mirror of
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268 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
268 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
Coding style guidelines for Genode
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##################################
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Things to avoid
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===============
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Please avoid using pre-processor macros. C++ provides language
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features for almost any case, for which a C programmer uses
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macros.
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:Defining constants:
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Use 'enum' instead of '#define'
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! enum { MAX_COLORS = 3 };
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! enum {
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! COLOR_RED = 1,
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! COLOR_BLUE = 2,
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! COLOR_GREEN = 3
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! };
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:Meta-programming:
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Use templates instead of pre-processor macros.
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In contrast to macros, templates are type-safe
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and fit well with the implementation syntax.
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:Conditional-code inclusion:
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Please avoid C-hacker style '#ifdef CONFIG_PLATFROM' - '#endif'
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constructs but instead, factor-out the encapsulated code into a
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separate file and introduce a proper function interface.
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The build process should then be used to select the appropriate
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platform-specific files at compile time. Keep platform dependent
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code as small as possible. Never pollute existing generic code
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with platform-specific code.
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Header of each file
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===================
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! /*
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! * \brief Short description of the file
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! * \author Original author
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! * \date Creation date
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! *
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! * Some more detailed description. This is optional.
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! */
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Identifiers
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===========
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* First character of class names uppercase, any other characters lowercase
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* Function and variable names lower case
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* 'Multi_word_identifiers' via underline
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* 'CONSTANTS' upper case
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* Private and protected members of a class begin with an '_'-character
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* Accessor functions are named after their corresponding attributes:
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! /**
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! * Request private member variable
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! */
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! int value() { return _value; }
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!
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! /**
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! * Set the private member variable
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! */
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! void value(int value) { _value = value; }
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Indentation
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===========
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* Use one tab per indentation step. *Do not mix tabs and spaces!*
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* Use no tabs except at the beginning of a line.
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* Use spaces for alignment
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See [http://web.archive.org/web/20050311153439/http://electroly.com/mt/archives/000002.html]
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for a more detailed description.
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This way, everyone can set his preferred tabsize in his editor
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and the source code always looks good.
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Switch statements
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Switch-statement blocks should be indented as follows:
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! switch (color) {
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!
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! case BLUE:
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! <tab>break;
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!
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! case GREEN:
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! <tab>{
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! <tab><tab>int declaration_required;
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! <tab><tab>...
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! <tab>}
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!
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! default:
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! }
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Please note that the case labels have the same indentation
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level as the switch statement. This avoids a two-level
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indentation-change at the end of the switch block that
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would occur otherwise.
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Vertical whitespaces
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====================
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In header files:
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* Leave two empty lines between classes.
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* Leave one empty line between member functions.
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In implementation files:
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* Leave two empty lines between functions.
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Braces
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======
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* Braces after class, struct and function names are placed at a new line:
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! class Foo
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! {
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! public:
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!
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! void function(void)
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! {
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! ...
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! }
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! };
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except for single-line functions.
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* All other occurrences of open braces (for 'if', 'while', 'do', 'for',
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'namespace', 'enum' etc.) are at the end of a line:
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! if (flag) {
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! ..
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! } else {
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! ..
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! }
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* Surprisingly, one-line functions should be written on one line.
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Typically, this applies for accessor functions.
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If slightly more space than one line is needed, indent as follows:
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! int heavy_computation(int a, int lot, int of, int args) {
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! return a + lot + of + args; }
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Comments
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========
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Function header
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each public or protected (but no private) function in a header-file should be
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prepended by a header as follows:
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! /**
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! * Short description
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! *
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! * \param a meaning of parameter a
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! * \param b meaning of parameter b
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! * \param c,d meaning of parameters c and d
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! *
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! * \return meaning of return value
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! * \retval 0 meaning of the return value 0
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! *
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! * More detailed information about the function. This is optional.
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! */
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Descriptions of parameters and return values should be lower-case and brief.
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More elaborative descriptions can be documented in the text area below.
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In implementation files, only local and private functions should feature
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function headers.
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Single-line comments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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! /* use this syntax for single line comments */
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A single-line comment should be prepended by an empty line.
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Single-line comments should be short - no complete sentences. Use lower-case.
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C++-style comments ('//') should only be used for temporarily commenting-out
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code. Such commented-out garbage is easy to 'grep' and there are handy
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'vim'-macros available for creating and removing such comments.
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Variable descriptions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Use the same syntax as for single-line comments. Insert two or more
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spaces before your comment starts.
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! int size; /* in kilobytes */
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Multi-line comments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Multi-line comments are more detailed descriptions in the form of
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sentences.
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A multi-line comment should be enclosed by empty lines.
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! /*
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! * This is some tricky
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! * algorithm that works
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! * as follows:
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! * ...
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! */
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The first and last line of a multi-line comment contain no words.
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Source-code blocks
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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For structuring your source code, you can entitle the different
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parts of a file like this:
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! <- two empty lines
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!
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! /********************
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! ** Event handlers **
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! ********************/
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! <- one empty line
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Note the two stars at the left and right. There are two of them to
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make the visible width of the border match its height (typically,
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characters are ca. twice as high as wide).
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A source-code block header represents a headline for the following
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code. To couple this headline with the following code closer than
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with previous code, leave two empty lines above and one empty line
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below the source-code block header.
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Order of public, protected, and private blocks
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==============================================
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For consistency reasons, use the following class layout:
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! class Sandstein
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! {
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! private:
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! ...
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! protected:
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! ...
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! public:
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! };
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Typically, the private section contains member variables that are used
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by public accessor functions below. In this common case, we only reference
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symbols that are defined above as it is done when programming plain C.
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Leave one empty line (or a line that contains only a brace) above and below
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a 'private', 'protected', or 'public' label. This also applies when the
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label is followed by a source-code block header.
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