LAMMPS is designed as a user-level application to conduct computer simulations for research using classical mechanics. As such LAMMPS depends to some degrees on users providing correctly formatted input and LAMMPS needs to read and write files based on uncontrolled user input. As a parallel application for use in high-performance computing environments, performance critical steps are also done without checking data.
LAMMPS also is interfaced to a number of external libraries, including libraries with experimental research software, that are not validated and tested by the LAMMPS developers, so it is easy to import bad behavior from calling functions in one of those libraries.
Thus is is quite easy to crash LAMMPS through malicious input and do all kinds of file system manipulations. And because of that LAMMPS should NEVER be compiled or run as superuser, either from a "root" or "administrator" account directly or indirectly via "sudo" or "su".
Therefore what could be seen as a security vulnerability is usually either a user mistake or a bug in the code. Bugs can be reported in the LAMMPS project issue tracker on GitHub.
To mitigate issues with using homoglyphs or bidirectional reordering in unicode, which have been demonstrated as a vector to obfuscate and hide malicious changes to the source code, all LAMMPS submissions are checked for unicode characters and only all-ASCII source code is accepted.
LAMMPS follows a continuous release development model. We aim to keep
the development version (develop
branch) always fully functional and
employ a variety of automatic testing procedures to detect failures
of existing functionality from adding or modifying features. Most of
those tests are run on pull requests before merging to the develop
branch. The develop
branch is protected, so all changes must be
submitted as a pull request and thus cannot avoid the automated tests.
Additional tests are run after merging. Before releases are made
all tests must have cleared. Then a release tag is applied and the
release
branch is fast-forwarded to that tag. This is often referred
to as a patch release. Bug fixes and updates are
applied first to the develop
branch. Later, they appear in the release
branch when the next patch release occurs.
For stable releases, selected bug fixes, updates, and new functionality
are pushed to the stable
branch and a new stable tag is applied.