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===============
Developer Guide
===============

.. contents:: Table of Contents
   :local:


.. _getting_started:

Getting Started
===============

Certbot has the same :ref:`system requirements <system_requirements>` when set
up for development.  While the section below will help you install Certbot and
its dependencies, Certbot needs to be run on a UNIX-like OS so if you're using
Windows, you'll need to set up a (virtual) machine running an OS such as Linux
and continue with these instructions on that UNIX-like OS.

If you're using macOS, it is recommended to first check out the `macOS
suggestions`_ section before continuing with the installation instructions
below.

.. _local copy:

Running a local copy of the client
----------------------------------

Running the client in developer mode from your local tree is a little different
than running Certbot as a user. To get set up, clone our git repository by
running:

.. code-block:: shell

   git clone https://github.com/certbot/certbot

If you're running on a UNIX-like OS, you can run the following commands to
install dependencies and set up a virtual environment where you can run
Certbot.

Install and configure the OS system dependencies required to run Certbot.

.. code-block:: shell

   # For APT-based distributions (e.g. Debian, Ubuntu ...)
   sudo apt update
   sudo apt install python3-venv libaugeas0
   # For RPM-based distributions (e.g. Fedora, CentOS ...)
   # NB1: old distributions will use yum instead of dnf
   # NB2: RHEL-based distributions use python3X instead of python3 (e.g. python38)
   sudo dnf install python3 augeas-libs
   # For macOS installations with Homebrew already installed and configured
   # NB: If you also run `brew install python` you don't need the ~/lib
   #     directory created below, however, without this directory and symlinks
   #     to augeas, Certbot's Apache plugin won't work if you use Python
   #     installed from other sources such as pyenv or the version provided by
   #     Apple.
   brew install augeas
   mkdir ~/lib
   ln -s $(brew --prefix)/lib/libaugeas* ~/lib

.. note:: If you have trouble creating the virtual environment below, you may
   need to install additional dependencies. See the `cryptography project's
   site`_ for more information.

.. _`cryptography project's site`: https://cryptography.io/en/latest/installation.html#building-cryptography-on-linux

Set up the Python virtual environment that will host your Certbot local instance.

.. code-block:: shell

   cd certbot
   python tools/venv.py

.. note:: You may need to repeat this when
  Certbot's dependencies change or when a new plugin is introduced.

You can now run the copy of Certbot from git either by executing
``venv/bin/certbot``, or by activating the virtual environment. You can do the
latter by running:

.. code-block:: shell

   source venv/bin/activate

After running this command, ``certbot`` and development tools like ``ipdb3``,
``ipython``, ``pytest``, and ``tox`` are available in the shell where you ran
the command. These tools are installed in the virtual environment and are kept
separate from your global Python installation. This works by setting
environment variables so the right executables are found and Python can pull in
the versions of various packages needed by Certbot.  More information can be
found in the `virtualenv docs`_.

.. _`virtualenv docs`: https://virtualenv.pypa.io

Find issues to work on
----------------------

You can find the open issues in the `github issue tracker`_. If you're starting
work on something, post a comment to let others know and seek feedback on your
plan where appropriate.

Once you've got a working branch, you can open a pull request.  All changes in
your pull request must have thorough unit test coverage, pass our
tests, and be compliant with the :ref:`coding style <coding-style>`.

.. _github issue tracker: https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues

.. _testing:

Testing
-------

You can test your code in several ways:

- running the `automated unit`_ tests,
- running the `automated integration`_ tests
- running an *ad hoc* `manual integration`_ test

.. note:: Running integration tests does not currently work on macOS. See
   https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/6959. In the meantime, we
   recommend developers on macOS open a PR to run integration tests.

.. _automated unit:

Running automated unit tests
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

When you are working in a file ``foo.py``, there should also be a file ``foo_test.py``
either in the same directory as ``foo.py`` or in the ``tests`` subdirectory
(if there isn't, make one). While you are working on your code and tests, run
``python foo_test.py`` to run the relevant tests.

For debugging, we recommend putting
``import ipdb; ipdb.set_trace()`` statements inside the source code.

Once you are done with your code changes, and the tests in ``foo_test.py``
pass, run all of the unit tests for Certbot and check for coverage with ``tox
-e cover``. You should then check for code style with ``tox run -e lint`` (all
files) or ``pylint --rcfile=.pylintrc path/to/file.py`` (single file at a
time).

Once all of the above is successful, you may run the full test suite using
``tox --skip-missing-interpreters``. We recommend running the commands above
first, because running all tests like this is very slow, and the large amount
of output can make it hard to find specific failures when they happen.

.. warning:: The full test suite may attempt to modify your system's Apache
  config if your user has sudo permissions, so it should not be run on a
  production Apache server.

.. _automated integration:

Running automated integration tests
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Generally it is sufficient to open a pull request and let Github and Azure Pipelines run
integration tests for you. However, you may want to run them locally before submitting
your pull request. You need Docker installed and working.

The tox environment `integration` will setup `Pebble`_, the Let's Encrypt ACME CA server
for integration testing, then launch the Certbot integration tests.

With a user allowed to access your local Docker daemon, run:

.. code-block:: shell

  tox run -e integration

Tests will be run using pytest. A test report and a code coverage report will be
displayed at the end of the integration tests execution.

.. _Pebble: https://github.com/letsencrypt/pebble

.. _manual integration:

Running manual integration tests
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You can also manually execute Certbot against a local instance of the `Pebble`_ ACME server.
This is useful to verify that the modifications done to the code makes Certbot behave as expected.

To do so you need:

- Docker installed, and a user with access to the Docker client,
- an available `local copy`_ of Certbot.

The virtual environment set up with `python tools/venv.py` contains two CLI tools
that can be used once the virtual environment is activated:

.. code-block:: shell

    run_acme_server

- Starts a local instance of Pebble and runs in the foreground printing its logs.
- Press CTRL+C to stop this instance.
- This instance is configured to validate challenges against certbot executed locally.

.. note:: Some options are available to tweak the local ACME server. You can execute
    ``run_acme_server --help`` to see the inline help of the ``run_acme_server`` tool.

.. code-block:: shell

    certbot_test [ARGS...]

- Execute certbot with the provided arguments and other arguments useful for testing purposes,
  such as: verbose output, full tracebacks in case Certbot crashes, *etc.*
- Execution is preconfigured to interact with the Pebble CA started with ``run_acme_server``.
- Any arguments can be passed as they would be to Certbot (eg. ``certbot_test certonly -d test.example.com``).

Here is a typical workflow to verify that Certbot successfully issued a certificate
using an HTTP-01 challenge on a machine with Python 3:

.. code-block:: shell

    python tools/venv.py
    source venv/bin/activate
    run_acme_server &
    certbot_test certonly --standalone -d test.example.com
    # To stop Pebble, launch `fg` to get back the background job, then press CTRL+C

Running tests in CI
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Certbot uses Azure Pipelines to run continuous integration tests. If you are using our
Azure setup, a branch whose name starts with `test-` will run all tests on that branch.

Code components and layout
==========================

The following components of the Certbot repository are distributed to users:

acme
  contains all protocol specific code
certbot
  main client code
certbot-apache and certbot-nginx
  client code to configure specific web servers
certbot-dns-*
  client code to configure DNS providers
windows installer
  Installs Certbot on Windows and is built using the files in windows-installer/

Plugin-architecture
-------------------

Certbot has a plugin architecture to facilitate support for
different webservers, other TLS servers, and operating systems.
The interfaces available for plugins to implement are defined in
`interfaces.py`_ and `plugins/common.py`_.

The main two plugin interfaces are `~certbot.interfaces.Authenticator`, which
implements various ways of proving domain control to a certificate authority,
and `~certbot.interfaces.Installer`, which configures a server to use a
certificate once it is issued. Some plugins, like the built-in Apache and Nginx
plugins, implement both interfaces and perform both tasks. Others, like the
built-in Standalone authenticator, implement just one interface.

.. _interfaces.py: https://github.com/certbot/certbot/blob/main/certbot/certbot/interfaces.py
.. _plugins/common.py: https://github.com/certbot/certbot/blob/main/certbot/certbot/plugins/common.py#L45


Authenticators
--------------

Authenticators are plugins that prove control of a domain name by solving a
challenge provided by the ACME server. ACME currently defines several types of
challenges: HTTP, TLS-ALPN, and DNS, represented by classes in `acme.challenges`.
An authenticator plugin should implement support for at least one challenge type.

An Authenticator indicates which challenges it supports by implementing
`get_chall_pref(domain)` to return a sorted list of challenge types in
preference order.

An Authenticator must also implement `perform(achalls)`, which "performs" a list
of challenges by, for instance, provisioning a file on an HTTP server, or
setting a TXT record in DNS. Once all challenges have succeeded or failed,
Certbot will call the plugin's `cleanup(achalls)` method to remove any files or
DNS records that were needed only during authentication.

Installer
---------

Installers plugins exist to actually setup the certificate in a server,
possibly tweak the security configuration to make it more correct and secure
(Fix some mixed content problems, turn on HSTS, redirect to HTTPS, etc).
Installer plugins tell the main client about their abilities to do the latter
via the :meth:`~.Installer.supported_enhancements` call. We currently
have two Installers in the tree, the `~.ApacheConfigurator`. and the
`~.NginxConfigurator`.  External projects have made some progress toward
support for IIS, Icecast and Plesk.

Installers and Authenticators will oftentimes be the same class/object
(because for instance both tasks can be performed by a webserver like nginx)
though this is not always the case (the standalone plugin is an authenticator
that listens on port 80, but it cannot install certificates; a postfix plugin
would be an installer but not an authenticator).

Installers and Authenticators are kept separate because
it should be possible to use the `~.StandaloneAuthenticator` (it sets
up its own Python server to perform challenges) with a program that
cannot solve challenges itself (Such as MTA installers).


Installer Development
---------------------

There are a few existing classes that may be beneficial while
developing a new `~certbot.interfaces.Installer`.
Installers aimed to reconfigure UNIX servers may use Augeas for
configuration parsing and can inherit from `~.AugeasConfigurator` class
to handle much of the interface. Installers that are unable to use
Augeas may still find the `~.Reverter` class helpful in handling
configuration checkpoints and rollback.


.. _dev-plugin:

Writing your own plugin
-----------------------

.. note:: The Certbot team is not currently accepting any new plugins
    because we want to rethink our approach to the challenge and resolve some
    issues like `#6464 <https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/6464>`_,
    `#6503 <https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/6503>`_, and `#6504
    <https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/6504>`_ first.

    In the meantime, you're welcome to release it as a third-party plugin. See
    `certbot-dns-ispconfig <https://github.com/m42e/certbot-dns-ispconfig>`_
    for one example of that.

Certbot client supports dynamic discovery of plugins through the
`importlib.metadata entry points`_ using the `certbot.plugins` group.
This way you can, for example, create a custom implementation of
`~certbot.interfaces.Authenticator` or the
`~certbot.interfaces.Installer` without having to merge it
with the core upstream source code. An example is provided in
``examples/plugins/`` directory.

While developing, you can install your plugin into a Certbot development
virtualenv like this:

.. code-block:: shell

  . venv/bin/activate
  pip install -e examples/plugins/
  certbot_test plugins

Your plugin should show up in the output of the last command. If not,
it was not installed properly.

Once you've finished your plugin and published it, you can have your
users install it system-wide with `pip install`. Note that this will
only work for users who have Certbot installed from OS packages or via
pip.

.. _`importlib.metadata entry points`:
    https://importlib-metadata.readthedocs.io/en/latest/using.html#entry-points

Writing your own plugin snap
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

If you'd like your plugin to be used alongside the Certbot snap, you
will also have to publish your plugin as a snap. Plugin snaps are
regular confined snaps, but normally do not provide any "apps"
themselves. Plugin snaps export loadable Python modules to the Certbot
snap.

When the Certbot snap runs, it will use its version of Python and prefer
Python modules contained in its own snap over modules contained in
external snaps. This means that your snap doesn't have to contain things
like an extra copy of Python, Certbot, or their dependencies, but also
that if you need a different version of a dependency than is already
installed in the Certbot snap, the Certbot snap will have to be updated.

Certbot plugin snaps expose their Python modules to the Certbot snap via a
`snap content interface`_ where ``certbot-1`` is the value for the ``content``
attribute. The Certbot snap only uses this to find the names of connected
plugin snaps and it expects to find the Python modules to be loaded under
``lib/python3.12/site-packages/`` in the plugin snap. This location is the
default when using the ``core24`` `base snap`_ and the `python snapcraft
plugin`_.

The Certbot snap also provides a separate content interface which
you can use to get metadata about the Certbot snap using the ``content``
identifier ``metadata-1``.

The script used to generate the snapcraft.yaml files for our own externally
snapped plugins can be found at
https://github.com/certbot/certbot/blob/main/tools/snap/generate_dnsplugins_snapcraft.sh.

For more information on building externally snapped plugins, see the section on
:ref:`Building snaps`.

Once you have created your own snap, if you have the snap file locally,
it can be installed for use with Certbot by running:

.. code-block:: shell

    snap install --classic certbot
    snap set certbot trust-plugin-with-root=ok
    snap install --dangerous your-snap-filename.snap
    sudo snap connect certbot:plugin your-snap-name
    sudo /snap/bin/certbot plugins

If everything worked, the last command should list your plugin in the
list of plugins found by Certbot. Once your snap is published to the
snap store, it will be installable through the name of the snap on the
snap store without the ``--dangerous`` flag. If you are also using
Certbot's metadata interface, you can run ``sudo snap connect
your-snap-name:your-plug-name-for-metadata certbot:certbot-metadata`` to
connect your snap to it.

.. _`snap content interface`:
    https://snapcraft.io/docs/content-interface
.. _`base snap`:
    https://snapcraft.io/docs/base-snaps
.. _`python snapcraft plugin`:
    https://snapcraft.io/docs/python-plugin

.. _coding-style:

Coding style
============

Please:

1. **Be consistent with the rest of the code**.

2. Read `PEP 8 - Style Guide for Python Code`_.

3. Follow the `Google Python Style Guide`_, with the exception that we
   use `Sphinx-style`_ documentation::

        def foo(arg):
            """Short description.

            :param int arg: Some number.

            :returns: Argument
            :rtype: int

            """
            return arg

4. Remember to use ``pylint``.

5. You may consider installing a plugin for `editorconfig`_ in
   your editor to prevent some linting warnings.

6. Please avoid `unittest.assertTrue` or `unittest.assertFalse` when
   possible, and use `assertEqual` or more specific assert. They give
   better messages when it's failing, and are generally more correct.

.. _Google Python Style Guide:
  https://google.github.io/styleguide/pyguide.html
.. _Sphinx-style: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/
.. _PEP 8 - Style Guide for Python Code:
  https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008
.. _editorconfig: https://editorconfig.org/

Use ``certbot.compat.os`` instead of ``os``
===========================================

Python's standard library ``os`` module lacks full support for several Windows
security features about file permissions (eg. DACLs). However several files
handled by Certbot (eg. private keys) need strongly restricted access
on both Linux and Windows.

To help with this, the ``certbot.compat.os`` module wraps the standard
``os`` module, and forbids usage of methods that lack support for these Windows
security features.

As a developer, when working on Certbot or its plugins, you must use ``certbot.compat.os``
in every place you would need ``os`` (eg. ``from certbot.compat import os`` instead of
``import os``). Otherwise the tests will fail when your PR is submitted.

.. _type annotations:

Mypy type annotations
=====================

Certbot uses the `mypy`_ static type checker. Python 3 natively supports official type annotations,
which can then be tested for consistency using mypy. Mypy does some type checks even without type
annotations; we can find bugs in Certbot even without a fully annotated codebase.

Zulip wrote a `great guide`_ to using mypy. It’s useful, but you don’t have to read the whole thing
to start contributing to Certbot.

To run mypy on Certbot, use ``tox run -e mypy`` on a machine that has Python 3 installed.

Also note that OpenSSL, which we rely on, has type definitions for crypto but not SSL. We use both.
Those imports should look like this:

.. code-block:: python

  from OpenSSL import crypto
  from OpenSSL import SSL

.. _mypy: https://mypy.readthedocs.io
.. _added in comments: https://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/latest/cheat_sheet.html
.. _great guide: https://blog.zulip.org/2016/10/13/static-types-in-python-oh-mypy/

Submitting a pull request
=========================

Steps:

0. We recommend you talk with us in a GitHub issue or :ref:`Mattermost <ask for
   help>` before writing a pull request to ensure the changes you're making is
   something we have the time and interest to review.
1. Write your code! When doing this, you should add :ref:`mypy type annotations
   <type annotations>` for any functions you add or modify. You can check that
   you've done this correctly by running ``tox run -e mypy`` on a machine that has
   Python 3 installed.
2. Make sure your environment is set up properly and that you're in your
   virtualenv. You can do this by following the instructions in the
   :ref:`Getting Started <getting_started>` section.
3. Run ``tox run -e lint`` to check for pylint errors. Fix any errors.
4. Run ``tox --skip-missing-interpreters`` to run all the tests we recommend
   developers run locally. The ``--skip-missing-interpreters`` argument ignores
   missing versions of Python needed for running the tests. Fix any errors.
5. If any documentation should be added or updated as part of the changes you
   have made, please include the documentation changes in your PR.
6. Submit the PR. Once your PR is open, please do not force push to the branch
   containing your pull request to squash or amend commits. We use `squash
   merges <https://github.com/blog/2141-squash-your-commits>`_ on PRs and
   rewriting commits makes changes harder to track between reviews.
7. Did your tests pass on Azure Pipelines? If they didn't, fix any errors.

.. _ask for help:

Asking for help
===============

If you have any questions while working on a Certbot issue, don't hesitate to
ask for help! You can do this in the Certbot channel in EFF's Mattermost
instance for its open source projects as described below.

You can get involved with several of EFF's software projects such as Certbot at
the `EFF Open Source Contributor Chat Platform
<https://opensource.eff.org/signup_user_complete/?id=6iqur37ucfrctfswrs14iscobw>`_.
By signing up for the EFF Open Source Contributor Chat Platform, you consent to
share your personal information with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which
is the operator and data controller for this platform. The channels will be
available both to EFF, and to other users of EFFOSCCP, who may use or disclose
information in these channels outside of EFFOSCCP. EFF will use your
information, according to the `Privacy Policy <https://www.eff.org/policy>`_,
to further the mission of EFF, including hosting and moderating the discussions
on this platform.

Use of EFFOSCCP is subject to the `EFF Code of Conduct
<https://www.eff.org/pages/eppcode>`_. When investigating an alleged Code of
Conduct violation, EFF may review discussion channels or direct messages.

.. _Building snaps:

Building the Certbot and DNS plugin snaps
=========================================

Instructions for how to manually build and run the Certbot snap and the externally
snapped DNS plugins that the Certbot project supplies are located in the README
file at https://github.com/certbot/certbot/tree/main/tools/snap.

Updating the documentation
==========================

Many of the packages in the Certbot repository have documentation in a
``docs/`` directory. This directory is located under the top level directory
for the package. For instance, Certbot's documentation is under
``certbot/docs``.

To build the documentation of a package, make sure you have followed the
instructions to set up a `local copy`_ of Certbot including activating the
virtual environment. After that, ``cd`` to the docs directory you want to build
and run the command:

.. code-block:: shell

   make clean html

This would generate the HTML documentation in ``_build/html`` in your current
``docs/`` directory.

Certbot's dependencies
======================

We attempt to pin all of Certbot's dependencies whenever we can for reliability
and consistency. Some of the places we have Certbot's dependencies pinned
include our snaps, Docker images, Windows installer, CI, and our development
environments.

In most cases, the file where dependency versions are specified is
``tools/requirements.txt``. The one exception to this is our "oldest" tests
where ``tools/oldest_constraints.txt`` is used instead. The purpose of the
"oldest" tests is to ensure Certbot continues to work with the oldest versions
of our dependencies which we claim to support. The oldest versions of the
dependencies we support should also be declared in our setup.py files to
communicate this information to our users.

The choices of whether Certbot's dependencies are pinned and what file is used
if they are should be automatically handled for you most of the time by
Certbot's tooling. The way it works though is ``tools/pip_install.py`` (which
many of our other tools build on) checks for the presence of environment
variables. If ``CERTBOT_OLDEST`` is set to 1, ``tools/oldest_constraints.txt``
will be used as constraints for ``pip``, otherwise, ``tools/requirements.txt``
is used as constraints.

Updating dependency versions
----------------------------

``tools/requirements.txt`` and ``tools/oldest_constraints.txt`` can be updated
using ``tools/pinning/current/repin.sh`` and ``tools/pinning/oldest/repin.sh``
respectively. This works by using ``poetry`` to generate pinnings based on a
Poetry project defined by the ``pyproject.toml`` file in the same directory as
the script. In many cases, you can just run the script to generate updated
dependencies, however, if you need to pin back packages or unpin packages that
were previously restricted to an older version, you will need to modify the
``pyproject.toml`` file. The syntax used by this file is described at
https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/ and how dependencies are specified in
this file is further described at
https://python-poetry.org/docs/dependency-specification/.

If you want to learn more about the design used here, see
``tools/pinning/DESIGN.md`` in the Certbot repo.

Choosing dependency versions
----------------------------

A number of Unix distributions create third-party Certbot packages for their users.
Where feasible, the Certbot project tries to manage its dependencies in a way that
does not create avoidable work for packagers.

Avoiding adding new dependencies is a good way to help with this.

When adding new or upgrading existing Python dependencies, Certbot developers should
pay attention to which distributions are actively packaging Certbot. In particular:

- EPEL (used by RHEL/CentOS/Fedora) updates Certbot regularly. At the time of writing,
  EPEL9 is the release of EPEL where Certbot is being updated, but check the `EPEL
  home page <https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/epel/>`_ and `pkgs.org
  <https://pkgs.org/search/?q=python3-certbot>`_ for the latest release.
- Debian and Ubuntu only package Certbot when making new releases of their distros.
  Checking the available version of dependencies in Debian "sid" and "unstable" can help
  to identify dependencies that are likely to be available in the next stable release of
  these distros.

If a dependency is already packaged in these distros and is acceptable for use in Certbot,
the oldest packaged version of that dependency should be chosen and set as the minimum
version in ``setup.py``.

macOS suggestions
=================

If you're developing on macOS, before :ref:`setting up your Certbot development
environment <local copy>`, it is recommended you perform the following steps.
None of this is required, but it is the approach used by all/most of the
current Certbot developers on macOS as of writing this:

0. Install `Homebrew <https://brew.sh/>`_. It is the most popular package
   manager on macOS by a wide margin and works well enough.
1. Install `pyenv <https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv>`_, ideally through Homebrew
   by running ``brew install pyenv``. Using Homebrew's Python for Certbot
   development is annoying because it regularly updates and every time it does
   it breaks your virtual environments. Using Python from ``pyenv`` avoids this
   problem and gives you easy access to all versions of Python.
2. If you're using ``pyenv``, make sure you've set up your shell for it by
   following instructions like
   https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv?tab=readme-ov-file#set-up-your-shell-environment-for-pyenv.
3. Configure ``git`` to ignore the ``.DS_Store`` files that are created by
   macOS's file manager Finder by running something like:

.. code-block:: shell

   mkdir -p ~/.config/git
   echo '.DS_Store' >> ~/.config/git/ignore

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