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author | Vikas Gorur <vikas@zresearch.com> | 2009-02-18 17:36:07 +0530 |
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committer | Vikas Gorur <vikas@zresearch.com> | 2009-02-18 17:36:07 +0530 |
commit | 77adf4cd648dce41f89469dd185deec6b6b53a0b (patch) | |
tree | 02e155a5753b398ee572b45793f889b538efab6b /doc/coding-standard.tex | |
parent | f3b2e6580e5663292ee113c741343c8a43ee133f (diff) |
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-rw-r--r-- | doc/coding-standard.tex | 361 |
1 files changed, 361 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/coding-standard.tex b/doc/coding-standard.tex new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ed9d920ec --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/coding-standard.tex @@ -0,0 +1,361 @@ +\documentclass{article}[12pt] +\usepackage{color} + +\begin{document} + + +\hrule +\begin{center}\textbf{\Large{GlusterFS Coding Standards}}\end{center} +\begin{center}\textbf{\large{\textcolor{red}{Z} Research}}\end{center} +\begin{center}{July 14, 2008}\end{center} +\hrule + +\vspace{8ex} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Structure definitions should have a comment per member} + +Every member in a structure definition must have a comment about its +purpose. The comment should be descriptive without being overly verbose. + +\vspace{2ex} +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + gf_lock_t lock; /* lock */ +\end{verbatim} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + DBTYPE access_mode; /* access mode for accessing + * the databases, can be + * DB_HASH, DB_BTREE + * (option access-mode <mode>) + */ +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Declare all variables at the beginning of the function} +All local variables in a function must be declared immediately after the +opening brace. This makes it easy to keep track of memory that needs to be freed +during exit. It also helps debugging, since gdb cannot handle variables +declared inside loops or other such blocks. + +\section*{$\bullet$ Always initialize local variables} +Every local variable should be initialized to a sensible default value +at the point of its declaration. All pointers should be initialized to NULL, +and all integers should be zero or (if it makes sense) an error value. + +\vspace{2ex} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + int ret = 0; + char *databuf = NULL; + int _fd = -1; +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Initialization should always be done with a constant value} +Never use a non-constant expression as the initialization value for a variable. + +\vspace{2ex} + +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + pid_t pid = frame->root->pid; + char *databuf = malloc (1024); +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Validate all arguments to a function} +All pointer arguments to a function must be checked for \texttt{NULL}. +A macro named \texttt{VALIDATE} (in \texttt{common-utils.h}) +takes one argument, and if it is \texttt{NULL}, writes a log message and +jumps to a label called \texttt{err} after setting op\_ret and op\_errno +appropriately. It is recommended to use this template. + +\vspace{2ex} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + VALIDATE(frame); + VALIDATE(this); + VALIDATE(inode); +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Never rely on precedence of operators} +Never write code that relies on the precedence of operators to execute +correctly. Such code can be hard to read and someone else might not +know the precedence of operators as accurately as you do. +\vspace{2ex} + +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + if (op_ret == -1 && errno != ENOENT) +\end{verbatim} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + if ((op_ret == -1) && (errno != ENOENT)) +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Use exactly matching types} +Use a variable of the exact type declared in the manual to hold the +return value of a function. Do not use an ``equivalent'' type. + +\vspace{2ex} + +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + int len = strlen (path); +\end{verbatim} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + size_t len = strlen (path); +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Never write code such as \texttt{foo->bar->baz}; check every pointer} +Do not write code that blindly follows a chain of pointer +references. Any pointer in the chain may be \texttt{NULL} and thus +cause a crash. Verify that each pointer is non-null before following +it. + +\section*{$\bullet$ Check return value of all functions and system calls} +The return value of all system calls and API functions must be checked +for success or failure. + +\vspace{2ex} +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + close (fd); +\end{verbatim} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + op_ret = close (_fd); + if (op_ret == -1) { + gf_log (this->name, GF_LOG_ERROR, + "close on file %s failed (%s)", real_path, + strerror (errno)); + op_errno = errno; + goto out; + } +\end{verbatim} + + +\section*{$\bullet$ Gracefully handle failure of malloc} +GlusterFS should never crash or exit due to lack of memory. If a +memory allocation fails, the call should be unwound and an error +returned to the user. + +\section*{$\bullet$ Use result args and reserve the return value to indicate success or failure} +The return value of every functions must indicate success or failure (unless +it is impossible for the function to fail --- e.g., boolean functions). If +the function needs to return additional data, it must be returned using a +result (pointer) argument. + +\vspace{2ex} +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + int32_t dict_get_int32 (dict_t *this, char *key); +\end{verbatim} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + int dict_get_int32 (dict_t *this, char *key, int32_t *val); +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ Always use the `n' versions of string functions} +Unless impossible, use the length-limited versions of the string functions. + +\vspace{2ex} +\textsl{Bad}: + +\begin{verbatim} + strcpy (entry_path, real_path); +\end{verbatim} + +\textsl{Good}: + +\begin{verbatim} + strncpy (entry_path, real_path, entry_path_len); +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{$\bullet$ No dead or commented code} +There must be no dead code (code to which control can never be passed) or +commented out code in the codebase. + +\section*{$\bullet$ Only one unwind and return per function} +There must be only one exit out of a function. \texttt{UNWIND} and return +should happen at only point in the function. + +\section*{$\bullet$ Keep functions small} +Try to keep functions small. Two to three screenfulls (80 lines per screen) is +considered a reasonable limit. If a function is very long, try splitting it +into many little helper functions. + +\vspace{2ex} +\textsl{Example for a helper function}: +\begin{verbatim} + static int + same_owner (posix_lock_t *l1, posix_lock_t *l2) + { + return ((l1->client_pid == l2->client_pid) && + (l1->transport == l2->transport)); + } +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{Style issues} + +\subsection*{Brace placement} +Use K\&R/Linux style of brace placement for blocks. + +\textsl{Example}: +\begin{verbatim} + int some_function (...) + { + if (...) { + /* ... */ + } else if (...) { + /* ... */ + } else { + /* ... */ + } + + do { + /* ... */ + } while (cond); + } +\end{verbatim} + +\subsection*{Indentation} +Use \textbf{eight} spaces for indenting blocks. Ensure that your +file contains only spaces and not tab characters. You can do this +in Emacs by selecting the entire file (\texttt{C-x h}) and +running \texttt{M-x untabify}. + +To make Emacs indent lines automatically by eight spaces, add this +line to your \texttt{.emacs}: + +\begin{verbatim} + (add-hook 'c-mode-hook (lambda () (c-set-style "linux"))) +\end{verbatim} + +\subsection*{Comments} +Write a comment before every function describing its purpose (one-line), +its arguments, and its return value. Mention whether it is an internal +function or an exported function. + +Write a comment before every structure describing its purpose, and +write comments about each of its members. + +Follow the style shown below for comments, since such comments +can then be automatically extracted by doxygen to generate +documentation. + +\textsl{Example}: +\begin{verbatim} +/** + * hash_name -hash function for filenames + * @par: parent inode number + * @name: basename of inode + * @mod: number of buckets in the hashtable + * + * @return: success: bucket number + * failure: -1 + * + * Not for external use. + */ +\end{verbatim} + +\subsection*{Indicating critical sections} +To clearly show regions of code which execute with locks held, use +the following format: + +\begin{verbatim} + pthread_mutex_lock (&mutex); + { + /* code */ + } + pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex); +\end{verbatim} + +\section*{A skeleton fop function} +This is the recommended template for any fop. In the beginning come +the initializations. After that, the `success' control flow should be +linear. Any error conditions should cause a \texttt{goto} to a single +point, \texttt{out}. At that point, the code should detect the error +that has occured and do appropriate cleanup. + +\begin{verbatim} +int32_t +sample_fop (call_frame_t *frame, + xlator_t *this, + ...) +{ + char * var1 = NULL; + int32_t op_ret = -1; + int32_t op_errno = 0; + DIR * dir = NULL; + struct posix_fd * pfd = NULL; + + VALIDATE_OR_GOTO (frame, out); + VALIDATE_OR_GOTO (this, out); + + /* other validations */ + + dir = opendir (...); + + if (dir == NULL) { + op_errno = errno; + gf_log (this->name, GF_LOG_ERROR, + "opendir failed on %s (%s)", loc->path, + strerror (op_errno)); + goto out; + } + + /* another system call */ + if (...) { + op_errno = ENOMEM; + gf_log (this->name, GF_LOG_ERROR, + "out of memory :("); + goto out; + } + + /* ... */ + + out: + if (op_ret == -1) { + + /* check for all the cleanup that needs to be + done */ + + if (dir) { + closedir (dir); + dir = NULL; + } + + if (pfd) { + if (pfd->path) + FREE (pfd->path); + FREE (pfd); + pfd = NULL; + } + } + + STACK_UNWIND (frame, op_ret, op_errno, fd); + return 0; +} +\end{verbatim} + +\end{document} |