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$Id: HACKING 6728 2008-01-17 07:22:03Z fyodor $ Nmap HACKING ------------ Information for potential Nmap hackers! Source is provided to Nmap because we believe users have a right to know exactly what a program is going to do before they run it. This also allows you to audit the software for security holes (none have been found so far). Source code also allows you to port Nmap to new platforms, fix bugs, and add new features. You are highly encouraged to send your changes to nmap-dev@insecure.org for possible incorporation into the main distribution. By sending these changes to Fyodor or one the insecure.org development mailing lists, it is assumed that you are offering Fyodor the unlimited, non-exclusive right to reuse, modify, and relicense the code. This is important because the inability to relicense code has caused devastating problems for other Free Software projects (such as KDE and NASM). Nmap will always be available Open Source. If you wish to specify special license conditions of your contributions, just say so when you send them. Nmap is a community project and has already benefitted greatly from outside contributors (for examples, see the CHANGELOG at http://nmap.org/changelog.html). Bugfixes, and portability changes will almost always be accepted. Even if you do not have time to track down and patch a problem, bug reports are always welcome. Hackers interested in something more major, such as a new feature, are encouraged to send a mail describing their plans to nmap-dev@insecure.org . This is a good way to solicit feedback on your proposals. List members are often very willing to help. You might want to subscribe to that mailing list as well -- send a blank email to nmap-dev-subscribe@insecure.org . While you are at it, you might also want to subscribe to nmap-hackers via the same mechanism. Web archives of those lists are at http://lists.insecure.org . If you are not ready to send details of your feature to the whole list, you can always start by mailing fyodor@insecure.org . Some ideas of useful contributions/projects ------------------------------------------- Of course, you are welcome to work on whatever suits your fancy. But here are some ideas of contributions that might be particularly useful: o Nmap GUI improvements -- Zenmap is the Nmap GUI. If you have enhancement ideas, give it a shot! Alternatively, consider contributing to the NmapGUI and Umit projects available at http://sourceforge.net/projects/nmapgui/ and http://umit.sourceforge.net/ , respectively. One of the best ways to help is to join the nmap-dev list ( http://cgi.insecure.org/mailman/listinfo/nmap-dev ). Requests for assistance and new Nmap-related projects are often posted there. How to make code contributions ------------------------------ The preferred mechanism for submitted changes is unified diffs against the latest development release version of Nmap. Please send them to fyodor@insecure.org or nmap-dev@insecure.org . To make a unified diff, please follow these instructions: 1. Remove temporary files: make clean 2. Rename your source tree: cd .. mv nmap-2.54BETA4 nmap-2.54BETA4-snazzy-feature 3. Unpack the original Nmap source alongside it: tar xzf nmap-2.54BETA4.tgz 4. Generate the diffs: diff -urNb nmap-2.54BETA4 nmap-2.54BETA4-snazzy-feature > nmap.patch 5. Check the patch and remove any unnecessary patches from the file. 6. If you've added several features, it's best to send them as several independent patches if you can. If you have just patched one or two files, then making patches is even easier. For each file, just do: cp file.c file.c.orig [Make changes to file.c ...] diff -u file.c.orig file.c > file.c.patch and just send us the patch: file.c.patch. Credits ------- I got the idea for this HACKING file from GNet (http://www.gnetlibrary.org/) and followed the general structure of their HACKING file.