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CONTRIBUTING

BIND 9 Source Access and Contributor Guidelines

May 28, 2020

Contents

 1. Access to source code
 2. Reporting bugs
 3. Contributing code

Introduction

Thank you for using BIND 9!

BIND is open source software that implements the Domain Name System (DNS)
protocols for the Internet. It is a reference implementation of those
protocols, but it is also production-grade software, suitable for use in
high-volume and high-reliability applications. It is very widely used DNS
software, providing a robust and stable platform on top of which
organizations can build distributed computing systems with the knowledge
that those systems are fully compliant with published DNS standards.

BIND is and will always remain free and openly available. It can be used
and modified in any way by anyone.

BIND is maintained by Internet Systems Consortium, a public-benefit 501(c)
(3) nonprofit, using a "managed open source" approach: anyone can see the
source, but only ISC employees have commit access. In the past, the source
could only be seen once ISC had published a release; read access to the
source repository was restricted just as commit access was. That has
changed, as ISC now provides a public git repository of the BIND source
tree (see below).

At ISC, we're committed to building communities that are welcoming and
inclusive: environments where people are encouraged to share ideas, treat
each other with respect, and collaborate towards the best solutions. To
reinforce our commitment, ISC has adopted a slightly modified version of
the Django Code of Conduct for the BIND 9 project, as well as for the
conduct of our developers throughout the industry.

Access to source code

Public BIND releases are always available from the ISC FTP site.

A public-access git repository is also available at https://gitlab.isc.org
. This repository contains all public release branches. Upcoming releases
can be viewed in their current state at any time. Short-lived development
branches contain unreviewed work in progress. Commits which address
security vulnerablilities are withheld until after public disclosure.

You can browse the source online via https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/
bind9

To clone the repository, use:

      $ git clone https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9.git

Release branch names are of the form bind-9.X, where X represents the
second number in the BIND 9 version number. So, to check out the BIND 9.18
branch, use:

      $ git checkout bind-9.18

Whenever a branch is ready for publication, a tag is placed of the form
v9.X.Y. The 9.18.0 release, for instance, is tagged as v9.18.0.

The branch in which the next major release is being developed is called
main.

Reporting bugs

Reports of flaws in the BIND package, including software bugs, errors in
the documentation, missing files in the tarball, suggested changes or
requests for new features, etc., can be filed using https://gitlab.isc.org
/isc-projects/bind9/issues.

Due to a large ticket backlog, we are sometimes slow to respond,
especially if a bug is cosmetic or if a feature request is vague or low in
priority, but we try at least to acknowledge legitimate bug reports within
a week.

ISC's GitLab system is publicly readable; however, you must have an
account to create a new issue. You can either register locally or use
credentials from an existing account at GitHub, GitLab, Google, Twitter,
or Facebook.

Reporting possible security issues

If you think you may be seeing a potential security vulnerability in BIND
(for example, a crash with REQUIRE, INSIST, or ASSERT failure), please
report it immediately by emailing to security-officer@isc.org. Plain-text
e-mail is not a secure choice for communications concerning undisclosed
security issues so please encrypt your communications to us if possible,
using the ISC Security Officer public key.

Do not discuss undisclosed security vulnerabilities on any public mailing
list. ISC has a long history of handling reported vulnerabilities promptly
and effectively and we respect and acknowledge responsible reporters.

ISC's Security Vulnerability Disclosure Policy is documented at https://
kb.isc.org/docs/aa-00861.

If you have a crash, you may want to consult "What to do if your BIND or
DHCP server has crashed."

Contributing code

BIND is licensed under the Mozilla Public License 2.0. Earlier versions
(BIND 9.10 and earlier) were licensed under the ISC License

ISC does not require an explicit copyright assignment for patch
contributions. However, by submitting a patch to ISC, you implicitly
certify that you are the author of the code, that you intend to relinquish
exclusive copyright, and that you grant permission to publish your work
under the open source license used for the BIND version(s) to which your
patch will be applied.

BIND code

Patches for BIND may be submitted directly via merge requests in ISC's
GitLab source repository for BIND.

Patches can also be submitted as diffs against a specific version of BIND
-- preferably the current top of the main branch. Diffs may be generated
using either git format-patch or git diff.

Those wanting to write code for BIND may be interested in the developer
information page, which includes information about BIND design and coding
practices, including discussion of internal APIs and overall system
architecture.

Every patch submitted is reviewed by ISC engineers following our code
review process before it is merged.

It may take considerable time to review patch submissions, especially if
they don't meet ISC style and quality guidelines. If a patch is a good
idea, we can and will do additional work to bring it up to par, but if
we're busy with other work, it may take us a long time to get to it.

To ensure your patch is acted on as promptly as possible, please:

  * Try to adhere to the BIND 9 coding style.
  * Run make check to ensure your change hasn't caused any functional
    regressions.
  * Document your work, both in the patch itself and in the accompanying
    email.
  * In patches that make non-trivial functional changes, include system
    tests if possible; when introducing or substantially altering a
    library API, include unit tests. See Testing for more information.

Changes to configure

If you need to make changes to configure, you should not edit it directly;
instead, edit configure.in, then run autoconf. Similarly, instead of
editing config.h.in directly, edit configure.in and run autoheader.

When submitting a patch as a diff, it's fine to omit the configure diffs
to save space. Just send the configure.in diffs and we'll generate the new
configure during the review process.

Documentation

All functional changes should be documented. There are three types of
documentation in the BIND source tree:

  * Man pages are kept alongside the source code for the commands they
    document, in files ending in .rst: for example, the named man page is
    bin/named/named.rst.
  * The BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual is in the .rst files in doc/
    arm/; the PDF and HTML versions are automatically generated from the
    .rst files.
  * API documentation is in the header file describing the API, in
    Doxygen-formatted comments.

Patches to improve existing documentation are also very welcome!

Tests

BIND is a large and complex project. We rely heavily on continuous
automated testing and cannot merge new code without adequate test
coverage. Please see the "Testing" section of doc/dev/dev.md for more
information.

Thanks

Thank you for your interest in contributing to the ongoing development of
BIND 9.