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Signed-off-by: Tim Small <tim@seoss.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
106 lines
5.6 KiB
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106 lines
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=======================
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Contributing to libvirt
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=======================
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This page provides guidance on how to contribute to the libvirt project.
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.. contents::
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Contributions required
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----------------------
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The libvirt project is always looking for new contributors to participate in
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ongoing activities. While code development is a major part of the project,
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assistance is needed in many other areas including documentation writing, bug
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triage, testing, application integration, website / wiki content management,
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translation, branding, social media and more. The only requirement is an
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interest in virtualization and desire to help.
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The following is a non-exhaustive list of areas in which people can contribute
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to libvirt. If you have ideas for other contributions feel free to follow them.
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- **Software development**. The official upstream code are kept in various `Git
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repositories <https://gitlab.com/libvirt/>`__. The core library / daemon (and
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thus the bulk of coding) is written in C, but there are language bindings
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written in Python, Perl, Java, Ruby, Php, OCaml and Go. There are also higher
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level wrappers mapping libvirt into other object frameworks, such GLib, CIM
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and SNMP. For those interested in working on the core parts of libvirt, the
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`contributor guidelines <hacking.html>`__ are mandatory reading.
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- **Translation**. All the libvirt modules aim to support translations where
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appropriate. All translation is handling outside of the normal libvirt review
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process, using the `Fedora
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instance <https://translate.fedoraproject.org/projects/libvirt/libvirt>`__ of
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the Weblate tool. Thus people wishing to contribute to translation should
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join the Fedora translation team.
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- **Documentation**. There are docbook guides on various aspects of libvirt,
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particularly application development guides for the C library and Python, and
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a virsh command reference. There is thus scope for work by people who are
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familiar with using or developing against libvirt, to write further content
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for these guides. There is also a need for people to review existing content
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for copy editing and identifying gaps in the docs.
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- **Website / wiki curation**. The bulk of the website is maintained in the
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primary GIT repository, while the wiki site uses mediawiki. In both cases
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there is a need for people to both write new content and curate existing
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content to identify outdated information, improve its organization and target
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gaps.
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- **Testing**. There are a number of tests suites that can run automated tests
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against libvirt. The coverage of the tests is never complete, so there is a
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need for people to create new test suites and / or provide environments to
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actually run the tests in a variety of deployment scenarios.
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- **Code analysis**. The libvirt project has access to the coverity tool to run
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static analysis against the codebase, however, there are other types of code
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analysis that can be useful. In particular fuzzing of the inputs can be very
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effective at identifying problematic edge cases.
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- **Security handling**. Downstream (operating system) vendors who distribute
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libvirt may wish to propose a person to be part of the security handling
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team, to get early access to information about forthcoming vulnerability
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fixes.
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- **Evangelism**. Work done by the project is of no benefit unless the
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(potential) user community knows that it exists. Thus it is critically
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important to the health and future growth of the project, that there are a
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people who evangelize the work created by the project. This can take many
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forms, writing blog posts (about usage of features, personal user
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experiences, areas for future work, and more), syndicating docs and blogs via
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social media, giving user group and/or conference talks about libvirt.
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- **User assistance**. Since documentation is never perfect, there are
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inevitably cases where users will struggle to attain a deployment goal they
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have, or run into trouble with managing an existing deployment. While some
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users may be able to contact a software vendor to obtain support, it is
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common to rely on community help forums such as `libvirt users mailing
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list <contact.html#mailing-lists>`__, or sites such as
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`stackoverflow. <https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/libvirt>`__
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People who are familiar with libvirt and have ability & desire to help other
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users are encouraged to participate in these help forums.
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Communication
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-------------
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For full details on contacting other project contributors read the
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`contact <contact.html>`__ page. There are two main channels that libvirt uses
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for communication between contributors:
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Mailing lists
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The project has a number of `mailing lists <contact.html#mailing-lists>`__ for
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general communication between contributors. In general any design discussions
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and review of contributions will take place on the mailing lists, so it is
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important for all contributors to follow the traffic.
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Instant messaging / chat
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Contributors to libvirt are encouraged to join the `IRC
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channel <contact.html#irc>`__ used by the project, where they can have live
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conversations with others members.
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Student / outreach coding programs
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----------------------------------
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Since 2016, the libvirt project directly participates as an organization in the
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`Google Summer of Code
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program <https://wiki.libvirt.org/page/Google_Summer_of_Code_Ideas>`__. Prior to
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this the project had a number of students in the program via a joint application
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with the QEMU project. People are encouraged to look at both the libvirt and
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QEMU programs to identify potentially interesting projects to work on.
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