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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-04 12:47:08 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-04 12:47:08 +0000 |
commit | 29b5ab554790bb57337a3b6ab9dcd963cf69d22e (patch) | |
tree | be1456d2bc6c1fb078695fad7bc8f6b212062d3c /docs/coding-style.md | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | libgit2-c1e1eb71b50aea7924f9091d188fa736bc813c6f.tar.xz libgit2-c1e1eb71b50aea7924f9091d188fa736bc813c6f.zip |
Adding upstream version 1.7.2+ds.upstream/1.7.2+ds
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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diff --git a/docs/coding-style.md b/docs/coding-style.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b8b94d6 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/coding-style.md @@ -0,0 +1,364 @@ +# libgit2 Coding Style + +This documentation describes the preferred coding style for the libgit2 project. +While not all parts of our code base conform to this coding style, the outlined +rules are what we aim for. + +Note that in no case do we accept changes that convert huge parts of the code +base to use our coding style. Instead, it is encouraged to modernize small parts +of code you're going to modify anyway for a given change you want to introduce. +A good rule to follow is the Boy Scout Rule: "Leave the campground cleaner than +you found it." + +## C Coding Style + +The following sections define the coding style for all code files and headers. + +### Indentation and Alignment + +Code is indented by tabs, where a tab is 8 spaces. Each opening scope increases +the indentation level. + +```c +int foobar(int void) +{ + if (condition) + doit(); + /* Body */ +} +``` + +Switch statements have their `case`s aligned with the `switch` keyword. Case +bodies are indented by an additional level. Case bodies should not open their +own scope to declare variables. + +```c +switch (c) { +case 'a': +case 'b': + return 0; +default: + return -1; +} +``` + +Multi-line conditions should be aligned with the opening brace of the current +statement: + +```c +if (one_very_long_condition(c) && + another_very_long_condition(c)) + doit(); +``` + +### Spaces + +There must be no space between the function and its arguments, arguments must be +separated by a space: + +```c +int doit(int first_arg, int second_arg); +doit(1, 2); +``` + +For any binary or ternary operators, the arguments and separator must be +separated by a space: + +```c +1 + 2; +x ? x : NULL; +``` + +Unary operators do not have a space between them and the argument they refer to: + +```c +*c +&c +``` + +The `sizeof` operator always must not have a space and must use braces around +the type: + +``` +sizeof(int) +``` + +There must be a space after the keywords `if`, `switch`, `case`, `do` and +`while`. + +### Braces + +Functions must have their opening brace on the following line: + +```c +void foobar(void) +{ + doit(); +} +``` + +For conditions, braces should be placed on the same line as the condition: + +```c +if (condition(c)) { + doit(); + dothat(); +} + +while (true) { + doit(); +} +``` + +In case a condition's body has a single line, only, it's allowed to omit braces, +except if any of its `else if` or `else` branches has more than one line: + +```c +if (condition(c)) + doit(); + +if (condition(c)) + doit(); +else if (other_condition(c)) + doit(); + +/* This example must use braces as the `else if` requires them. */ +if (condition(c)) { + doit(); +} else if (other_condition(c)) { + doit(); + dothat(); +} else { + abort(); +} +``` + +### Comments + +Comments must use C-style `/* */` comments. C++-style `// `comments are not +allowed in our codebase. This is a strict requirement as libgit2 tries to be +compliant with the ISO C90 standard, which only allows C-style comments. + +Single-line comments may have their opening and closing tag on the same line: + +```c +/* This is a short comment. */ +``` + +For multi-line comments, the opening and closing tag should be empty: + +```c +/* + * This is a rather long and potentially really unwiedly but informative + * multiline comment that helps quite a lot. + */ +``` + +Public functions must have documentation that explain their usage, internal +functions should have a comment. We use Docurium to generate documentation +derived from these comments, which uses syntax similar to Doxygen. The first +line should be a short summary of what the function does. More in-depth +explanation should be separated from that first line by an empty line. +Parameters and return values should be documented via `@return` and `@param` +tags: + +```c +/* + * Froznicate the string. + * + * Froznicate the string by foobaring its internal structure into a more obvious + * translation. Note that the returned string is a newly allocated string that + * shall be `free`d by the caller. + * + * @param s String to froznicate + * @return A newly allocated string or `NULL` in case an error occurred. + */ +char *froznicate(const char *s); +``` + +### Variables + +Variables must be declared at the beginning of their scope. This is a strict +requirement as libgit2 tries to be compliant with the ISO C90 standard, which +forbids mixed declarations and code: + +```c +void foobar(void) +{ + char *c = NULL; + int a, b; + + a = 0; + b = 1; + + return c; +} +``` + +### Naming + +Variables must have all-lowercase names. In case a variable name has multiple +words, words should be separated by an underscore `_` character. While +recommended to use descriptive naming, common variable names like `i` for +indices are allowed. + +All public functions must have a `git` prefix as well as a prefix indicating +their respective subsystem. E.g. a function that opens a repository should be +called `git_repository_open()`. Functions that are not public but declared in +an internal header file for use by other subsystems should follow the same +naming pattern. File-local static functions must not have a `git` prefix, but +should have a prefix indicating their respective subsystem. + +All structures declared in the libgit2 project must have a `typedef`, we do not +use `struct type` variables. Type names follow the same schema as functions. + +### Error Handling + +The libgit2 project mostly uses error codes to indicate errors. Error codes are +always of type `int`, where `0` indicates success and a negative error code +indicates an error case. In some cases, positive error codes may be used to +indicate special cases. Returned values that are not an error code should be +returned via an out parameter. Out parameters must always come first in the list +of arguments. + +```c +int doit(const char **out, int arg) +{ + if (!arg) + return -1; + *out = "Got an argument"; + return 0; +} +``` + +To avoid repetitive and fragile error handling in case a function has resources +that need to be free'd, we use `goto out`s: + +```c +int doit(char **out, int arg) +{ + int error = 0; + char *c; + + c = malloc(strlen("Got an argument") + 1); + if (!c) { + error = -1; + goto out; + } + + if (!arg) { + error = -1; + goto out; + } + + strcpy(c, "Got an argument") + *out = c; + +out: + if (error) + free(c); + return error; +} +``` + +When calling functions that return an error code, you should assign the error +code to an `error` variable and, in case an error case is indicated and no +custom error handling is required, return that error code: + +```c +int foobar(void) +{ + int error; + + if ((error = doit()) < 0) + return error; + + return 0; +} +``` + +When doing multiple function calls where all of the functions return an error +code, it's common practice to chain these calls together: + +```c +int doit(void) +{ + int error; + + if ((error = dothis()) < 0 || + (error = dothat()) < 0) + return error; + + return 0; +} +``` + +## CMake Coding Style + +The following section defines the coding style for our CMake build system. + +### Indentation + +Code is indented by tabs, where a tab is 8 spaces. Each opening scope increases +the indentation level. + +```cmake +if(CONDITION) + doit() +endif() +``` + +### Spaces + +There must be no space between keywords and their opening brace. While this is +the same as in our C codebase for function calls, this also applies to +conditional keywords. This is done to avoid the awkward-looking `else ()` +statement. + +```cmake +if(CONDITION) + doit() +else() + dothat() +endif() +``` + +### Case + +While CMake is completely case-insensitive when it comes to function calls, we +want to agree on a common coding style for this. To reduce the danger of +repetitive strain injuries, all function calls should be lower-case (NB: this is +not currently the case yet, but introduced as a new coding style by this +document). + +Variables are written all-uppercase. In contrast to functions, variables are +case-sensitive in CMake. As CMake itself uses upper-case variables in all +places, we should follow suit and do the same. + +Control flow keywords must be all lowercase. In contrast to that, test keywords +must be all uppercase: + +```cmake +if(NOT CONDITION) + doit() +elseif(FOO AND BAR) + dothat() +endif() +``` + +### Targets + +CMake code should not use functions that modify the global scope but prefer +their targeted equivalents, instead. E.g. instead of using +`include_directories()`, you must use `target_include_directories()`. An +exception to this rule is setting up global compiler flags like warnings or +flags required to set up the build type. + +### Dependencies + +Dependencies should not be discovered or set up in the main "CMakeLists.txt" +module. Instead, they should either have their own module in our top-level +"cmake/" directory or have a "CMakeLists.txt" in their respective "deps/" +directory in case it is a vendored library. All dependencies should expose +interface library targets that can be linked against with +`target_link_libraries()`. |