.aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu]
# You must set the gcc as linker since a lot of magic must happen here.
linker = "aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc"
ar = "aarch64-linux-gnu-ar"
This block should be added to your user cargo config (usually
~/.cargo/config.toml
), since these values can differ between distros and
users.
To actually compile for the given triple you need to call cargo build
with the --target
flag:
$ cargo build --release --target=aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
Tests
Sadly, still very much // TODO:
. We're working on it! :/