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Contributors Guide
Ghidra is an open source project. If you are interested in making it better, there are many ways you can contribute. For example, you can:
- Submit a bug report
- Suggest a new feature
- Provide feedback by commenting on feature requests/proposals
- Propose a patch by submitting a pull request
- Suggest or submit documentation improvements
- Review outstanding pull requests
- Answer questions from other users
- Share the software with other users who are interested
- Teach others to use the software
- Package and distribute the software in a downstream community (such as your preferred Linux distribution)
Bugs and Feature Requests
If you believe that you have found a bug or wish to propose a new feature, please first search the existing issues to see if it has already been reported. If you are unable to find an existing issue, consider using one of the provided templates to create a new issue and provide as many details as you can to assist in reproducing the bug or explaining your proposed feature.
Patch Submission tips
Patches should be submitted in the form of Pull Requests to the Ghidra repository on GitHub. But first, consider the following tips to ensure a smooth process when submitting a patch:
- Ensure that the patch compiles and does not break any build-time tests.
- Be understanding, patient, and friendly; developers may need time to review your submissions before they can take action or respond. This does not mean your contribution is not valued. If your contribution has not received a response in a reasonable time, consider commenting with a polite inquiry for an update.
- Limit your patches to the smallest reasonable change to achieve your intended goal. For example, do not make unnecessary indentation changes; but don't go out of your way to make the patch so minimal that it isn't easy to read, either. Consider the reviewer's perspective.
- Unless previously authorized by the Ghidra team, repackaging, renaming, and other refactoring should not be part of any pull request. These types of changes are difficult to review, pollute the git history making it harder to do git forensics on regressions, and will likely conflict with other changes that the Ghidra team is making internally.
- Avoid "find and replace" changes in your pull request. While it may be tempting to globally replace calls to deprecated methods or change the style of the code to fit your personal preference, these types of seemingly trivial changes have likely not already been performed by the Ghidra team for good reason.
- Focus your patches on bug fixes that were discovered through real-world usage and testing, and on improvements that clearly satisfy a need in Ghidra's functionality. Before you begin implementing, consider first opening a dialogue with the Ghidra team to ensure that your efforts will align with the goals of the project. This will significantly improve the odds that your patch gets accepted.
- Unless it addresses a critical security update, avoid pull requests that update jars or other 3rd party libraries. It is preferred that these changes are made internally by the team. If you have a need for an updated library, please submit an issue with your request instead of a pull request.
- Before submission, please squash your commits to using a message that starts with the issue number and a description of the changes.
- Isolate multiple patches from each other. If you wish to make several independent patches, do so in separate, smaller pull requests that can be reviewed more easily.
- Be prepared to answer questions from reviewers. They may have further questions before accepting your patch, and may even propose changes. Please accept this feedback constructively, and not as a rejection of your proposed change.
Review
- We welcome code reviews from anyone. A committer is required to formally accept and merge the changes.
- Reviewers will be looking for things like threading issues, performance implications, API design, duplication of existing functionality, readability and code style, avoidance of bloat (scope-creep), etc.
- Reviewers will likely ask questions to better understand your change.
- Reviewers will make comments about changes to your patch:
- MUST means that the change is required
- SHOULD means that the change is suggested, further discussion on the subject may be required
- COULD means that the change is optional
Getting Started
Once available, please see the developer's guide for instructions to set up a suitable development environment.
Timeline and Managing Expectations
As we continue to engage contributors and learn best practices for running a successful open source project, our processes and guidance will likely evolve. We will try to communicate expectations as we are able and to always be responsive. We hope that the community will share their suggestions for improving this engagement. Based on the level of initial interest we receive and the availability of resources to evaluate contributions, we anticipate the following:
- We will initially prioritize pull requests that include small bug fixes and code that addresses potential vulnerabilities
as well as pull requests that include improvements for processor language specifications because these require a reasonable amount of effort to evaluate and will help us exercise and revise our process for accepting contributions. In other words, we are going to start small in order to work out the kinks first. - We are committed to maintaining the integrity and security of our code base. In addition to the careful review the maintainers will give to code contributions to make sure they do not introduce new bugs or vulnerabilities, we will be trying to identify best practices to incorporate with our open source project so that contributors can have more control over whether their contributions are accepted. These might include things like style guides and requirements for tests and documentation to accompany some code contributions. As a result, it may take a long time for some contributions to be accepted. This does not mean we are ignoring them.
- We are committed to integrating this GitHub project with our team's regular development work flow so that the open source project remains dynamic and relevant. This may affect our responsiveness and ability to accept pull requests quickly. This does not mean we are ignoring them.
- Not all innovative ideas need to be accepted as pull requests into this GitHub project to be valuable to the community.
There may be times when we recommend that you just share your code for some enhancement to Ghidra from your own repository. As we identify and recognize extensions that are of general interest to the reverse engineering community, we may seek to incorporate them with our baseline.
Legal
Consistent with Section D.6. of the GitHub Terms of Service as of 2019, and Section 5. of the Apache License, Version 2.0, the project maintainer for this project accepts contributions using the inbound=outbound model. When you submit a pull request to this repository (inbound), you are agreeing to license your contribution under the same terms as specified in LICENSE (outbound).
This is an open source project. Contributions you make to this public U.S. Government ("USG") repository are completely voluntary. When you submit an issue, bug report, question, enhancement, pull request, etc., you are offering your contribution without expectation of payment, you expressly waive any future pay claims against the USG related to your contribution, and you acknowledge that this does not create an obligation on the part of the USG of any kind. Furthermore, your contributing to this project does not create an employer-employee relationship between the United States ("U.S.") Government and the contributor.