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1HACKING ON SYSTEMD
2
3We welcome all contributions to systemd. If you notice a bug or a missing
4feature, please feel invited to fix it, and submit your work as a github Pull
5Request (PR):
6
7 https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/new
8
9Please make sure to follow our Coding Style when submitting patches. See
f09eb768 10doc/CODING_STYLE for details. Also have a look at our Contribution Guidelines:
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12 https://github.com/systemd/systemd/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md
13
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14When adding new functionality, tests should be added. For shared functionality
15(in src/basic and src/shared) unit tests should be sufficient. The general
16policy is to keep tests in matching files underneath src/test,
17e.g. src/test/test-path-util.c contains tests for any functions in
18src/basic/path-util.c. If adding a new source file, consider adding a matching
19test executable. For features at a higher level, tests in src/test/ are very
20strongly recommended. If that is no possible, integration tests in test/ are
21encouraged.
22
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23Please always test your work before submitting a PR. For many of the components
24of systemd testing is straight-forward as you can simply compile systemd and
25run the relevant tool from the build directory.
26
27For some components (most importantly, systemd/PID1 itself) this is not
28possible, however. In order to simplify testing for cases like this we provide
29a set of "mkosi" build files directly in the source tree. "mkosi" is a tool for
30building clean OS images from an upstream distribution in combination with a
31fresh build of the project in the local working directory. To make use of this,
32please acquire "mkosi" from https://github.com/systemd/mkosi first, unless your
33distribution has packaged it already and you can get it from there. After the
34tool is installed it is sufficient to type "mkosi" in the systemd project
35directory to generate a disk image "image.raw" you can boot either in
36systemd-nspawn or in an UEFI-capable VM:
37
38 # systemd-nspawn -bi image.raw
39
40or:
41
676a0406 42 # qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -m 512 -smp 2 -bios /usr/share/edk2/ovmf/OVMF_CODE.fd -hda image.raw
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44Every time you rerun the "mkosi" command a fresh image is built, incorporating
45all current changes you made to the project tree.
46
47Alternatively, you may install the systemd version from your git check-out
48directly on top of your host system's directory tree. This mostly works fine,
49but of course you should know what you are doing as you might make your system
50unbootable in case of a bug in your changes. Also, you might step into your
51package manager's territory with this. Be careful!
52
53And never forget: most distributions provide very simple and convenient ways to
54install all development packages necessary to build systemd. For example, on
55Fedora the following command line should be sufficient to install all of
56systemd's build dependencies:
57
58 # dnf builddep systemd
59
60Putting this all together, here's a series of commands for preparing a patch
61for systemd (this example is for Fedora):
62
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63 $ sudo dnf builddep systemd # install build dependencies
64 $ sudo dnf install mkosi # install tool to quickly build images
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65 $ git clone https://github.com/systemd/systemd.git
66 $ cd systemd
67 $ vim src/core/main.c # or wherever you'd like to make your changes
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68 $ meson build # configure the build
69 $ ninja -C build # build it locally, see if everything compiles fine
70 $ ninja -C build test # run some simple regression tests
c8475a8f 71 $ (umask 077; echo 123 > mkosi.rootpw) # set root password used by mkosi
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72 $ sudo mkosi # build a test image
73 $ sudo systemd-nspawn -bi image.raw # boot up the test image
74 $ git add -p # interactively put together your patch
75 $ git commit # commit it
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76 $ git push REMOTE HEAD:refs/heads/BRANCH
77 # where REMOTE is your "fork" on github
78 # and BRANCH is a branch name.
e4a3e122 79
02263eb7 80And after that, head over to your repo on github and click "Compare & pull request"
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81
82Happy hacking!
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83
84
85FUZZERS
86
87systemd includes fuzzers in src/fuzz that use libFuzzer and are automatically
88run by OSS-Fuzz (https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz) with sanitizers. To add a
89fuzz target, create a new src/fuzz/fuzz-foo.c file with a LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput
90function and add it to the list in src/fuzz/meson.build.
91
92Whenever possible, a seed corpus and a dictionary should also be added with new
93fuzz targets. The dictionary should be named src/fuzz/fuzz-foo.dict and the seed
94corpus should be built and exported as $OUT/fuzz-foo_seed_corpus.zip in
9037a0e0 95tools/oss-fuzz.sh.
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97The fuzzers can be built locally if you have libFuzzer installed by running
9037a0e0 98tools/oss-fuzz.sh. You should also confirm that the fuzzer runs in the
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99OSS-Fuzz environment by checking out the OSS-Fuzz repo, and then running
100commands like this:
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102 python infra/helper.py build_image systemd
33d62eba 103 python infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer memory systemd ../systemd
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104 python infra/helper.py run_fuzzer systemd fuzz-foo
105
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106If you find a bug that impacts the security of systemd, please follow the
107guidance in .github/CONTRIBUTING.md on how to report a security vulnerability.
108
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109For more details on building fuzzers and integrating with OSS-Fuzz, visit:
110
111 https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/blob/master/docs/new_project_guide.md
112
113 https://llvm.org/docs/LibFuzzer.html
114
115 https://github.com/google/fuzzer-test-suite/blob/master/tutorial/libFuzzerTutorial.md
116
117 https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/testing/libfuzzer/+/HEAD/efficient_fuzzer.md