source: vendor/3.5.0/README.Coding

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Samba 3.5.0: Initial import

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1Coding conventions in the Samba tree
2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3
4.. contents::
5
6===========
7Quick Start
8===========
9
10Coding style guidelines are about reducing the number of unnecessary
11reformatting patches and making things easier for developers to work together.
12You don't have to like them or even agree with them, but once put in place
13we all have to abide by them (or vote to change them). However, coding
14style should never outweigh coding itself and so the guidelines
15described here are hopefully easy enough to follow as they are very
16common and supported by tools and editors.
17
18The basic style, also mentioned in prog_guide4.txt, is the Linux kernel coding
19style (See Documentation/CodingStyle in the kernel source tree). This closely
20matches what most Samba developers use already anyways.
21
22But to save you the trouble of reading the Linux kernel style guide, here
23are the highlights.
24
25* Maximum Line Width is 80 Characters
26 The reason is not for people with low-res screens but rather sticking
27 to 80 columns prevents you from easily nesting more than one level of
28 if statements or other code blocks. Use source3/script/count_80_col.pl
29 to check your changes.
30
31* Use 8 Space Tabs to Indent
32 No whitespace filler.
33
34* No Trailing Whitespace
35 Use source3/script/strip_trail_ws.pl to clean you files before committing.
36
37* Follow the K&R guidelines. We won't go throw them all here. You have
38 a copy of "The C Programming Language" anyways right? You can also use
39 the format_indent.sh script found in source3/script/ if all else fails.
40
41
42
43============
44Editor Hints
45============
46
47Emacs
48-----
49Add the follow to your $HOME/.emacs file:
50
51 (add-hook 'c-mode-hook
52 (lambda ()
53 (c-set-style "linux")
54 (c-toggle-auto-state)))
55
56
57Vi
58--
59(Thanks to SATOH Fumiyasu <fumiyas@osstech.jp> for these hints):
60
61For the basic vi editor included with all variants of \*nix, add the
62following to $HOME/.exrc:
63
64 set tabstop=8
65 set shiftwidth=8
66
67For Vim, the following settings in $HOME/.vimrc will also deal with
68displaying trailing whitespace::
69
70 if has("syntax") && (&t_Co > 2 || has("gui_running"))
71 syntax on
72 function! ActivateInvisibleCharIndicator()
73 syntax match TrailingSpace "[ \t]\+$" display containedin=ALL
74 highlight TrailingSpace ctermbg=Red
75 endf
76 autocmd BufNewFile,BufRead * call ActivateInvisibleCharIndicator()
77 endif
78 " Show tabs, trailing whitespace, and continued lines visually
79 set list listchars=tab:»·,trail:·,extends:

80
81 " highlight overly long lines same as TODOs.
82 set textwidth=80
83 autocmd BufNewFile,BufRead *.c,*.h exec 'match Todo /\%>' . &textwidth . 'v.\+/'
84
85
86=========================
87FAQ & Statement Reference
88=========================
89
90Comments
91--------
92
93Comments should always use the standard C syntax. C++
94style comments are not currently allowed.
95
96
97Indention & Whitespace & 80 columns
98-----------------------------------
99
100To avoid confusion, indentations are to be 8 character with tab (not
1018 ' ' characters. When wrapping parameters for function calls,
102align the parameter list with the first parameter on the previous line.
103Use tabs to get as close as possible and then fill in the final 7
104characters or less with whitespace. For example,
105
106 var1 = foo(arg1, arg2,
107 arg3);
108
109The previous example is intended to illustrate alignment of function
110parameters across lines and not as encourage for gratuitous line
111splitting. Never split a line before columns 70 - 79 unless you
112have a really good reason. Be smart about formatting.
113
114
115If, switch, & Code blocks
116-------------------------
117
118Always follow an 'if' keyword with a space but don't include additional
119spaces following or preceding the parentheses in the conditional.
120This is good:
121
122 if (x == 1)
123
124This is bad:
125
126 if ( x == 1 )
127
128Yes we have a lot of code that uses the second form and we are trying
129to clean it up without being overly intrusive.
130
131Note that this is a rule about parentheses following keywords and not
132functions. Don't insert a space between the name and left parentheses when
133invoking functions.
134
135Braces for code blocks used by for, if, switch, while, do..while, etc.
136should begin on the same line as the statement keyword and end on a line
137of their own. NOTE: Functions are different and the beginning left brace
138should begin on a line of its own.
139
140If the beginning statement has to be broken across lines due to length,
141the beginning brace should be on a line of its own.
142
143The exception to the ending rule is when the closing brace is followed by
144another language keyword such as else or the closing while in a do..while
145loop.
146
147Good examples::
148
149 if (x == 1) {
150 printf("good\n");
151 }
152
153 for (x=1;
154 x<10;
155 x++)
156 {
157 print("%d\n", x);
158 }
159
160 do {
161 printf("also good\n");
162 } while (1);
163
164Bad examples::
165
166 while (1)
167 {
168 print("I'm in a loop!\n"); }
169
170
171Goto
172----
173
174While many people have been academically taught that goto's are fundamentally
175evil, they can greatly enhance readability and reduce memory leaks when used
176as the single exit point from a function. But in no Samba world what so ever
177is a goto outside of a function or block of code a good idea.
178
179Good Examples::
180
181 int function foo(int y)
182 {
183 int *z = NULL;
184 int ret = 0;
185
186 if ( y < 10 ) {
187 z = malloc(sizeof(int)*y);
188 if (!z) {
189 ret = 1;
190 goto done;
191 }
192 }
193
194 print("Allocated %d elements.\n", y);
195
196 done:
197 if (z)
198 free(z);
199
200 return ret;
201 }
202
203
204Checking Pointer Values
205-----------------------
206
207When invoking functions that return pointer values, either of the following
208are acceptable. Use you best judgement and choose the more readable option.
209Remember that many other people will review it.::
210
211 if ((x = malloc(sizeof(short)*10)) == NULL ) {
212 fprintf(stderr, "Unable to alloc memory!\n");
213 }
214
215or::
216
217 x = malloc(sizeof(short)*10);
218 if (!x) {
219 fprintf(stderr, "Unable to alloc memory!\n");
220 }
221
222
223Primitive Data Types
224--------------------
225
226Samba has large amounts of historical code which makes use of data types
227commonly supported by the C99 standard. However, at the time such types
228as boolean and exact width integers did not exist and Samba developers
229were forced to provide their own. Now that these types are guaranteed to
230be available either as part of the compiler C99 support or from lib/replace/,
231new code should adhere to the following conventions:
232
233 * Booleans are of type "bool" (not BOOL)
234 * Boolean values are "true" and "false" (not True or False)
235 * Exact width integers are of type [u]int[8|16|32|64]_t
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