Thanks for your interest in contributing to NetBird.
There are many ways that you can contribute:
- Reporting issues
- Updating documentation
- Sharing use cases in slack or Reddit
- Bug fix or feature enhancement
If you haven't already, join our slack workspace here, we would love to discuss topics that need community contribution and enhancements to existing features.
This project and everyone participating in it are governed by the Code of Conduct which can be found in the file CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to community@netbird.io.
The NetBird project monorepo is organized to maintain most of its individual dependencies code within their directories, except for a few auxiliary or shared packages.
The most important directories are:
- /.github - Github actions workflow files and issue templates
- /client - NetBird agent code
- /client/cmd - NetBird agent cli code
- /client/internal - NetBird agent business logic code
- /client/proto - NetBird agent daemon GRPC proto files
- /client/server - NetBird agent daemon code for background execution
- /client/ui - NetBird agent UI code
- /encryption - Contain main encryption code for agent communication
- /iface - Wireguard® interface code
- /infrastructure_files - Getting started files containing docker and template scripts
- /management - Management service code
- /management/client - Management service client code which is imported by the agent code
- /management/proto - Management service GRPC proto files
- /management/server - Management service server code
- /management/server/http - Management service REST API code
- /management/server/idp - Management service IDP management code
- /release_files - Files that goes into release packages
- /signal - Signal service code
- /signal/client - Signal service client code which is imported by the agent code
- /signal/peer - Signal service peer message logic
- /signal/proto - Signal service GRPC proto files
- /signal/server - Signal service server code
If you want to contribute to bug fixes or improve existing features, you have to ensure that all needed dependencies are installed. Here is a short guide on how that can be done.
Follow the installation guide from https://go.dev/
We use the fyne toolkit in our UI client. You can follow its requirement guide to have all its dependencies installed: https://developer.fyne.io/started/#prerequisites
You can follow the instructions from the quickstarter guide https://grpc.io/docs/languages/go/quickstart/#prerequisites and then run the generate.sh
files located in each proto
directory to generate changes.
IMPORTANT: We are very open to contributions that can improve the client daemon protocol. For Signal and Management protocols, please reach out on slack or via github issues with your proposals.
Follow the installation guide from https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/
We utilize two tools in our Github actions workflows:
- Goreleaser: Used for release packaging. You can follow the installation steps here; keep in mind to match the version defined in release.yml
- golangci-lint: Used for linting checks. You can follow the installation steps here; keep in mind to match the version defined in golangci-lint.yml
They can be executed from the repository root before every push or PR:
Goreleaser
goreleaser --snapshot --rm-dist
golangci-lint
golangci-lint run
IMPORTANT: All the steps below have to get executed at least once to get the development setup up and running!
Now that everything NetBird requires to run is installed, the actual NetBird code can be checked out and set up:
-
Fork the NetBird repository
-
Clone your forked repository
git clone https://github.com/<your_github_username>/netbird.git
-
Go into the repository folder
cd netbird
-
Add the original NetBird repository as
upstream
to your forked repositorygit remote add upstream https://github.com/netbirdio/netbird.git
-
Install all Go dependencies:
go mod tidy
Windows clients have a Wireguard driver requirement. We provide a bash script that can be executed in WLS 2 with docker support wireguard_nt.sh.
To start NetBird, execute:
cd client
# bash wireguard_nt.sh # if windows
go build .
To start NetBird the client in the foreground:
sudo ./client up --log-level debug --log-file console
On Windows use a powershell with administrator privileges
To start NetBird's signal, execute:
cd signal
go build .
To start NetBird the signal service:
./signal run --log-level debug --log-file console
You may need to generate a configuration file for management. Follow steps 2 to 5 from our self-hosting guide.
To start NetBird's management, execute:
cd management
go build .
To start NetBird the management service:
./management management --log-level debug --log-file console --config ./management.json
The tests can be started via:
cd netbird
go test -exec sudo ./...
On Windows use a powershell with administrator privileges
As a critical network service and open-source project, we must enforce a few things before submitting the pull-requests:
- Keep functions as simple as possible, with a single purpose
- Use private functions and constants where possible
- Comment on any new public functions
- Add unit tests for any new public function
When pushing fixes to the PR comments, please push as separate commits; we will squash the PR before merging, so there is no need to squash it before pushing it, and we are more than okay with 10-100 commits in a single PR. This helps review the fixes to the requested changes.
NetBird project is composed of 3 main repositories:
- NetBird: This repository, which contains the code for the agents and control plane services.
- Dashboard: https://github.com/netbirdio/dashboard, contains the Administration UI for the management service
- Documentations: https://github.com/netbirdio/docs, contains the documentation from https://netbird.io/docs
That we do not have any potential problems later it is sadly necessary to sign a Contributor License Agreement. That can be done literally with the push of a button.
A bot will automatically comment on the pull request once it got opened asking for the agreement to be signed. Before it did not get signed it is sadly not possible to merge it in.