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