Wormhole is an open-source project licensed under the permissive Apache 2 license. Contributions are greatly appreciated and will be reviewed swiftly.
Wormhole is a mission-critical, high-stakes project. We optimize for quality over quantity. Design processes and code reviews are our most important tools to accomplish that.
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All new features must first be discussed in a GitHub issue before starting to implement them. For complex features, it can be useful to submit a formal design document.
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Development happens on a long-lived development branch (
main
anddev.v1
). Every change going into a development branch is reviewed individually (see below). Release branches may be used to support in-the-wild releases of Wormhole. We aim to support at most two release branches at the same time. Changes can be cherry-picked from the development branch to release branches, but never from release branches to a development branch. -
Releases are first tested on a testnet.
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Commits should be small and have a meaningful commit message. One commit should, roughly, be "one idea" and be as atomic as possible. A feature can consist of many such commits.
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Feature flags and interface evolution are better than breaking changes and long-lived feature branches.
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We optimize for reading, not for writing - over its lifetime, code is read much more often than written. Small commits, meaningful commit messages and useful comments make it easier to review code and improve the quality of code review as well as review turnaround times. It's much easier to spot mistakes in small, well-defined changes.
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We welcome typo and grammar fixes to public facing documents. This includes things like the whitepapers, but excludes inline code comments. PRs that touch only the latter will be rejected. Fixing typos in comments alongside other non-trivial engineering work is welcome.
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Pull requests that modify dependencies must be well-documented so that the benefits of updating can be weighed against security and compatibility concerns. Low-effort PRs that update dependencies without any documentation will be rejected.
Documentation for the in-the-wild deployments lives in the wormhole-networks repository.
See DEVELOP.md for more information on how to run the development environment.
The answer is... maybe? The following things are needed in order to fully support a chain in Wormhole:
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The Wormhole mainnet is governed by a DAO. Wormhole's design is symmetric - every guardian node needs to run a node or light client for every chain supported by Wormhole. This adds up, and the barrier to support new chains is pretty high. Your proposal should clearly outline the value proposition of supporting the new chain. Convincing the DAO to run nodes for your chain is the first step in supporting a new chain.
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The chain needs to support smart contracts capable of verifying 19 individual secp256k1 signatures.
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The smart contract needs to be built and audited. In some cases, existing contracts can be used, like with EVM-compatible chains.
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Support for observing the chain needs to be added to guardiand.
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Web wallet integration needs to be built to actually interact with Wormhole.
The hard parts are (1) convincing the DAO to run the nodes, and (2) convincing the core development team to either build the integration, or work with an external team to build it.
Please do not open a GitHub issue about new networks - this repository is only a reference implementation for Wormhole, just like go-ethereum is a reference implementation for Ethereum. Instead, reach out to the Wormhole Network.
Probably :-). At its core, Wormhole is a generic attestation mechanism and is not tied to any particular kind of communication (like transfers). It is likely that you can use the existing Wormhole contracts to build your own features on top of, without requiring any changes in Wormhole itself.
Please open a GitHub issue outlining your use case, and we can help you build it!
Run ./scripts/lint.sh -d format
and ./scripts/lint.sh lint
.
When making commits on Wormhole, it's advised to prefix the commit with the component name.
Example Component Names (generally the root folder of the change in the Wormhole repo):
- node
- ethereum
- sdk
- solana
Example Full Commit Text:
- sdk/js-proto*: 0.0.4 version bump
- node: docs for running a spy against mainnet
- node: Fix formatting with go 1.19
Example Full Commits:
- https://github.com/wormhole-foundation/wormhole/commit/5cc2c071572daab876db2fd82e9d16dc4c34aa11
- https://github.com/wormhole-foundation/wormhole/commit/eeb1682fba9530a8cd8755b53639ba3daefeda36
Resources for writing good commit messages:
- https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/how-to-write-better-git-commit-messages/
- https://cbea.ms/git-commit/
- https://reflectoring.io/meaningful-commit-messages/
Go code should follow the Go Doc Comments standard.
TypeScript code should follow the TSDoc standard.
You must format your code with goimports
before submitting.
You can install it with go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports@latest
and run it with goimports -d ./
.
You can enable it in VSCode with the following in your settings.json
.
"go.useLanguageServer": true,
"go.formatTool": "goimports",
"[go]": {
"editor.defaultFormatter": "golang.go",
"editor.formatOnSaveMode": "file",
"editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
"source.fixAll": true,
"source.organizeImports": true
}
},
We believe automated tests ensure the integrity of all Wormhole components. Anyone can verify or extend them transparently and they fit nicely with our software development lifecycle. This ensures Wormhole components operate as expected in both expected and failure cases.
Places to find out more about existing test coverage and how to run those tests:
- Guardian Node
- Tests:
./node/**/*_test.go
- Run:
cd node && make test
- Tests:
- Ethereum Smart Contracts
- Tests:
./ethereum/test/*.[js|sol]
- Run:
cd ethereum && make test
- Tests:
- Solana Smart Contracts
- Tests:
./solana/bridge/program/tests/*.rs
- Run:
cd solana && make test
- Tests:
- Terra Smart Contracts
- Tests:
./terra/test/*
- Run:
cd terra && make test
- Tests:
- Cosmwasm Smart Contracts
- Tests:
./cosmwasm/test/*
- Run:
cd cosmwasm && make test
- Tests:
- Algorand Smart Contracts
- Tests:
./algorand/test/*
- Run:
cd algorand && make test
- Tests:
The best place to understand how we invoke these tests via GitHub Actions on every commit can be found via ./.github/workflows/*.yml
and the best place to observe the results of these builds can be found via https://github.com/wormhole-foundation/wormhole/actions.