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author | Mark Whitley <markw@lineo.com> | 2001-03-02 19:14:25 +0000 |
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committer | Mark Whitley <markw@lineo.com> | 2001-03-02 19:14:25 +0000 |
commit | 3b565cdf910a95e0955d3480fcd617fa5dbda78b (patch) | |
tree | 7c36bee48bb6dce655a4535311a928f3b22464d9 | |
parent | 85adecb668cec178d32775547ebde4eb4f1e9149 (diff) | |
download | busybox-w32-3b565cdf910a95e0955d3480fcd617fa5dbda78b.tar.gz busybox-w32-3b565cdf910a95e0955d3480fcd617fa5dbda78b.tar.bz2 busybox-w32-3b565cdf910a95e0955d3480fcd617fa5dbda78b.zip |
Added 'How to contribute to Busybox' doc.
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1 | Contributing To Busybox | ||
2 | ======================= | ||
3 | |||
4 | This document describes what you need to do to contribute to Busybox, where | ||
5 | you can help, guidelines on testing, and how to submit a well-formed patch | ||
6 | that is more likely to be accepted. | ||
7 | |||
8 | The Busybox home page is at: http://busybox.lineo.com | ||
9 | |||
10 | |||
11 | |||
12 | Pre-Contribution Checklist | ||
13 | -------------------------- | ||
14 | |||
15 | So you want to contribute to Busybox, eh? Great, wonderful, glad you want to | ||
16 | help. However, before you dive in, headlong and hotfoot, there are some things | ||
17 | you need to do: | ||
18 | |||
19 | |||
20 | Checkout the Latest Code from CVS | ||
21 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
22 | |||
23 | This is a necessary first step. Please do not try to work with the last | ||
24 | released version, as there is a good chance that somebody has already worked | ||
25 | on the area you had in mind and your patch might already be obsolete. | ||
26 | |||
27 | For information on how to check out Busybox from CVS, please look at the | ||
28 | following links: | ||
29 | |||
30 | http://oss.lineo.com/cvs_anon.html | ||
31 | http://oss.lineo.com/cvs_howto.html | ||
32 | |||
33 | |||
34 | Read the Mailing List | ||
35 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
36 | |||
37 | No one is required to read the entire archives of the mailing list, but you | ||
38 | should at least read up on what people have been talking about lately. If | ||
39 | you've recently discovered a problem, chances are somebody else has too. If | ||
40 | you're the first to discover a problem, post a message and let the rest of us | ||
41 | know. | ||
42 | |||
43 | Archives can be found here: | ||
44 | |||
45 | http://opensource.lineo.com/lists/busybox/ | ||
46 | |||
47 | If you have a serious interest in Busybox, i.e. you are using it day-to-day or | ||
48 | as part of an embedded project, it's a good idea to join the mailing list. | ||
49 | |||
50 | A web-based sign-up form can be found here: | ||
51 | |||
52 | http://opensource.lineo.com/mailman/listinfo/busybox | ||
53 | |||
54 | |||
55 | Coordinate with the Applet Maintainer | ||
56 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
57 | |||
58 | Some (not all) of the applets in Busybox are "owned" by a maintainer who has | ||
59 | put significant effort into it and is probably more familiar with it than | ||
60 | others. To find the maintainer of an applet, look at the top of the .c file | ||
61 | for a name following the word 'Copyright' or 'Written by'. | ||
62 | |||
63 | Before plunging ahead, it's a good idea to send a message to the mailing list | ||
64 | that says: "Hey, I was thinking about adding the 'transmogrify' feature to the | ||
65 | 'foo' applet. Would this be useful? Is anyone else working on it?" You might | ||
66 | want to CC the maintainer (if any) with your question. | ||
67 | |||
68 | |||
69 | |||
70 | Areas Where You Can Help | ||
71 | ------------------------ | ||
72 | |||
73 | Busybox can always use improvement! If you're looking for ways to help, there | ||
74 | there are a variety of areas where you could help. | ||
75 | |||
76 | |||
77 | What Busybox Doesn't Need | ||
78 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
79 | |||
80 | Before listing the areas where you _can_ help, it's worthwhile to mention the | ||
81 | areas where you shouldn't bother. While Busybox strives to be the "Swiss Army | ||
82 | Knife" of embedded Linux, there are some applets that will not be accepted: | ||
83 | |||
84 | - Any filesystem manipulation tools: Busybox is filesystem independent and | ||
85 | we do not want to start adding mkfs/fsck tools for every (or any) | ||
86 | filesystem under the sun. (fsck_minix.c and mkfs_minix.c are living on | ||
87 | borrowed time.) There are far too many of these tools out there. Use | ||
88 | the upstream version. Not everything has to be part of Busybox. | ||
89 | |||
90 | - Any partitioning tools: Partitioning a device is typically done once and | ||
91 | only once, and tools which do this generally do not need to reside on the | ||
92 | target device (esp a flash device). If you need a partitioning tool, grab | ||
93 | one (such as fdisk, sfdisk, or cfdisk from util-linux) and use that, but | ||
94 | don't try to merge it into busybox. These are nasty and complex and we | ||
95 | don't want to maintain them. | ||
96 | |||
97 | - Any disk, device, or media-specific tools: Use the -utils or -tools package | ||
98 | that was designed for your device; don't try to shoehorn them into Busybox. | ||
99 | |||
100 | - Any architecture specific tools: Busybox is (or should be) architecture | ||
101 | independent. Do not send us tools that cannot be used across multiple | ||
102 | platforms / arches. | ||
103 | |||
104 | |||
105 | Bug Reporting | ||
106 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
107 | |||
108 | If you find a bug in Busybox, you can send a bug report to our bug tracking | ||
109 | system (homepage: http://bugs.lineo.com). Instructions on how to send a bug | ||
110 | report to the tracking system can be found at: | ||
111 | |||
112 | http://bugs.lineo.com/Reporting.html | ||
113 | |||
114 | The README file that comes with Busybox also describes how to submit a bug. | ||
115 | |||
116 | A well-written bug report will include a transcript of a shell session that | ||
117 | demonstrates the bad behavior and enables anyone else to duplicate the bug on | ||
118 | their own machine. | ||
119 | |||
120 | |||
121 | Bug Triage | ||
122 | ~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
123 | |||
124 | Validating and confirming bugs is nearly as important as reporting them in the | ||
125 | first place. It is valuable to know if a bug can be duplicated on a different | ||
126 | machine, on a different filesystem, on a different architecture, with a | ||
127 | different C library, and so forth. | ||
128 | |||
129 | To see a listing of all the bugs currently filed against Busybox, look here: | ||
130 | |||
131 | http://bugs.lineo.com/db/pa/lbusybox.html | ||
132 | |||
133 | If you have comments to add to a bug (can / can't duplicate, think a bug | ||
134 | should be closed / reopened), please send it to [bugnumber]@bugs.lineo.com. | ||
135 | The message you send will automatically be forwarded to the mailing list for | ||
136 | all to see. | ||
137 | |||
138 | |||
139 | Write Documentation | ||
140 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
141 | |||
142 | Chances are, documentation in Busybox is either missing or needs improvement. | ||
143 | Either way, help is welcome. | ||
144 | |||
145 | Work is being done to automatically generate documentation from sources, | ||
146 | especially from the usage.h file. If you want to correct the documentation, | ||
147 | please make changes to the pre-generation parts, rather than the generated | ||
148 | documentation. [More to come on this later...] | ||
149 | |||
150 | It is preferred that modifications to documentation be submitted in patch | ||
151 | format (more on this below), but we're a little more lenient when it comes to | ||
152 | docs. You could, for example, just say "after the listing of the mount | ||
153 | options, the following example would be helpful..." | ||
154 | |||
155 | |||
156 | Consult Existing Sources | ||
157 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
158 | |||
159 | For a quick listing of "needs work" spots in the sources, cd into the Busybox | ||
160 | directory and run the following: | ||
161 | |||
162 | for i in TODO FIXME XXX; do grep $i *.[ch]; done | ||
163 | |||
164 | This will show all of the trouble spots or 'questionable' code. Pick a spot, | ||
165 | any spot, these are all invitations for you to contribute. | ||
166 | |||
167 | |||
168 | Consult The Bug-Tracking System | ||
169 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
170 | |||
171 | Head to: http://bugs.lineo.com/db/pa/lBusybox.html and look at the bugs on | ||
172 | there. Pick one you think you can fix, and fix it. If it's a wishlist item and | ||
173 | someone's requesting a new feature, take a stab at adding it. Everything | ||
174 | previously said about "reading the mailing list" and "coordinating with the | ||
175 | applet maintainer" still applies. | ||
176 | |||
177 | |||
178 | Add a New Applet | ||
179 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
180 | |||
181 | If you want to add a new applet to Busybox, we'd love to see it. However, | ||
182 | before you write any code, please ask beforehand on the mailing list something | ||
183 | like "Do you think applet 'foo' would be useful in Busybox?" or "Would you | ||
184 | guys accept applet 'foo' into Busybox if I were to write it?" If the answer is | ||
185 | "no" by the folks on the mailing list, then you've saved yourself some time. | ||
186 | Conversely, you could get some positive responses from folks who might be | ||
187 | interested in helping you implement it, or can recommend the best approach. | ||
188 | Perhaps most importantly, this is your way of calling "dibs" on something and | ||
189 | avoiding duplication of effort. | ||
190 | |||
191 | Also, before you write a line of code, please read the 'new-applet-HOWTO.txt' | ||
192 | file in the docs/ directory. | ||
193 | |||
194 | |||
195 | Janitorial Work | ||
196 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
197 | |||
198 | These are dirty jobs, but somebody's gotta do 'em. | ||
199 | |||
200 | - Security audits: | ||
201 | http://www.securityfocus.com/frames/?content=/forums/secprog/secure-programming.html | ||
202 | |||
203 | - Synthetic code removal: http://www.perl.com/pub/2000/06/commify.html - This | ||
204 | is very Perl-specific, but the advice given in here applies equally well to | ||
205 | C. | ||
206 | |||
207 | - C library funciton use audits: Verifying that functions are being used | ||
208 | properly (called with the right args), replacing unsafe library functions | ||
209 | with safer versions, making sure return codes are being checked, etc. | ||
210 | |||
211 | - Where appropriate, replace preprocessor defined macros and values with | ||
212 | compile-time equivalents. | ||
213 | |||
214 | - Makefile improvements: | ||
215 | http://www.canb.auug.org.au/~millerp/rmch/recu-make-cons-harm.html | ||
216 | (I think the recursive problems are pretty much taken care of at this point, non?) | ||
217 | |||
218 | - "Ten Commandments" compliance: (this is a "maybe", certainly not as | ||
219 | important as any of the previous items.) | ||
220 | http://web.onetelnet.ch/~twolf/tw/c/ten_commandments.html | ||
221 | |||
222 | Other useful links: | ||
223 | |||
224 | - the comp.lang.c FAQ: http://web.onetelnet.ch/~twolf/tw/c/index.html#Sources | ||
225 | |||
226 | |||
227 | |||
228 | Submitting Patches To Busybox | ||
229 | ----------------------------- | ||
230 | |||
231 | Here are some guidelines on how to submit a patch to Busybox. | ||
232 | |||
233 | |||
234 | Making A Patch | ||
235 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
236 | |||
237 | If you've got anonymous CVS access set up, making a patch is simple. Just make | ||
238 | sure you're in the busybox/ directory and type 'cvs diff -bwu > mychanges.patch'. | ||
239 | You can send the resulting .patch file to the mailing list with a description | ||
240 | of what it does. (But not before you test it! See the next section for some | ||
241 | guidelines.) It is preferred that patches be sent as attachments, but it is | ||
242 | not required. | ||
243 | |||
244 | Also, feel free to help test other people's patches and reply to them with | ||
245 | comments. You can apply a patch by saving it into your busybox/ directory and | ||
246 | typing 'patch < mychanges.patch'. Then you can recompile, see if it runs, test | ||
247 | if it works as advertised, and post your findings to the mailing list. | ||
248 | |||
249 | NOTE: Please do not include extraneous or irrelevant changes in your patches. | ||
250 | Please do not try to "bundle" two patches together into one. Make single, | ||
251 | discreet changes on a per-patch basis. Sometimes you need to make a patch that | ||
252 | touches code in many places, but these kind of patches are rare and should be | ||
253 | coordinated with a maintainer. | ||
254 | |||
255 | |||
256 | Testing Guidelines | ||
257 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
258 | |||
259 | It's considered good form to test your new feature before you submit a patch | ||
260 | to the mailing list, and especially before you commit a change to CVS. Here | ||
261 | are some guidelines on how to test your changes. | ||
262 | |||
263 | - Always test Busybox applets against GNU counterparts and make sure the | ||
264 | behavior / output is identical between the two. | ||
265 | |||
266 | - Try several different permutations and combinations of the features you're | ||
267 | adding (i.e. different combinations of command-line switches) and make sure | ||
268 | they all work; make sure one feature does not interfere with another. | ||
269 | |||
270 | - Make sure you test compiling against the source both with the feature | ||
271 | turned on and turned off in Config.h and make sure Busybox compiles cleanly | ||
272 | both ways. | ||
273 | |||
274 | - Run the multibuild.pl script in the tests directory and make sure | ||
275 | everything checks out OK. (Do this from within the busybox/ directory by | ||
276 | typing: 'tests/multibuild.pl'.) | ||
277 | |||
278 | |||
279 | Making Sure Your Patch Doesn't Get Lost | ||
280 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
281 | |||
282 | If you don't want your patch to be lost or forgotten, send it to the bug | ||
283 | tracking system (http://bugs.lineo.com). You do this by emailing your patch in | ||
284 | a message to submit@bugs.lineo.com with a subject line something like this: | ||
285 | |||
286 | [PATCH] - Adds "transmogrify" feature to "foo" | ||
287 | |||
288 | In the body, you should have a pseudo-header that looks like the following: | ||
289 | |||
290 | Package: busybox | ||
291 | Version: v0.50pre (or whatever the current version is) | ||
292 | Severity: wishlist | ||
293 | |||
294 | The remainder of the body should read along these lines: | ||
295 | |||
296 | This patch adds the "transmogrify" feature to the "foo" applet. I have | ||
297 | tested this on [arch] system(s) and it works. I have tested it against the | ||
298 | GNU counterparts and the outputs are identical. I have run the scripts in | ||
299 | the 'tests' directory and nothing breaks. | ||
300 | |||
301 | Detailed instructions on how to submit a bug to the tracking system are at: | ||
302 | |||
303 | http://bugs.lineo.com/Reporting.html | ||
304 | |||
305 | |||
306 | |||
307 | Improving Your Chances of Patch Acceptance | ||
308 | ------------------------------------------ | ||
309 | |||
310 | Even after you send a brilliant patch to the mailing list, sometimes it can go | ||
311 | unnoticed, un-replied-to, and sometimes (sigh) even lost. This is an | ||
312 | unfortunate fact of life, but there are steps you can take to help your patch | ||
313 | get noticed and convince a maintainer that it should be added: | ||
314 | |||
315 | |||
316 | Be Succinct | ||
317 | ~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
318 | |||
319 | A patch that includes small, isolated, obvious changes is more likely to be | ||
320 | accepted than a patch that touches code in lots of different places or makes | ||
321 | sweeping, dubious changes. | ||
322 | |||
323 | |||
324 | Back It Up | ||
325 | ~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
326 | |||
327 | Hard facts on why your patch is better than the existing code will go a long | ||
328 | way toward convincing maintainers that your patch should be included. | ||
329 | Specifically, patches are more likely to be accepted if they are provably more | ||
330 | correct, smaller, faster, simpler, or more maintainable than the existing | ||
331 | code. | ||
332 | |||
333 | Conversely, any patch that is supported with nothing more than "I think this | ||
334 | would be cool" or "this patch is good because I say it is and I've got a Phd | ||
335 | in Computer Science" will likely be ignored. | ||
336 | |||
337 | |||
338 | Follow The Style Guide | ||
339 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
340 | |||
341 | It's considered good form to abide by the established coding style used in a | ||
342 | project; Busybox is no exception. We have gone so far as to delineate the | ||
343 | "elements of Busybox style" in the file docs/style-guide.txt. Please follow | ||
344 | them. | ||
345 | |||
346 | |||
347 | Work With Someone Else | ||
348 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
349 | |||
350 | Working on a patch in isolation is less effective than working with someone | ||
351 | else for a variety of reasons. If another Busybox user is interested in what | ||
352 | you're doing, then it's two (or more) voices instead of one that can petition | ||
353 | for inclusion of the patch. You'll also have more people that can test your | ||
354 | changes, or even offer suggestions on better approaches you could take. | ||
355 | |||
356 | Getting other folks interested follows as a natural course if you've received | ||
357 | responses from queries to applet maintainer or positive responses from folks | ||
358 | on the mailing list. | ||
359 | |||
360 | We've made strident efforts to put a useful "collaboration" infrastructure in | ||
361 | place in the form of mailing lists, the bug tracking system, and CVS. Please | ||
362 | use these resources. | ||
363 | |||
364 | |||
365 | Be Polite | ||
366 | ~~~~~~~~~ | ||
367 | |||
368 | The old saying "You'll catch more flies with honey than you will with vinegar" | ||
369 | applies when submitting patches to the mailing list for approval. The way you | ||
370 | present your patch is sometimes just as important as the actual patch itself | ||
371 | (if not more so). Being rude to the maintainers is not an effective way to | ||
372 | convince them that your patch should be included; it will likely have the | ||
373 | opposite effect. | ||
374 | |||
375 | |||
376 | |||
377 | Final Words | ||
378 | ----------- | ||
379 | |||
380 | If all of this seems complicated, don't panic, it's really not that tough. If | ||
381 | you're having difficulty following some of the steps outlined in this | ||
382 | document don't worry, the folks on the Busybox mailing list are a fairly | ||
383 | good-natured bunch and will work with you to help get your patches into shape | ||
384 | or help you make contributions. | ||
385 | |||
386 | If you submit several patches that demonstrate that you are a skilled and wise | ||
387 | coder, you may be invited to become a committer, thus enabling you to commit | ||
388 | changes directly to CVS. | ||
389 | |||
390 | |||