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CONTRIBUTING.md

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How to contribute

Notes

  1. Only Roots or other members of the CVE Automation Working Group should create pull requests or open issues in this repository currently. Going forward, we hope to allow wider participation; e.g., from security researchers and other cybersecurity community members. Until then, others who wish to contribute should use the CVE Request web form. If you are a sub-CNA you MUST push within your hierarchy first according to the rules within that hierarchy.

  2. Only submit information to the CVE Program cvelist repo that is intended to become public immediately. There is no support for embargoed submissions!!

  3. Understand that this is only a pilot - it could be changed significantly or even halted.

  4. Submissions should be made subject to the CVE Submissions License Terms of Use.

  5. It is strongly recommended that submissions use signed commits. Please note that some hierarchies require all submissions to be signed.

  6. Submissions from CNAs should be formatted using the CVE JSON format. If you are not familiar with that or do not have tools to work with that, have a look at Vulnogram, which offers a web-based interface for creating and editing information about one CVE at a time.

Sending Data about CVE Records to the CVE Program

  1. If you haven't done so already, create an account on GitHub.com and fork the cvelist repository (i.e., you would fork CVEProject/cvelist). You can either fork into your own account (e.g., from the command line this is the default), for example, if your account name is $YOU, this will result in a new repo named $YOU/cvelist. [NB: $YOU is used throughout the rest of this file; substitute your own account name in any names, commands, URLs, etc.] You can also clone in to an organization in GitHub via the web interface at https://github.com/CVEProject/cvelist by selecting "Fork" and then any of the organizations listed in the box (all organizations that you are a member of and have appropriate permissions to will be listed). Then clone your repo on a local host, such as your workstation or a *nix system where you have shell access. Once you have cloned it do not forget to set the upstream value for your git repo, for example if you are a root CNA you would set it to git@github.com:CVEProject/cvelist.git:
git remote add upstream git@github.com:CVEProject/cvelist.git
  1. Ensure your fork is up to date, especially prior to creating a new branch (every time you create a new branch). The command for this are:
git fetch upstream
git checkout master
git merge upstream/master
  1. Optionally push any updates from the upstream CVEProject/cvelist master back to you fork on Github.com:
git push
  1. Create a new branch, separate from master, for each submission. We encourage you to include in that multiple, related updates whenever possible. For example, if you publish monthly advisories, you might name your branch Nov-2017 and use that to send us assignment information for all the CVE IDs you assigned in that month. If instead you publish advisories only as needed, you might name your branch using the advisory id (e.g., SA-2017-11-03) and include in that assignment information for the CVE ids you assigned for only this one advisory. If you are working on multiple branches make sure you explicitly branch against master otherwise future branches may include work from other local branches:
git branch $YOUR_BRANCH master

For now, let's assume you've named your branch $YOUR_BRANCH you can then change to your branch:

git checkout $YOUR_BRANCH

By branching against master explicitly you can have multiple current branches that can be submitted to your parent CNA seperately.

  1. Make changes to one or more files. NB: limit your changes to only those portions of the JSON that need to be updated rather than naively overwriting the entire file.

  2. Validate any files you change against the JSON schema and ensure they pass. You can use command line Python for example to validate that the file is valid JSON:

python -m json.tool < CVE-2017-1234.json

You can also validate against the schema using a variety of tools, e.g. Python jsonschema:

jsonschema -i CVE-2017-1234.json CVE_JSON_4.0_min_public.schema

The schema file is available in the CVE Automation Working Group and version 4 is currently in use.

  1. Review your updates carefully and make sure they contain only information you intend to make public. Once those reach GitHub.com, it's extremely difficult if not impossible to put it back under wraps. For example, you may be able to check that every CVE ID is mentioned in one of the references associated with it to avoid making public information about a vulnerability ahead of schedule. Also, review the details in the description. Do they agree with information in the associated references?

  2. Commit your changes (e.g., git commit -av) and, if necessary, push your branch from your local copy of your repo to GitHub.com (e.g., git push origin $YOUR_BRANCH).

  3. Create a pull request to merge the changes in your new branch into CVEProject/cvelist master. You can do this by browsing to https://github.com/$YOU/cvelist/pull/new/master and then filling in the form. There are several fields that you need to worry about :

  • base fork is the upstream repo in which you want your updates merged - CVEProject/cvelist
  • base is the branch in the upstream repo in which the changes should be placed - master
  • head fork is your repo from which the updates should be taken; eg, $YOU/cvelist
  • compare is the branch in your repo where the changes are; eg, $YOUR_BRANCH

If you created your pull request using the URL above, make sure that GitHub reports that the branches can be merged. If not, say because you forgot to ensure your fork was synched with the upstream master, make additional commits in your branch to resolve the merge conflicts.

After a pull request has been submitted, several checks will be launched automatically, such as to perform schema validation and check ownership. The checks may add comments and labels to the pull request and, by default, GitHub should notify you via email of those automatically. If the checks identify issues, you will need to address them before processing can continue.

Next, the CVE Team generally will also review the pull request, ensuring that descriptions contain product and version information, references provide provenance, etc. As before, reviewers will add comments and labels to the pull request if additional issues are found, and you will need to address those before processing can continue.

Finally, the CVE Team will add an "accepted" label in the pull request, merge the updated files into the "master" branch, and use the supplied information to populate the associated entries in the CVE List itself.

Here is a visual respresentation of the git process:

github.com/CVEProject/cvelist --> fork --> github.com/$YOU/cvelist
    ^                                                          |
    | merge                                                    |
    |                                                     git clone
    `-------- Accepted?                                        |
                  ^                                            V
                  |                                /localpath/repo/cvelist
           create | pull request                      |              |
                  |                                 git branch     git branch
  github.com/$YOU/cvelist/$YOUR_BRANCH                |              |
                  |                                   |              V
                  |                                   V             some_other_branch
                  `-- push to your github <-- $YOUR_BRANCH

Note that you may contact the CVE Team using the CVE Request web form if you wish to discuss something privately. Note also that pull requests left open for more than 21 days will be rejected.

Contact

Direct questions, comments, or concerns about use of this repo to the CVE Team using the CVE Request web form.