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HACKING
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HACKING
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# $Id$
This file contains some brief instructions on contributing to the
Metasploit Framework.
Code Style
==========
In order to maintain consistency and readability, we ask that you
adhere to the following style guidelines:
- Standard Ruby two-space soft tabs, not hard tabs.
- Try to keep your lines under 100 columns (assuming two-space tabs)
- do; end instead of {} for a block
- Always use str[0,1] instead of str[0]
(This avoids a known ruby 1.8/1.9 incompatibility.)
- Method names should always be lower_case and words separated by "_"
- Variable names should be lower case with words separated by "_"
- Don't depend on any external gems or libraries without talking to
todb to resolve packaging and licensing issues
You can use the the "./tools/msftidy.rb" script to do some rudimentary
checking for various violations.
Code No-Nos
===========
1. Don't print to standard output. Doing so means that users of
interfaces other than msfconsole, such as msfrpc and msfgui, won't see
your output. You can use print_line to accomplish the same thing as
puts.
2. Don't read from standard input, doing so will make your code
lock up the entire module when called from other interfaces. If you
need user input, you can either register an option or expose an
interactive session type specific for the type of exploit.
3. Always use Rex sockets, not ruby sockets. This includes
third-party libraries such as Net::Http. There are several very good
reasons for this rule. First, the framework doesn't get notified on
the creation of ruby sockets and won't know how to clean them up in
case your module raises an exception without cleaning up after itself.
Secondly, non-Rex sockets do not know about routes and therefore can't
be used through a meterpreter tunnel. Lastly, regular sockets miss
out on msf's proxy and SSL features. Msf includes many protocols
already implemented with Rex and if the protocol you need is missing,
porting another library to use them is straight-forward. See our
Net::SSH modifications in lib/net/ssh/ for an example.
4. When opening an IO stream, always force binary with "b" mode (or
using IO#binmode). This not only helps keep Windows and non-Windows
runtime environments consistent with each other, but also guarantees
that files will be treated as ASCII-8BIT instead of UTF-8.
5. Don't use String#[] for a single character. This returns a Fixnum in
ruby 1.8 and a String in 1.9, so it's safer to use the following idiom:
str[idx,1]
which always returns a String. If you need the ASCII byte, unpack it like
so:
tr[idx,1].unpack("C")[0]
6. Whenever possible, avoid using '+' or '+=' to concatenate strings.
The '<<' operator is significantly faster. The difference will become
even more apparent when doing string manipulation in a loop. The
following table approximates the underlying implementation:
Ruby Pseudo-C
----------- ----------------
a = b + c a = malloc(b.len+c.len+1);
strcpy(a, b);
memcpy(a+b.len, c, c.len);
a[b.len + c.len] = '\0';
a = b a = b;
a << c a = realloc(a, a.len+c.len+1);
memcpy(a+a.len, c, c.len);
a[a.len + c.len] = '\0';
Note that the original value of 'b' is lost in the second case. Care
must be taken to duplicate strings that you do not want to modify.
7. For other Ruby 1.8.x/1.9.x compat issues, please see Sam Ruby's
excellent slide show at <http://slideshow.rubyforge.org/ruby19.html>
for an overview of common and not-so-common Ruby version related gotchas.
8. Never, ever use $global variables. This applies to modules, mixins,
and libraries. If you need a "global" within a specific class, you can
use @@class_variables, but most modules should use @instance variables
to store information between methods.
Creating New Modules
====================
When creating a new module, the simplest way to start is to copy
another module that uses the same protocol and modify it to your
needs. If you're creating an exploit module, generally you'll want
to edit the exploit() method. Auxiliary Scanner modules use one of
run_host(), run_range(), or run_batch() instead of exploit().
Non-scanner aux modules use run().
Submitting Your Code
====================
To get started with a Metasploit Framework source clone, simply:
- Fork rapid7/metasploit-framework to your GitHub account
- git clone git://github.com/YourName/metasploit-framework.git
- gem install bundler
- bundle install
More detailed documentation regarding the process for submitting new
modules via GitHub is documented here:
https://github.com/rapid7/metasploit-framework/wiki/Metasploit-Development-Environment
This describes the process of forking, editing, and generating a
pull request, and is the preferred method for bringing new modules
and framework enhancements to the attention of the core Metasploit
development team. Note that this process requires a GitHub account.
For Git commits, please adhere to 50/72 formatting: your commits should
start with a line 50 characters or less, followed by a blank line,
followed by one or more lines of explanatory text wrapped at at 72
characters Pull requests with commits not formatted this way will
be rejected without review.
For modules, note that Author field is not automatic, and should be
filled in in the format of 'Your Name <user[at]domain.tld>' so future
developers can contact you with any questions.
Licensing
=========
By submitting code contributions to the Metasploit Project it is
assumed that you are offering your code under the Metasploit License
or similar 3-clause BSD-compatible license. MIT and Ruby Licenses
are also fine. We specifically cannot include GPL code. LGPL code
is accepted on a case by case basis for libraries only and is never
accepted for modules.
When possible, such as aux and exploit modules, be sure to include
your license designation in the file in the appropriate place.