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gosec/CONTRIBUTING.md

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# Contributing
## Adding a new rule
New rules can be implemented in two ways:
- as a `gosec.Rule` -- these define an arbitrary function which will be called on every AST node in the analyzed file, and are appropriate for rules that mostly need to reason about a single statement.
- as an Analyzer -- these can operate on the entire program, and receive an [SSA](https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/tools/go/ssa) representation of the package. This type of rule is useful when you need to perform a more complex analysis that requires a great deal of context.
### Adding a gosec.Rule
1. Copy an existing rule file as a starting point-- `./rules/unsafe.go` is a good option, as it implements a very simple rule with no additional supporting logic. Put the copied file in the `./rules/` directory.
2. Change the name of the rule constructor function and of the types in the rule file you've copied so they will be unique.
3. Edit the `Generate` function in `./rules/rulelist.go` to include your rule.
4. Add a RuleID to CWE ID mapping for your rule to the `ruleToCWE` map in `./issue/issue.go`. If you need a CWE that isn't already defined in `./cwe/data.go`, add it to the `idWeaknessess` map in that file.
5. Use `make` to compile `gosec`. The binary will now contain your rule.
To make your rule actually useful, you will likely want to use the support functions defined in `./resolve.go`, `./helpers.go` and `./call_list.go`. There are inline comments explaining the purpose of most of these functions, and you can find usage examples in the existing rule files.
### Adding an Analyzer
1. Create a new go file under `./analyzers/` with the following scaffolding in it:
```go
package analyzers
import (
"fmt"
"golang.org/x/tools/go/analysis"
"golang.org/x/tools/go/analysis/passes/buildssa"
"github.com/securego/gosec/v2/issue"
)
const defaultIssueDescriptionMyAnalyzer = "My new analyzer!"
func newMyAnalyzer(id string, description string) *analysis.Analyzer {
return &analysis.Analyzer{
Name: id,
Doc: description,
Run: runMyAnalyzer,
Requires: []*analysis.Analyzer{buildssa.Analyzer},
}
}
func runMyAnalyzer(pass *analysis.Pass) (interface{}, error) {
ssaResult, err := getSSAResult(pass)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("building ssa representation: %w", err)
}
var issues []*issue.Issue
fmt.Printf("My Analyzer ran! %+v\n", ssaResult)
return issues, nil
}
```
2. Add the analyzer to `./analyzers/analyzerslist.go` in the `defaultAnalyzers` variable under an entry like `{"G999", "My test analyzer", newMyAnalyzer}`
3. Add a RuleID to CWE ID mapping for your rule to the `ruleToCWE` map in `./issue/issue.go`. If you need a CWE that isn't already defined in `./cwe/data.go`, add it to the `idWeaknessess` map in that file.
4. `make`; then run the `gosec` binary produced. You should see the output from our print statement.
5. You now have a working example analyzer to play with-- look at the other implemented analyzers for ideas on how to make useful rules.
## Developing your rule
There are some utility tools which are useful for analyzing the SSA and AST representation `gosec` works with before writing rules or analyzers.
For instance to dump the SSA, the [ssadump](https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/tools/cmd/ssadump) tool can be used as following:
```bash
ssadump -build F main.go
```
Consult the documentation for ssadump for an overview of available output flags and options.
For outputting the AST and supporting information, there is a utility tool in <https://github.com/securego/gosec/blob/master/cmd/gosecutil/tools.go> which can be compiled and used as standalone.
```bash
gosecutil -tool ast main.go
```
Valid tool arguments for this command are `ast`, `callobj`, `uses`, `types`, `defs`, `comments`, and `imports`.