🎉 Thanks for your interest in Ruffle! Contributions of all kinds are welcome.
This document serves as a general guide for contributing to Ruffle. Follow your best judgement in following these guidelines.
- Getting Started
- Ways to Contribute
- Debugging ActionScript Content
- Reporting Bugs
- Code Guidelines
- Test Guidelines
- Commit Message Guidelines
- Pull Requests
The Ruffle wiki is a great way to familiarize yourself with the project. It contains info on how to build Ruffle, using Ruffle, and links to helpful documentation about the Flash format.
Feel free to ask questions in our Discord server.
Ruffle does not use any proprietary knowledge or code, and is built entirely upon either inspecting the output of Flash Player, or by consulting license-compatible libraries such as avmplus.
It is strictly forbidden to decompile Flash Player, Flash Professional, Adobe Animate, or any other software that does not explicitly permit doing so. Any contributions to Ruffle must be re-licensable to MIT/Apache and obtained through legitimate methods.
If you're unsure if something is allowed, ask in our Discord server! The rule of thumb though is that if you made it, and you didn't decompile anything to get there, it's probably fine!
We love new contributors! You can contribute to Ruffle in several ways:
Try out your favorite SWF content in Ruffle and see how it works! Follow the instructions on the Using Ruffle page to get Ruffle for your desired platform. You can run the SWF through the desktop player, the web demo, or try the extension on live websites.
If you encounter specific issues with content, please follow the guidelines on filing an issue.
We use Crowdin to manage the translations of Ruffle into various languages. You can view the project and help make sure your language is nicely translated.
If your native language isn't listed on there, ask us in Discord and we may be able to add it as a new supported language!
Improving documentation is a great way to learn the codebase. Adding documentation to both the wiki and the code eases the learning curve for both end users and new contributors.
For documentation in the code, we follow the rustdoc guidelines.
Try your hand at fixing issues that are interesting to you. Follow the instructions on building Ruffle, familiarize yourself with the project layout, and use SWF resources and decompilers to help debug the issue.
You can also ask for mentoring on our Discord server.
Ruffle is a young project, and there is still much Flash functionality that is unimplemented. Check for the "unimplemented" in issues.
To enable debug logging, set RUST_LOG=warn,ruffle_core=debug,avm_trace=trace
and run Ruffle from the command line.
This will also enable printing trace()
statements.
Additionally, if you build Ruffle with --features avm_debug
then you will activate a few more built-in debugging utilities inside Ruffle, listed below.
All AVM errors and warnings will print their stack trace so that you can view where they are in relation to the ActionScript inside the movie.
The hotkey Ctrl+Alt+D toggles verbose AVM debugging output on and off (default off). You will be able to follow the flow of ActionScript inside of a SWF movie, as each action is performed. Please note that this will likely slow down Ruffle, and it may significantly spam output. Please use sparingly.
When paired with a tool such as JPEXS, you can compare the ActionScript you see being executed in Ruffle with the actual ActionScript inside of a SWF movie, and attempt to find whatever problem it is that you're looking for.
The hotkey Ctrl+Alt+V dumps every variable inside the AVM at the moment you press it. This can be very useful to inspect the internal state of games and see, for example, if a coordinate is NaN, your lives are negative, or maybe an important object just didn't get initialized.
This currently only works for AVM1. We'd welcome a PR to change that!
The hotkey Ctrl+Alt+F dumps the DisplayObject render tree at the moment you press it. This allows you to see Ruffle's representation of the objects on the Stage.
Issue reports and feature requests are encouraged, and are a great way to measure our progress!
When filing an issue, if possible, please include:
- A clear description of the problem.
- The platform you are testing on (web, desktop, OS).
- A link/attachment to the SWF demonstrating the issue, if possible.
- Screenshots if the issue is a visible problem.
- Bonus points for including the correct output from the official Flash Player.
These types of focused issues are helpful:
- Tracking issues for specific Flash features (ActionScript 3.0, drawing API, etc.)
- Bug reports for specific content that works but isn't quite right (art not looking correct, etc.)
- Platform-specific issues
- Enhancement requests to improve user experience
The project is still in the early stages, so many Flash features are unimplemented and not yet expected to work. Please avoid filing generic issues such as:
- A "this SWF doesn't work at all" report (what about it doesn't work?).
- Duplicate issues for each piece of content using an unimplemented feature.
- Asking for dates when a feature will be implemented.
Ruffle is built using the latest stable version of the Rust compiler. Nightly and unstable features should be avoided.
The Rust code in Ruffle strives to be idiomatic. The Rust compiler should emit no warnings when building the project. Additionally, all code should be formatted using rustfmt
and linted using clippy
. You can install these tools using rustup
:
rustup component add rustfmt
rustup component add clippy
You can auto-format your changes with rustfmt
:
cargo fmt --all
and you can run the clippy lints:
cargo clippy --all --tests
Specific warnings and clippy lints can be allowed when appropriate using attributes, such as:
#[allow(clippy::float_cmp)]
Most tests are SWF-based, with the SWFs stored in tests/tests/swfs/
. They are configured in tests/tests/regression_tests.rs
. Most test SWFs include trace()
statements, the output of which is compared to the expected output from Flash Player. To view the output from Flash Player, first download the debug Flash Player for your platform. Then create a plain text file called mm.cfg
with the following contents:
ErrorReportingEnable=1
TraceOutputFileEnable=1
Place the file at the following location:
- Windows:
%USERPROFILE%
- MacOS:
/Library/Application Support/Macromedia/
- Linux:
$HOME
When you run a test SWF, trace output will appear in a file called flashlog.txt
at the following location:
- Windows:
%APPDATA%\Macromedia\Flash Player\Logs\
- MacOS:
~/Library/Preferences/Macromedia/Flash Player/Logs/
- Linux:
$HOME/.macromedia/Flash_Player/Logs/
There are several ways to create your own test SWFs, which are listed in the sections below.
Once you have an .swf
, run it in the debug Flash Player and copy the output of the trace statements into a file called output.txt
. Add the output.txt
, test.swf
and either the test.as
or test.fla
file to a directory under tests/tests/swfs/avm1
(or avm2
) named after what your test tests.
Finally, add a test.toml
in the same directory to control how the test is run - such as how many frames it should take or if we should compare the image it generates. See tests/README.md for information on what the test.toml should look like.
Running cargo test [your test]
from within the tests
folder will run the .swf
in Ruffle and compare the trace()
output against output.txt
. To run all of the tests in all workspaces, run cargo test --all
.
Some tests also compare Ruffle's visual output to an expected image. To properly run these tests, add the argument --features imgtests
.
Heavily algorithmic code may benefit from unit tests in Rust: create a module mod tests
conditionally compiled with #[cfg(test)]
, and add your tests in there.
Create a new ActionScript project. Save the .fla
file and export an .swf
(File -> Export -> Export Movie...).
Adobe Flash Professional CS6 is the most recent version to support both ActionScript 2 and 3. Newer versions support ActionScript 3 only.
This is a free and open source command-line ActionScript 2 compiler. It can be downloaded from here.
Create a test.as
file in a text editor, per the following template:
class Test {
static function main() {
// Your test here.
trace("Hello World!");
}
}
Then compile it using:
mtasc -main -header 200:150:30 test.as -swf test.swf
This is a free and open source SDK capable of compiling ActionScript 3 code. It can be set up as follows:
- Download a release for your platform from here, and extract the files somewhere.
- Add the
<sdk-root>/bin
directory to yourPATH
. After that, the command-line compilermxmlc
(among other tools) should be available. mxmlc
needs aplayerglobal.swc
in order to work, which can be grabbed from here. Place it in<sdk-root>/frameworks/libs/player/32.0/playerglobal.swc
, while creating intermediateplayer
and32.0
directories.- Define the
FLEX_HOME
andPLAYERGLOBAL_HOME
environment variables to the path of the extracted SDK root, and the path of the<sdk-root>/frameworks/libs/player
subdirectory, respectively. - Edit
<sdk-root>/frameworks/flex-config.xml
and change<target-player>27.0</target-player>
to<target-player>32.0</target-player>
.
After mxmlc
is set up, create a file test.as
in a text editor, per the following template:
package {
public class Test {}
}
// Your test here.
trace("Hello World!");
Then compile it using:
mxmlc -output test.swf -compiler.debug=true Test.as
You may want to use Docker instead - something like docker run -it --rm -v ${PWD}:/src jeko/airbuild mxmlc -output test.swf -compiler.debug=true Test.as
works well.
RABCDAsm allows writing AVM2 bytecode sequences directly, without intermediate AS3 code, which is primarily useful for testing opcodes that aren't generated by the above-mentioned AS3 compilers.
However it cannot generate SWF files from scratch. Instead, you must first generate a SWF from the above mentioned methods, then extract and disassemble its ABC with abcexport
and rabcdasm
.
Once you have modified your bytecode, you must reassemble and inject it into the movie with rabcasm
and abcreplace
.
If you are adding a new test, commit both your SWF source (.fla
and/or .as
files) as well as the modified bytecode (.abc
files and test-0
folder).
Here is a sample commit message:
web: Fix incorrect rendering of gradients (close #23)
- If applicable, prefix the first line with a tag indicating the relevant area of changes:
core:
desktop:
web:
avm1:
avm2:
docs:
chore:
tests:
- Capitalize the first letter following the tag.
- Limit line length to 72 characters.
- Use the present tense and imperative mood ("fix", not "fixed" nor "fixes").
- Reference any PRs or issues in the first line.
- Use keywords to close/address issues when applicable ("close #23").
- Write more detailed info on following lines when applicable.
Pull requests are the primary way to contribute code to Ruffle. Pull requests should be made against the latest master
branch. Your pull request should not contain merges; you should always rebase when bringing the latest changes into your branch from the master
branch. If there are merge conflicts, or if your commit history is messy, please rebase onto the latest master. git rebase -i
is a great way to clean up your pull request.
When you make a pull request, our CI will build your changes and run them through all tests and style checks. All of these tests should pass before your pull request can be accepted.
One of our regular contributors will review your changes and try their best to helpfully suggest any changes. If all goes well, your PR should be merged without much delay. We use both standard merge commits and fast-forward merges depending on the size of the changes. Thanks for your contribution!