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Notes for New Contributors
===================================
Source Code Layout
-------------------------------------------------
Under ``src`` there are directories
* ``lib`` is the library itself, more on that below
* ``cli`` is the command line application ``botan``
* ``tests`` contain what you would expect. Input files go under ``tests/data``.
* ``build-data`` contains files read by the configure script. For
example ``build-data/cc/gcc.txt`` describes various gcc options.
* ``scripts`` contains misc scripts: install, distribution, various
codegen things. Scripts controlling CI go under ``scripts/ci``.
* ``configs`` contains configuration files for emacs, astyle, pylint, etc
* ``python/botan2.py`` is the Python ctypes wrapper
Library Layout
----------------------------------------
* ``base`` defines some high level types
* ``utils`` contains various utility functions and types
* ``codec`` has hex, base64
* ``block`` contains the block cipher implementations
* ``modes`` contains block cipher modes (CBC, GCM, etc)
* ``stream`` contains the stream ciphers
* ``hash`` contains the hash function implementations
* ``passhash`` contains password hashing algorithms for authentication
* ``kdf`` contains the key derivation functions
* ``mac`` contains the message authentication codes
* ``pbkdf`` contains password hashing algorithms for key derivation
* ``math`` is the big integer math library. It is divided into three parts:
``mp`` which are the low level algorithms; ``bigint`` which is a C++ wrapper
around ``mp``, and ``numbertheory`` which contains higher level algorithms like
primality testing and exponentiation
* ``pubkey`` contains the public key algorithms
* ``pk_pad`` contains padding schemes for public key algorithms
* ``rng`` contains the random number generators
* ``entropy`` has various entropy sources used by some of the RNGs
* ``asn1`` is the DER encoder/decoder
* ``x509`` is X.509 certificates, PKCS #10 requests, OCSP
* ``tls`` contains the TLS implementation
* ``filters`` is a filter/pipe API for data transforms
* ``compression`` has the compression wrappers (zlib, bzip2, lzma)
* ``ffi`` is the C99 API
* ``prov`` contains bindings to external libraries like OpenSSL and PKCS #11
* ``misc`` contains odds and ends: format preserving encryption, SRP, threshold
secret sharing, all or nothing transform, and others
Sending patches
----------------------------------------
All contributions should be submitted as pull requests via GitHub
change email the mailing list or open a discussion ticket on github
before starting out to make sure you are on the right path. And once
you have something written, free to open a [WIP] PR for early review
and comment.
If possible please sign your git commits using a PGP key.
instructions on how to set this up.
Depending on what your change is, your PR should probably also include an update
to ``news.rst`` with a note explaining the change. If your change is a
simple bug fix, a one sentence description is perhaps sufficient. If there is an
existing ticket on GitHub with discussion or other information, reference it in
your change note as 'GH #000'.
Update ``doc/credits.txt`` with your information so people know what you did!
If you are interested in contributing but don't know where to start check out
``doc/dev_ref/todo.rst`` for some ideas - these are changes we would almost
certainly accept once they've passed code review.
Also, try building and testing it on whatever hardware you have handy,
especially unusual platforms, or using C++ compilers other than the regularly
tested GCC, Clang, and Visual Studio.
FFI Additions
----------------
If adding a new function declaration to ``ffi.h``, the same PR must
also add the same declaration in the Python binding ``botan2.py``, in
addition the new API functionality must be exposed to Python and a
test written in Python.
Git Usage
----------------------------------------
Do *NOT* merge ``master`` into your topic branch, this creates
needless commits and noise in history. Instead, as needed, rebase your
branch against master (``git rebase -i master``) and force push the
branch to update the PR. If the GitHub PR page does not report any
merge conflicts and nobody asks you to rebase, you don't need to
rebase.
Try to keep your history clean and use rebase to squash your commits
as needed. If your diff is less than roughly 100 lines, it should
probably be a single commit. Only split commits as needed to help with
review/understanding of the change.
Python
----------------------------------------
Scripts should be in Python whenever possible.
For configure.py (and helper scripts install.py, cleanup.py and build_docs.py)
the target is stock (no modules outside the standard library) CPython 2.7 plus
latest CPython 3.x. Support for CPython 2.6, PyPy, etc is great when viable (in
the sense of not causing problems for 2.7 or 3.x, and not requiring huge blocks
of version dependent code). As running this program successfully is required for
a working build, making it as portable as possible is considered key.
The python wrapper botan2.py targets CPython 2.7, 3.x, and latest PyPy. Note that
a single file is used to avoid dealing with any of Python's various crazy module
distribution issues.
For random scripts not typically run by an end-user (codegen, visualization, and
so on) there isn't any need to worry about 2.6 and even just running under
Python2 xor Python3 is acceptable if needed. Here it's fine to depend on any
useful modules such as graphviz or matplotlib, regardless if it is available
from a stock CPython install. Since Python2 is now end of life, prefer Python3
for new scripts of this sort.
Build Tools and Hints
----------------------------------------
If you don't already use it for all your C/C++ development, install ``ccache``
(or on Windows, ``sccache``) right now, and configure a large cache on a fast
disk. It allows for very quick rebuilds by caching the compiler output.
Use ``--enable-sanitizers=`` flag to enable various sanitizer checks. Supported
values including "address" and "undefined" for GCC and Clang. GCC also supports
"iterator" (checked iterators), and Clang supports "memory" (MSan) and
"coverage" (for fuzzing).
On Linux if you have the ``lcov`` and ``gcov`` tools installed, then running
``./src/scripts/ci_build.py coverage`` will produce a coverage enabled build,
run the tests, test the fuzzers against a corpus, and produce an HTML report
of total coverage. This coverage build requires the development headers for
zlib, bzip2, liblzma, OpenSSL, TrouSerS (libtspi), and Sqlite3.
Copyright Notice
----------------------------------------
At the top of any new file add a comment with a copyright and a reference to the
license, for example::
/*
* (C) 20xx Copyright Holder
* Botan is released under the Simplified BSD License (see license.txt)
*/
If you are making a substantial or non-trivial change to an existing file, add
or update your own copyright statement at the top of each file.
Style Conventions
----------------------------------------
When writing your code remember the need for it to be easily understood by
reviewers and auditors, both at the time of the patch submission and in the
future.
Avoid complicated template metaprogramming where possible. It has its places but
should be used judiciously.
When designing a new API (for use either by library users or just internally)
try writing out the calling code first. That is, write out some code calling
your idealized API, then just implement that API. This can often help avoid
cut-and-paste by creating the correct abstractions needed to solve the problem
at hand.
The C++11 ``auto`` keyword is very convenient but only use it when the type
truly is obvious (considering also the potential for unexpected integer
conversions and the like, such as an apparent uint8_t being promoted to an int).
If a variable is defined and not modified, declare it ``const``. Some exception
for very short-lived variables, but generally speaking being able to read the
declaration and know it will not be modified is useful.
Use ``override`` annotations whenever overriding a virtual function. If
introducing a new type that is not intended for derivation, mark it ``final``.
Avoid explicit ``delete`` - use RAII.
Use ``m_`` prefix on all member variables.
For formatting, there are configs for emacs and astyle in ``src/configs``.
No tabs, and remove trailing whitespace.
Prefer using braces on both sides of if/else blocks, even if only using a single
statement. The current code doesn't always do this.
Avoid ``using namespace`` declarations, even inside of single functions. One
allowed exception is ``using namespace std::placeholders`` in functions which
use ``std::bind``. (But, don't use ``std::bind`` - use a lambda instead).
Use ``::`` to explicitly refer to the global namespace (eg, when calling an OS
or external library function like ``::select`` or ``::sqlite3_open``).
Use of External Dependencies
----------------------------------------
Compiler Dependencies
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The library should always be as functional as possible when compiled with just
C++11. However, feel free to use the full C++11 language. No accomodations are
made for compilers that are incomplete or buggy.
Use of compiler extensions is fine whenever appropriate; this is typically
restricted to a single file or an internal header. Compiler extensions used
currently include native uint128_t, SIMD intrinsics, inline asm syntax and so
on, so there are some existing examples of appropriate use.
Generally intrinsics or inline asm is preferred over bare assembly to avoid
calling convention issues among different platforms; the improvement in
maintainability is seen as worth any potential performance tradeoff. One risk
with intrinsics is that the compiler might rewrite your clever const-time SIMD
into something with a conditional jump, but code intended to be const-time
should in any case be annotated so it can be checked at runtime with tools.
Operating System Dependencies
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you're adding a small OS dependency in some larger piece of code, try to
contain the actual non-portable operations to utils/os_utils.* and then call
them from there.
As a policy, operating systems which are not supported by their original vendor
are not supported by Botan either. Patches that complicate the code in order to
support obsolete operating systems will likely be rejected. In writing OS
specific code, feel free to assume roughly POSIX 2008, or for Windows, Windows 8
/Server 2012 (which are as of this writing the oldest versions still supported
by Microsoft).
Some operating systems, such as OpenBSD, only support the latest release. For
such cases, it's acceptable to add code that requires APIs added in the most
recent release of that OS as soon as the release is available.
Library Dependencies
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Any external library dependency - even optional ones - is met with as one PR
submitter put it "great skepticism".
At every API boundary there is potential for confusion that does not exist when
the call stack is all contained within the boundary. So the additional API
really needs to pull its weight. For example a simple text parser or such which
can be trivially implemented is not really for consideration. As a rough idea of
the bar, equate the viewed cost of an external dependency as at least 1000
additional lines of code in the library. That is, if the library really does
need this functionality, and it can be done in the library for less than that,
then it makes sense to just write the code. Yup.
Currently the (optional) external dependencies of the library are OpenSSL (for
access to fast and side channel hardened RSA, ECDSA, AES), some compression
libraries (zlib, bzip2, lzma), sqlite3 database, Trousers (TPM integration),
plus various operating system utilities like basic filesystem operations. These
provide major pieces of functionality which seem worth the trouble of
maintaining an integration with.
At this point the most plausible examples of an appropriate new external
dependency are all deeper integrations with system level cryptographic systems
(CommonCrypto, CryptoAPI, /dev/crypto, iOS keychain, TPM 2.0, etc)