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bitwarden-server/CONTRIBUTING.md
2021-03-11 11:00:17 -05:00

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How to Contribute

Contributions of all kinds are welcome!

Please visit our Community Forums for general community discussion and the development roadmap.

Here is how you can get involved:

  • Request a new feature: Go to the Feature Requests category of the Community Forums. Please search existing feature requests before making a new one

  • Write code for a new feature: Make a new post in the Github Contributions category of the Community Forums. Include a description of your proposed contribution, screeshots, and links to any relevant feature requests. This helps get feedback from the community and Bitwarden team members before you start writing code

  • Report a bug or submit a bugfix: Use Github issues and pull requests

  • Write documentation: Submit a pull request to the Bitwarden help repository

  • Help other users: Go to the User-to-User Support category on the Community Forums

Contributor Agreement

Please sign the Contributor Agreement if you intend on contributing to any Github repository. Pull requests cannot be accepted and merged unless the author has signed the Contributor Agreement.

Pull Request Guidelines

  • commit any pull requests against the master branch
  • include a link to your Community Forums post

Server Architecture

The Server is divided into a number of services. Each service is a Visual Studio project in the Server solution. These are:

  • Admin
  • Api
  • Icons
  • Identity
  • Notifications
  • SQL

Each service is built and run separately. The Bitwarden clients can use different servers for different services.

This means that you don't need to run all services locally for a development environment. You can run only those services that you intend to modify, and use Bitwarden.com or a self-hosted instance for all other services required.

Local Development Environment Setup

This guide will show you how to set up the Api, Identity and SQL projects for development. These are the minimum projects for any development work. You may need to set up additional projects depending on the changes you want to make.

SQL Server

There are 2 options for deploying your own SQL server.

Without Docker

  1. Install your own SQL server on localhost (e.g. SQL Express)
  2. Right-click the SQL project in Visual Studio and click Snapshot Project. This will produce a .dacpac file containing the database schema
  3. Use your preferred database management software (such as SQL Server Management Studio) to deploy a new database from the .dacpac file

With Docker

  1. Follow the Installing and deploying > TL;DR instructions to install and deploy a local Bitwarden Server using Docker. This will give you the entire Bitwarden Server (not just the SQL server), but it is the quickest and easiest method to get what you need.

  2. Stop all containers

    Bash:

    ./bitwarden.sh stop
    

    Powershell:

    .\bitwarden.ps1 -stop
    
  3. Open a terminal with elevated privileges and navigate to your bwdata install folder

  4. Run the SQL Docker container with these arguments:

    docker run -e "ACCEPT_EULA=Y" -e "SA_PASSWORD=<set an SQL password here>" -p 1433:1433 --name mssql-dev \
    --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/mssql/data,target=/var/opt/mssql/data \
    --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/logs/mssql,target=/var/opt/mssql/log \
    --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/mssql/backups,target=/etc/bitwarden/mssql/backups bitwarden/mssql
    

Note: you will need the SA_PASSWORD you set here for the connection string in your user secrets (see below).

User Secrets

User secrets are a method for managing application settings on a per-developer basis. They are stored outside of the local git repository so that they are not pushed to remote.

User secrets override the settings in appsettings.json of each project. Your user secrets file should match the structure of the appsettings.json file for the settings you intend to override.

For more information, see: Safe storage of app secrets in development in ASP.NET Core.

Editing user secrets - Visual Studio on Windows

Right-click on the project in the Solution Explorer and click Manage User Secrets.

Editing user secrets - Visual Studio on macOS

Open a terminal and navigate to the project directory. Once there, initiate and create the blank user secrets file by running:

dotnet user-secrets init

Add a user secret by running:

dotnet user-secrets set "<key>" "<value>"

View currently set secrets by running:

dotnet user-secrets list

Editing user secrets - Rider

  • Navigate to Preferences -> Plugins and Install .NET Core User Secrets
  • Right click on the a project and click Tools > Open project user secrets

User Secrets - Certificates

Once you have your user secrets files set up, you'll need to generate 3 of your own certificates for use in local development.

This guide uses OpenSSL to generate the certificates. If you are using Windows, pre-compiled OpenSSL binaries are available via Cygwin.

  1. Open a terminal.
  2. Create an Identity Server (Dev) certificate file (.crt) and key file (.key):
    openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -sha256 -nodes -keyout identity_server_dev.key -out identity_server_dev.crt -subj "/CN=Bitwarden Identity Server Dev" -days 3650
    
  3. Create an Identity Server (Dev) .pfx file based on the certificate and key you just created. You will be prompted to enter a password - remember this because youll need it later:
    openssl pkcs12 -export -out identity_server_dev.pfx -inkey identity_server_dev.key -in identity_server_dev.crt -certfile identity_server_dev.crt
    
  4. Create a Data Protection (Dev) certificate file (.crt) and key file (.key):
    openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -sha256 -nodes -keyout data_protection_dev.key -out data_protection_dev.crt -subj "/CN=Bitwarden Data Protection Dev" -days 3650
    
  5. Create a Data Protection (Dev) .pfx file based on the certificate and key you just created. You will be prompted to enter a password - remember this because youll need it later:
    openssl pkcs12 -export -out data_protection_dev.pfx -inkey data_protection_dev.key -in data_protection_dev.crt -certfile data_protection_dev.crt
    
  6. Install the .pfx files by double-clicking on them and entering the password when prompted.
    • On Windows, this will add them to your certificate stores. You should add them to the "Trusted Root Certificate Authorities" store.
    • On MacOS, this will add them to your keychain. You should update the Trust options for each certificate to always trust.
  7. Get the SHA1 thumbprint for the Identity and Data Protection certificates
    • On Windows
      • press Windows key + R to open the Run prompt
      • type "certmgr.msc" and press enter. This will open the system tool used to manage user certificates
      • find the "Bitwarden Data Protection Dev" and "Bitwarden Identity Server Dev" certificates in the Trusted Root Certificate Authorities > Certificates folder
      • double click on the certificate
      • click the "Details" tab and find the "Thumbprint" field in the list of properties.
    • On MacOS
      • press Command + Spacebar to open the Spotlight search
      • type "keychain access" and press enter
      • find the "Bitwarden Data Protection Dev" and "Bitwarden Identity Server Dev" certificates
      • select each certificate and click the "i" (information) button
      • find the SHA-1 fingerprint in the list of properties
  8. Add the SHA1 thumbprints of both certificates to your user secrets for the Api and Identity projects. (See the example user secrets file below.)

User Secrets - Other

selfhosted: It is highly recommended that you use the selfHosted: true setting when running a local development environment. This tells the system not to use cloud services, assuming that you are running your own local SQL instance.

Alternatively, there are emulators that allow you to run local dev instances of various Azure and/or AWS services (e.g. local-stack), or you can use your own Azure accounts for provisioning the necessary services and set the connection strings accordingly. These are outside the scope of this guide.

sqlServer__connectionString: this provides the information required for the Server to connect to the SQL instance. See the example connection string below.

licenseDirectory: this must be set to avoid errors, but it can be set to an aribtrary empty folder.

installation__key and installation__id: request your own private Installation Id and Installation Key for self-hosting: https://bitwarden.com/host/.

Example User Secrets file

This is an example user secrets file for both the Api and Identity projects.

{
  "globalSettings": {
    "selfHosted": true,
    "identityServer": {
      "certificateThumbprint": "<your Identity certificate thumbprint with no spaces>"
    },
    "dataProtection": {
      "certificateThumbprint": "<your Data Protection certificate thumbprint with no spaces>"
    },
    "installation": {
      "id": "<your Installation Id>",
      "key": "<your Installation Key>"
    },
    "licenseDirectory": "<full path to licence directory>",
    "sqlServer": {
      "connectionString": "Data Source=localhost,1433;Initial Catalog=vault;Persist Security Info=False;User ID=sa;Password=<your SQL password>;MultipleActiveResultSets=False;Connect Timeout=30;Encrypt=True;TrustServerCertificate=True"
    }
  }
}

Possible setup error in src/Identity

You may encounter an Invalid licensing certificate when running the command dotnet run in the project src/Identity, like this one:

info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.DataProtection.KeyManagement.XmlKeyManager[0]
      User profile is available. Using '/Users/<username>/.aspnet/DataProtection-Keys' as key repository; keys will not be encrypted at rest.
info: IdentityServer4.Startup[0]
      Starting IdentityServer4 version 4.0.4+1b36d1b414f4e0f965af97ab2a7e9dd1b5167bca
crit: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Diagnostics[6]
      Application startup exception
System.Exception: Invalid licensing certificate.

As a quick fix, navigate to src/Core/Services/Implementations/LicensingService.cs, line 49, and change that line to

var certThumbprint = !environment.IsDevelopment() ? "207E64A231E8AA32AAF68A61037C075EBEBD553F" :
                "B34876439FCDA2846505B2EFBBA6C4A951313EBE";

⚠️ Do not commit this change, as it might ruin the experience for others.

Running and Debugging

After you have completed the above steps, you should be ready to launch your development environment for the Api and Identity projects.

Visual Studio

To debug:

  • On Windows, right-click on each project > click Debug > click Start New Instance
  • On MacOS, right-click each project > click Start Debugging Project

To run without debugging, open a terminal and navigate to the location of the .csproj file for that project (usually in src/ProjectName). Start the project with:

dotnet run

NOTE: check the output of the running project to find the port it is listening on. If this is different to the default in appsettings.json, you may need to update your user secrets to override this (typically the Api user secrets for the Identity URL).

Rider

From within Rider, launch both the Api project and the Identity project by clicking the "play" button for each project separately.

Testing your deployment

Troubleshooting

  • If you get a 404 error, the projects may be listening on a non-default port. Check the output of your running projects to check the port they are listening on.