1 1.1 christos <!-- 2 1.1.1.5 christos Copyright (C) Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") 3 1.1.1.5 christos 4 1.1.1.5 christos SPDX-License-Identifier: MPL-2.0 5 1.1.1.5 christos 6 1.1.1.5 christos This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public 7 1.1.1.5 christos License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this 8 1.1.1.5 christos file, you can obtain one at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. 9 1.1.1.5 christos 10 1.1.1.5 christos See the COPYRIGHT file distributed with this work for additional 11 1.1.1.5 christos information regarding copyright ownership. 12 1.1 christos --> 13 1.1.1.3 christos ## BIND 9 Source Access and Contributor Guidelines 14 1.1.1.9 christos *Nov 26, 2024* 15 1.1 christos 16 1.1 christos ### Contents 17 1.1 christos 18 1.1 christos 1. [Access to source code](#access) 19 1.1 christos 1. [Reporting bugs](#bugs) 20 1.1 christos 1. [Contributing code](#contrib) 21 1.1.1.10 christos 1. [Generated code](#generated-code) 22 1.1 christos 23 1.1 christos ### Introduction 24 1.1 christos 25 1.1.1.3 christos Thank you for using BIND 9! 26 1.1 christos 27 1.1 christos BIND is open source software that implements the Domain Name System (DNS) 28 1.1 christos protocols for the Internet. It is a reference implementation of those 29 1.1 christos protocols, but it is also production-grade software, suitable for use in 30 1.1.1.3 christos high-volume and high-reliability applications. It is very 31 1.1 christos widely used DNS software, providing a robust and stable platform on top of 32 1.1 christos which organizations can build distributed computing systems with the 33 1.1 christos knowledge that those systems are fully compliant with published DNS 34 1.1 christos standards. 35 1.1 christos 36 1.1 christos BIND is and will always remain free and openly available. It can be 37 1.1 christos used and modified in any way by anyone. 38 1.1 christos 39 1.1.1.3 christos BIND is maintained by [Internet Systems Consortium](https://www.isc.org), 40 1.1 christos a public-benefit 501(c)(3) nonprofit, using a "managed open source" approach: 41 1.1 christos anyone can see the source, but only ISC employees have commit access. 42 1.1.1.3 christos In the past, the source could only be seen once ISC had published 43 1.1.1.3 christos a release; read access to the source repository was restricted just 44 1.1.1.3 christos as commit access was. That has changed, as ISC now provides a 45 1.1.1.4 christos public git repository of the BIND source tree (see below). 46 1.1 christos 47 1.1.1.3 christos At ISC, we're committed to 48 1.1.1.3 christos building communities that are welcoming and inclusive: environments where people 49 1.1.1.2 christos are encouraged to share ideas, treat each other with respect, and collaborate 50 1.1.1.3 christos towards the best solutions. To reinforce our commitment, ISC 51 1.1.1.3 christos has adopted a slightly modified version of the Django 52 1.1.1.4 christos [Code of Conduct](https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9/-/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) 53 1.1.1.4 christos for the BIND 9 project, as well as for the conduct of our developers throughout 54 1.1.1.4 christos the industry. 55 1.1.1.2 christos 56 1.1 christos ### <a name="access"></a>Access to source code 57 1.1 christos 58 1.1 christos Public BIND releases are always available from the 59 1.1 christos [ISC FTP site](ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9). 60 1.1 christos 61 1.1.1.4 christos A public-access git repository is also available at 62 1.1.1.4 christos [https://gitlab.isc.org](https://gitlab.isc.org). This repository 63 1.1.1.4 christos contains all public release branches. Upcoming releases can be viewed in 64 1.1.1.4 christos their current state at any time. Short-lived development branches 65 1.1.1.4 christos contain unreviewed work in progress. Commits which address security 66 1.1.1.4 christos vulnerablilities are withheld until after public disclosure. 67 1.1 christos 68 1.1 christos You can browse the source online via 69 1.1 christos [https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9](https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9) 70 1.1 christos 71 1.1 christos To clone the repository, use: 72 1.1 christos 73 1.1 christos > $ git clone https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9.git 74 1.1 christos 75 1.1.1.6 christos Release branch names are of the form `bind-9.X`, where X represents the second 76 1.1.1.9 christos number in the BIND 9 version number. So, to check out the BIND 9.20 77 1.1 christos branch, use: 78 1.1 christos 79 1.1.1.9 christos > $ git checkout bind-9.20 80 1.1 christos 81 1.1.1.3 christos Whenever a branch is ready for publication, a tag is placed of the 82 1.1.1.9 christos form `v9.X.Y`. The 9.20.0 release, for instance, is tagged as `v9.20.0`. 83 1.1 christos 84 1.1 christos The branch in which the next major release is being developed is called 85 1.1.1.4 christos `main`. 86 1.1 christos 87 1.1 christos ### <a name="bugs"></a>Reporting bugs 88 1.1 christos 89 1.1 christos Reports of flaws in the BIND package, including software bugs, errors 90 1.1 christos in the documentation, missing files in the tarball, suggested changes 91 1.1.1.3 christos or requests for new features, etc., can be filed using 92 1.1 christos [https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9/issues](https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9/issues). 93 1.1 christos 94 1.1 christos Due to a large ticket backlog, we are sometimes slow to respond, 95 1.1 christos especially if a bug is cosmetic or if a feature request is vague or 96 1.1.1.3 christos low in priority, but we try at least to acknowledge legitimate 97 1.1 christos bug reports within a week. 98 1.1 christos 99 1.1.1.3 christos ISC's GitLab system is publicly readable; however, you must have 100 1.1.1.3 christos an account to create a new issue. You can either register locally or 101 1.1 christos use credentials from an existing account at GitHub, GitLab, Google, 102 1.1 christos Twitter, or Facebook. 103 1.1 christos 104 1.1 christos ### Reporting possible security issues 105 1.1.1.4 christos 106 1.1.1.7 christos See `SECURITY.md`. 107 1.1 christos 108 1.1.1.2 christos ### <a name="contrib"></a>Contributing code 109 1.1 christos 110 1.1 christos BIND is licensed under the 111 1.1.1.3 christos [Mozilla Public License 2.0](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/MPL/2.0/). 112 1.1.1.4 christos Earlier versions (BIND 9.10 and earlier) were licensed under the 113 1.1.1.4 christos [ISC License](https://www.isc.org/licenses/) 114 1.1 christos 115 1.1 christos ISC does not require an explicit copyright assignment for patch 116 1.1 christos contributions. However, by submitting a patch to ISC, you implicitly 117 1.1.1.3 christos certify that you are the author of the code, that you intend to relinquish 118 1.1 christos exclusive copyright, and that you grant permission to publish your work 119 1.1 christos under the open source license used for the BIND version(s) to which your 120 1.1 christos patch will be applied. 121 1.1 christos 122 1.1 christos #### <a name="bind"></a>BIND code 123 1.1 christos 124 1.1 christos Patches for BIND may be submitted directly via merge requests in 125 1.1.1.9 christos [ISC's GitLab](https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9/) source repository for 126 1.1.1.9 christos BIND. Please contact ISC and provide your GitLab username in order to be allowed 127 1.1.1.9 christos to fork the project and submit merge requests. 128 1.1 christos 129 1.1 christos Patches can also be submitted as diffs against a specific version of 130 1.1.1.4 christos BIND -- preferably the current top of the `main` branch. Diffs may 131 1.1 christos be generated using either `git format-patch` or `git diff`. 132 1.1 christos 133 1.1 christos Those wanting to write code for BIND may be interested in the 134 1.1 christos [developer information](doc/dev/dev.md) page, which includes information 135 1.1 christos about BIND design and coding practices, including discussion of internal 136 1.1.1.3 christos APIs and overall system architecture. 137 1.1 christos 138 1.1.1.3 christos Every patch submitted is reviewed by ISC engineers following our 139 1.1 christos [code review process](doc/dev/dev.md#reviews) before it is merged. 140 1.1 christos 141 1.1 christos It may take considerable time to review patch submissions, especially if 142 1.1 christos they don't meet ISC style and quality guidelines. If a patch is a good 143 1.1 christos idea, we can and will do additional work to bring it up to par, but if 144 1.1 christos we're busy with other work, it may take us a long time to get to it. 145 1.1 christos 146 1.1 christos To ensure your patch is acted on as promptly as possible, please: 147 1.1 christos 148 1.1 christos * Try to adhere to the [BIND 9 coding style](doc/dev/style.md). 149 1.1.1.9 christos * Run unit and system tests to ensure your change hasn't caused any 150 1.1.1.9 christos functional regressions (these can be checked in the CI pipeline). 151 1.1 christos * Document your work, both in the patch itself and in the 152 1.1 christos accompanying email. 153 1.1 christos * In patches that make non-trivial functional changes, include system 154 1.1 christos tests if possible; when introducing or substantially altering a 155 1.1 christos library API, include unit tests. See [Testing](doc/dev/dev.md#testing) 156 1.1 christos for more information. 157 1.1 christos 158 1.1 christos ##### Changes to `configure` 159 1.1 christos 160 1.1 christos If you need to make changes to `configure`, you should not edit it 161 1.1.1.9 christos directly; instead, edit `configure.ac`, then run `autoconf`. Similarly, 162 1.1.1.9 christos instead of editing `config.h.in` directly, edit `configure.ac` and run 163 1.1 christos `autoheader`. 164 1.1 christos 165 1.1 christos When submitting a patch as a diff, it's fine to omit the `configure` 166 1.1.1.9 christos diffs to save space. Just send the `configure.ac` diffs and we'll 167 1.1 christos generate the new `configure` during the review process. 168 1.1 christos 169 1.1 christos ##### Documentation 170 1.1 christos 171 1.1 christos All functional changes should be documented. There are three types 172 1.1 christos of documentation in the BIND source tree: 173 1.1 christos 174 1.1 christos * Man pages are kept alongside the source code for the commands 175 1.1.1.3 christos they document, in files ending in `.rst`: for example, the 176 1.1.1.3 christos `named` man page is `bin/named/named.rst`. 177 1.1.1.3 christos * The *BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual* is in the .rst files in 178 1.1.1.8 christos `doc/arm/`; the HTML version is automatically generated from 179 1.1.1.4 christos the `.rst` files. 180 1.1 christos * API documentation is in the header file describing the API, in 181 1.1 christos Doxygen-formatted comments. 182 1.1 christos 183 1.1 christos Patches to improve existing documentation are also very welcome! 184 1.1 christos 185 1.1 christos ##### Tests 186 1.1 christos 187 1.1 christos BIND is a large and complex project. We rely heavily on continuous 188 1.1 christos automated testing and cannot merge new code without adequate test coverage. 189 1.1.1.3 christos Please see [the "Testing" section of doc/dev/dev.md](doc/dev/dev.md#testing) 190 1.1 christos for more information. 191 1.1 christos 192 1.1.1.10 christos ### <a name="generated-code"></a>Guidelines for Tool-Generated Content 193 1.1.1.10 christos 194 1.1.1.10 christos #### Purpose 195 1.1.1.10 christos 196 1.1.1.10 christos BIND 9 contributors have long used tooling to assist in development. 197 1.1.1.10 christos These tools can increase the volume and velocity of contributions. At 198 1.1.1.10 christos the same time, reviewer and maintainer bandwidth is a scarce resource, 199 1.1.1.10 christos and the stability of DNS software is critical infrastructure. 200 1.1.1.10 christos Understanding which portions of a contribution come from humans versus 201 1.1.1.10 christos tools is helpful to maintain those resources, assess risk, and keep 202 1.1.1.10 christos BIND 9 development healthy. 203 1.1.1.10 christos 204 1.1.1.10 christos The goal here is to clarify community expectations around tools, 205 1.1.1.10 christos particularly LLMs (Large Language Models) and generative AI. This 206 1.1.1.10 christos lets everyone become more productive while maintaining high degrees of 207 1.1.1.10 christos trust between submitters and reviewers. 208 1.1.1.10 christos 209 1.1.1.10 christos #### Out of Scope 210 1.1.1.10 christos 211 1.1.1.10 christos These guidelines do not apply to tools that make trivial tweaks to 212 1.1.1.10 christos preexisting content or verify adherence to style guides. Nor do they 213 1.1.1.10 christos pertain to AI tooling that helps with menial tasks. Some examples: 214 1.1.1.10 christos 215 1.1.1.10 christos - Spelling and grammar fix-ups, like rephrasing documentation to the 216 1.1.1.10 christos imperative voice. 217 1.1.1.10 christos - Typing aids like IDE identifier completion, common boilerplate, or 218 1.1.1.10 christos trivial pattern completion. 219 1.1.1.10 christos - Purely mechanical transformations like variable renaming across a 220 1.1.1.10 christos scope. 221 1.1.1.10 christos - Reformatting using the standard BIND 9 clang-format configuration 222 1.1.1.10 christos or black (for Python system tests). 223 1.1.1.10 christos 224 1.1.1.10 christos Even if your tool use is out of scope, you should still always 225 1.1.1.10 christos consider if it would assist the review of your contribution if the 226 1.1.1.10 christos reviewer knows about the tool that you used. 227 1.1.1.10 christos 228 1.1.1.10 christos #### In Scope 229 1.1.1.10 christos 230 1.1.1.10 christos These guidelines apply when a meaningful amount of content in a BIND 9 231 1.1.1.10 christos contribution (code, documentation, or tests) was not written by a 232 1.1.1.10 christos person contributing the patch or merge request, but was instead 233 1.1.1.10 christos created by a tool. 234 1.1.1.10 christos 235 1.1.1.10 christos Detection of a problem and testing the fix for it is also part of the 236 1.1.1.10 christos development process; if a tool was used to find a problem addressed by 237 1.1.1.10 christos a change (e.g., a fuzzer or static analyzer), that should be noted in 238 1.1.1.10 christos the commit message or MR description. This not only gives credit where 239 1.1.1.10 christos it is due, it also helps fellow developers find out about these tools. 240 1.1.1.10 christos 241 1.1.1.10 christos Some examples: 242 1.1.1.10 christos 243 1.1.1.10 christos - Complex semantic patches generated by Coccinelle scripts. 244 1.1.1.10 christos - A chatbot or AI assistant generated a new function in your Merge 245 1.1.1.10 christos Request to handle a specific DNS RR type. 246 1.1.1.10 christos - A .c file or system test in the MR was originally generated by a 247 1.1.1.10 christos coding assistant but cleaned up by hand. 248 1.1.1.10 christos - The commit message or MR description was generated by handing the 249 1.1.1.10 christos diff to a generative AI tool. 250 1.1.1.10 christos - Documentation or comments were translated from another language 251 1.1.1.10 christos using an automated tool. 252 1.1.1.10 christos 253 1.1.1.10 christos If in doubt, choose transparency and assume these guidelines apply to 254 1.1.1.10 christos your contribution. 255 1.1.1.10 christos 256 1.1.1.10 christos #### Guidelines 257 1.1.1.10 christos 258 1.1.1.10 christos You are responsible for the code you submit, regardless of how it was generated. 259 1.1.1.10 christos When opening a Merge Request, be transparent about the origin of content in the 260 1.1.1.10 christos MR description and commit messages. You can be more transparent by adding 261 1.1.1.10 christos information like this: 262 1.1.1.10 christos 263 1.1.1.10 christos - What tools were used? 264 1.1.1.10 christos - The input to the tools you used, like the Coccinelle source script 265 1.1.1.10 christos or specific configuration. 266 1.1.1.10 christos - If code was largely generated from a single or short set of 267 1.1.1.10 christos prompts, include those prompts. For longer sessions, include a 268 1.1.1.10 christos summary of the prompts and the nature of the resulting assistance. 269 1.1.1.10 christos - Which portions of the content were affected by that tool? 270 1.1.1.10 christos - How is the submission tested? (e.g., "I used tool X to generate a 271 1.1.1.10 christos system test case that triggers the bug.") 272 1.1.1.10 christos 273 1.1.1.10 christos As with all contributions, BIND 9 maintainers have discretion to 274 1.1.1.10 christos choose how they handle the contribution. For example, they might: 275 1.1.1.10 christos 276 1.1.1.10 christos - Treat it just like any other contribution. 277 1.1.1.10 christos - Reject it outright if the provenance is unclear or the code quality 278 1.1.1.10 christos is low. 279 1.1.1.10 christos - Treat the contribution specially, such as reviewing with extra 280 1.1.1.10 christos scrutiny regarding memory safety or RFC compliance. 281 1.1.1.10 christos - Suggest a better prompt or approach instead of suggesting specific 282 1.1.1.10 christos code changes. 283 1.1.1.10 christos - Ask the submitter to explain in more detail about the contribution 284 1.1.1.10 christos to ensure the submitter fully understands the DNS logic or internal 285 1.1.1.10 christos BIND 9 architecture implemented by the tool. 286 1.1.1.10 christos 287 1.1 christos #### Thanks 288 1.1 christos 289 1.1 christos Thank you for your interest in contributing to the ongoing development 290 1.1.1.3 christos of BIND 9. 291