Developer Guide¶
Table of Contents
Getting Started¶
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:
git clone https://github.com/certbot/certbot
If you’re on macOS, we recommend you skip the rest of this section and instead run Certbot in Docker. You can find instructions for how to do this here. If you’re running on Linux, you can run the following commands to install dependencies and set up a virtual environment where you can run Certbot. You will need to repeat this when Certbot’s dependencies change or when a new plugin is introduced.
cd certbot
./certbot-auto --os-packages-only
./tools/venv.sh
Then in each shell where you’re working on the client, do:
source ./venv/bin/activate
export SERVER=https://acme-staging.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
source tests/integration/_common.sh
After that, your shell will be using the virtual environment, and you run the
client by typing certbot
or certbot_test
. The latter is an alias that
includes several flags useful for testing. For instance, it sets various output
directories to point to /tmp/, and uses non-privileged ports for challenges, so
root privileges are not required.
Activating a shell with venv/bin/activate
sets environment variables so that
Python pulls in the correct versions of various packages needed by Certbot.
More information can be found in the virtualenv docs.
Find issues to work on¶
You can find the open issues in the github issue tracker. Comparatively easy ones are marked Good Volunteer Task. 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 coding style.
Testing¶
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 unittests for Certbot with tox -e py27
(this uses Python
2.7).
Once all the unittests pass, check for sufficient test coverage using
tox -e cover
, and then check for code style with tox -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,
including integration tests, using tox
. We recommend running the
commands above first, because running all tests with tox
is very
slow, and the large amount of tox
output can make it hard to find
specific failures when they happen. Also note that the full test suite
will 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.
If you have trouble getting the full tox
suite to run locally, it is
generally sufficient to open a pull request and let Github and Travis run
integration tests for you.
Integration testing with the Boulder CA¶
To run integration tests locally, you need Docker and docker-compose installed and working. Fetch and start Boulder using:
./tests/boulder-fetch.sh
If you have problems with Docker, you may want to try removing all containers and volumes and making sure you have at least 1GB of memory.
Set up a certbot_test alias that enables easily running against the local Boulder:
export SERVER=http://localhost:4000/directory
source tests/integration/_common.sh
Run the integration tests using:
./tests/boulder-integration.sh
Code components and layout¶
- acme
- contains all protocol specific code
- certbot
- main client code
- certbot-apache and certbot-nginx
- client code to configure specific web servers
- certbot.egg-info
- configuration for packaging Certbot
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 IAuthenticator
, which
implements various ways of proving domain control to a certificate authority,
and IInstaller
, 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.
There are also IDisplay
plugins,
which can change how prompts are displayed to a user.
Authenticators¶
Authenticators are plugins that prove control of a domain name by solving a
challenge provided by the ACME server. ACME currently defines three types of
challenges: HTTP, TLS-SNI, 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 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 443, but it cannot install certs; 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 IInstaller
.
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.
Writing your own plugin¶
Certbot client supports dynamic discovery of plugins through the
setuptools entry points using the certbot.plugins
group. This
way you can, for example, create a custom implementation of
IAuthenticator
or the
IInstaller
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:
. venv/bin/activate
. tests/integration/_common.sh
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. Users who run certbot-auto
are currently unable to use third-party
plugins. It’s technically possible to install third-party plugins into
the virtualenv used by certbot-auto
, but they will be wiped away when
certbot-auto
upgrades.
Warning
Please be aware though that as this client is still in a developer-preview stage, the API may undergo a few changes. If you believe the plugin will be beneficial to the community, please consider submitting a pull request to the repo and we will update it with any necessary API changes.
Coding style¶
Please:
Be consistent with the rest of the code.
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
Remember to use
pylint
.
Submitting a pull request¶
Steps:
- Write your code!
- Make sure your environment is set up properly and that you’re in your
virtualenv. You can do this by running
./tools/venv.sh
. (this is a very important step) - Run
tox -e lint
to check for pylint errors. Fix any errors. - Run
tox --skip-missing-interpreters
to run the entire test suite including coverage. The--skip-missing-interpreters
argument ignores missing versions of Python needed for running the tests. Fix any errors. - If your code touches communication with an ACME server/Boulder, you should run the integration tests, see integration.
- Submit the PR.
- Did your tests pass on Travis? If they didn’t, fix any errors.
Updating certbot-auto and letsencrypt-auto¶
Updating the scripts¶
Developers should not modify the certbot-auto
and letsencrypt-auto
files
in the root directory of the repository. Rather, modify the
letsencrypt-auto.template
and associated platform-specific shell scripts in
the letsencrypt-auto-source
and
letsencrypt-auto-source/pieces/bootstrappers
directory, respectively.
Building letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto¶
Once changes to any of the aforementioned files have been made, the
letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto
script should be updated. In lieu of
manually updating this script, run the build script, which lives at
letsencrypt-auto-source/build.py
:
python letsencrypt-auto-source/build.py
Running build.py
will update the letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto
script. Note that the certbot-auto
and letsencrypt-auto
scripts in the root
directory of the repository will remain unchanged after this script is run.
Your changes will be propagated to these files during the next release of
Certbot.
Opening a PR¶
When opening a PR, ensure that the following files are committed:
letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto.template
andletsencrypt-auto-source/pieces/bootstrappers/*
letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto
(generated bybuild.py
)
It might also be a good idea to double check that no changes were
inadvertently made to the certbot-auto
or letsencrypt-auto
scripts in the
root of the repository. These scripts will be updated by the core developers
during the next release.
Updating the documentation¶
In order to generate the Sphinx documentation, run the following commands:
make -C docs clean html man
This should generate documentation in the docs/_build/html
directory.
Running the client with Docker¶
You can use Docker Compose to quickly set up an environment for running and testing Certbot. This is especially useful for macOS users. To install Docker Compose, follow the instructions at https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/.
Note
Linux users can simply run pip install docker-compose
to get
Docker Compose after installing Docker Engine and activating your shell as
described in the Getting Started section.
Now you can develop on your host machine, but run Certbot and test your changes
in Docker. When using docker-compose
make sure you are inside your clone of
the Certbot repository. As an example, you can run the following command to
check for linting errors:
docker-compose run --rm --service-ports development bash -c 'tox -e lint'
You can also leave a terminal open running a shell in the Docker container and modify Certbot code in another window. The Certbot repo on your host machine is mounted inside of the container so any changes you make immediately take effect. To do this, run:
docker-compose run --rm --service-ports development bash
Now running the check for linting errors described above is as easy as:
tox -e lint
Notes on OS dependencies¶
OS-level dependencies can be installed like so:
letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto --os-packages-only
In general...
sudo
is required as a suggested way of running privileged process- Python 2.6/2.7 is required
- Augeas is required for the Python bindings
virtualenv
andpip
are used for managing other python library dependencies
Debian¶
For squeeze you will need to:
- Use
virtualenv --no-site-packages -p python
instead of-p python2
.
FreeBSD¶
Packages can be installed on FreeBSD using pkg
,
or any other port-management tool (portupgrade
, portmanager
, etc.)
from the pre-built package or can be built and installed from ports.
Either way will ensure proper installation of all the dependencies required
for the package.
FreeBSD by default uses tcsh
. In order to activate virtualenv (see
above), you will need a compatible shell, e.g. pkg install bash &&
bash
.