We welcome new contributors! You can get in contact with us on
our gitlab instance, or on the
\#tor-dev IRC
channel on OFTC.
Make sure to familiarize yourself with our
Code of Conduct.
The new-account process on our gitlab instance is moderated, to reduce spam and abuse. (Insert instructions for anonymous usage here)
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
The following section is not an exhaustive guide, and only covers common setup and development tasks.
Install build dependencies
You'll need to have a working Rust environment to build the code, and a working Git installation to fetch the code. Additionally, please install the SQLite 3 development files and shellcheck to successfully run git hooks.
-
Rust note, for Windows devices check the Other Installation Methods
-
Git note, for Linux, macOS, and some Unix-like devices Git may be available via a package manager;
apt
,brew
,yum
,pacman
, etc. Git needs to be compiled with PCRE support to allow the use ofgit grep -P
in the git hooks. PCRE support is the default in some packages, but if you compile from source setUSE_LIBPCRE=YesPlease
when runningmake
or--with-libpcre
when running./configure
. -
SQLite 3 development files (e.g. available via
apt install libsqlite3-dev
) -
For git hooks: shellcheck (used in
maint/shellcheck_all
)
(Optional) install development dependencies
TL;DR: ./maint/check_env
If you plan to run scripts inside the maint/
directory, that are scripts
such as coverage reports, you'll need a few more dependencies. For this,
please execute ./maint/check_env
, which will check your host machine if
all required dependencies are satisfied. If this is not the case, it will
report the missing ones. Keep in mind that this list is pretty comprehensive
and not every script requires all of these dependencies.
Clone the source code
In order to get a copy of the latest version of the arti source code:
$ git clone https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/core/arti.git
This will create a new git checkout in a directory called arti
.
Update the source code
To get the latest updates, you can run:
$ git pull origin main
Note, if you're working on a local git branch it may be wise to use
fetch
andmerge
options instead$ git fetch origin $ git merge origin/main
Please see a good Git tutorial for more information
Running the unit tests
$ cargo test --all-features
Installing git hooks
This repository contains some useful git hooks that you might want to use to help avoid your code failing CI checks. You can install them with
$ cp -v maint/hooks/* .git/hooks/
Add fork URL
If you've created an account at gitlab.torproject.org
, you can add a
link to your forked arti repository at:
$ git remote add _name_ [email protected]:_name_/arti.git
$ git fetch _name_
Tip: replace
_name_
in above, and following, commands to reflect your sign in name.Note: to fork this repository, or contribute to Issues and Merge Requests, you will need an account on our gitlab server. If you don't have an account there, you can either request an account or report a bug anonymously.
Check the Sign In page for further instructions on requesting access.
Push to fork
$ git push _name_ main
Tip, to open a Merge Request navigate to the Merge Request tab for your account's fork; URL will be similar to the following
https://gitlab.torproject.org/_name_/arti/-/merge_requests
We prefer not to rebase and squash MRs during the review cycle,
so if you want to make changes to your MR, please add new commits rather than squashing.
You can use the
fixup!
(or squash!
)
autosquash
syntax if it seems best;
this is a good idea if the un-fixed state breaks the tests or is otherwise broken,
but is not needed otherwise.
You might want to begin by looking around the codebase, or getting to know our architecture.
More tests would always be great. You can look at the coverage reports to find out what parts need the more love.
Parsing more Tor document types would be neat.
More documentation examples would be great.
Improvements or bugfixes to the existing code would be great.
Improving the look and feel of the documentation would also rock.
We've made a bunch of notes throughout the document in comments with strings like "FIXME" or "TODO".
When we have TODOs that we want to fix prior to the release of a particular feature or milestone, we define a special TODO format. Right now we have "TODO HS" (or "TODO hs") for things we intend to fix before we release support for Tor Hidden Services (.onion services).
If you want to make a temporary change that ought definitely not to be merged,
mark it with XXX
.
This will be spotted by the CI, preventing a mistaken merge.
There is a list of features that I wish other crates had in a file called
WANT_FROM_OTHER_CRATES
.
Finally, check out the bugtracker. There are some tickets there labeled as "First Contribution": that label means that we think they might be a good place to start out.
Please don't assume that what you see here is good Rust: we've tried to follow best practices, but we've been learning Rust here as we go along. There are probably aspects of the language or its ecosystem that we're getting wrong.
Almost nothing about this code should be taken as "final" -- I expect that we'll need to refactor and move around a whole bunch of code, add a bunch of APIs, split crates, merge crates, and so on.
There are some places where I am deviating from the existing Tor protocol under the assumption that certain proposals will be accepted. See Compatibility.md for more information.
This code does not attempt to be indistinguishable from the current Tor implementation.
When building the docs with cargo doc
, use --workspace --all-features
,
or you may find broken links.
(We welcome fixes to links broken with --all-features
.
cargo doc --workspace --all-features --document-private-items
is also supported, to reveal (unstable) internal information.)
Enjoy hacking on arti!