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libkernaux/CONTRIBUTING.md
2022-12-01 19:42:43 +00:00

5.1 KiB

Common

  • Add your name to COPYING.
  • Don't add your name to AUTHORS - it's for maintainers.
  • Add copyright notice in the beginning of changed files except the headers.
  • If you change the behavior (even just fix a bug) of libkernaux (stable) or libc, add a record to ChangeLog.

Prohibitions:

  • Don't commit binary files
  • Don't commit configuration files of your editor or IDE
  • Don't use encodings other than ASCII and UTF-8
  • Don't use alphabets other than Latin
  • Don't use languages other than English
  • Don't use tabulations (I don't hate tabs, but people can not use them properly)
  • Don't leave trailing whitespaces
  • Don't forget the newline character in the end of files

The following statements are recommendations, but highly encouraged:

  • Write documentation
  • Write tests
  • Keep lines less than 80 characters long for better experience on split screen

Programming mistakes

  • Always check documentation, manuals and specifications

Avoid stupid errors with:

  • Manual memory management
    • malloc may return NULL
    • Memory leak (forget to free)
    • Use after free/realloc
    • Double free/realloc
    • freeing/reallocating unallocated memory
    • Changing the original pointer to the allocated memory (use const!)
  • NULL pointers and nil/None/whatever objects
  • Division by zero
  • Pointer arithmetic - consider type size
  • Type sizes (like long on 32-bit and 64-bit)
  • Integer arithmetic overflow
  • Bit shift
  • Endianness (byte order)
  • Data packing
  • Data alignment
  • Thread safety
  • Undefined behavior
  • Logical expressions (tautology, whatever)
  • Checking for an error (return value, pointer argument, whatever)
  • Use of not fully initialized data
  • Not reading beyond a buffer, array or string
    • The index of the last item, which is less than the buffer size
    • Negative indices
    • The terminating null character in a string
  • Allowed values of arguments
  • Possible values of parameters
  • Operator precedence
  • Default case in switch statements
  • Braces (curly brackets) around code blocks

Things to review periodically

  • git grep -i fixme
  • git grep -i todo
  • git grep -i cppcheck-suppress
  • git grep -i rubocop:disable

C language

Use cppcheck.

  • Name regular functions (not methods) and variables in lower snake case (example: foo_bar).

  • Name macros in upper snake case (example: FOO_BAR).

  • Name types (structures, unions, enumerations and type definitions) in Pascal case (example: FooBar).

  • Name nested types in Pascal case and with the prefix of the surrounding type in Pascal case, separate type names with underscores (example: FooBar_CarCdr).

  • Name methods (functions that belong to a specific type) in lower snake case and with the prefix of the type name in Pascal case (example: FooBar_car_cdr).

  • Name public (defined in the headers and exported as symbols) regular functions (not methods) and variables with the prefix kernaux_ (example: kernaux_foo_bar).

  • Name public (defined in the headers) macros with the prefix KERNAUX_ (example: KERNAUX_FOO_BAR).

  • Name public (defined in the headers) types with the prefix KernAux_ (example: KernAux_FooBar).

  • Name public (defined in the headers) with the prefix KernAux_ and with the prefix of the surrounding type, separate type names with underscore (example: KernAux_FooBar_CarCdr).

  • Name public (defined in the headers) methods with the prefix KernAux_ and with the prefix of the type name (example: KernAux_FooBar_car_cdr).

  • Create typedefs with the names of related structs. Use this name with a prefix struct to declare the data itself, withoth the prefix to declare a pointer or an array:

typedef struct FooBar { int car; } *FooBar;

static struct FooBar FooBar_create();
static void FooBar FooBar_init(FooBar foobar);

static void FooBar_do_something(FooBar foobar);

// Initialize:
struct FooBar foobar = FooBar_create();
// or
struct FooBar foobar;
FooBar_init(&foobar);

// Use:
FooBar foobar_ptr = &foobar;
FooBar_do_something(&foobar);
typedef struct FooBar { int car; } FooBar[1];

static struct FooBar FooBar_create();
static void FooBar FooBar_init(FooBar foobar);

static void FooBar_do_something(FooBar foobar);

// Initialize:
FooBar foobar = { FooBar_create() };
// or
FooBar foobar;
FooBar_init(foobar);

// Use:
FooBar_do_something(foobar);
  • Mark variables and parameters with const if you don't plan to modify them
  • Only omit braces (curly brackets) of a block if it's statement is placed on the same line as conditional statement:
// Good:
if (foo) return bar;
if (foo) {
    return bar;
}

// Bad:
if (foo)
    return bar;

Python

Nothing here yet.

Ruby

  • Freeze objects if you don't plan to modify them

Matz's Ruby interpreter

Use RuboCop. See bindings/ruby/.rubocop.yml

mruby

Use RuboCop. See bindings/mruby/.rubocop.yml

Rust

Use rustfmt and Clippy. See bindings/rust/rustfmt.toml