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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
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  <body>
    <h1>Contributor guidelines</h1>

    <ul id="toc"></ul>

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    <h2><a id="patches">General tips for contributing patches</a></h2>
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    <ol>
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      <li>
        <p>Discuss any large changes on the mailing list first.  Post patches
        early and listen to feedback.</p>
      </li>
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      <li>
        <p>Official upstream repository is kept in git
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        (<code>https://libvirt.org/git/libvirt.git</code>) and is browsable
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        along with other libvirt-related repositories
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        (e.g. libvirt-python) <a href="https://libvirt.org/git/">online</a>.</p>
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      </li>
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      <li>
        <p>Patches to translations are maintained via
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        the <a href="https://fedora.zanata.org/">zanata project</a>.
        If you want to fix a translation in a .po file, join the
        appropriate language team. The libvirt release process
        automatically pulls the latest version of each translation
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        file from zanata.</p>
      </li>
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      <li><p>Post patches using <code>git send-email</code>, with git
        rename detection enabled.  You need a one-time setup of:</p>
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<pre>
  git config diff.renames true
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</pre>
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        <p>Also, for code motion patches, you may find that <code>git
        diff --patience</code> provides an easier-to-read patch.
        However, the usual workflow of libvirt developer is:</p>
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<pre>
  git checkout master
  git pull
  git checkout -t origin -b workbranch
  Hack, committing any changes along the way
</pre>
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        <p>More hints on compiling can be
        found <a href="compiling.html">here</a>.  When you want to
        post your patches:</p>
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<pre>
  git pull --rebase
  (fix any conflicts)
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  git send-email --cover-letter --no-chain-reply-to --annotate \
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                 --confirm=always --to=libvir-list@redhat.com master
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</pre>
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        <p>For a single patch you can omit
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        <code>--cover-letter</code>, but a series of two or more
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        patches needs a cover letter.</p>
        <p>Note that the <code>git send-email</code> subcommand may not
        be in the main git package and using it may require installation
        of a separate package, for example the "git-email" package in
        Fedora and Debian.  If this is your first time using
        <code>git send-email</code>, you might need to configure it to
        point it to your SMTP server with something like:</p>
<pre>
  git config --global sendemail.smtpServer stmp.youremailprovider.net
</pre>
        <p>If you get tired of typing
        <code>--to=libvir-list@redhat.com</code> all the time, you can
        configure that to be automatically handled as well:</p>
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<pre>
  git config sendemail.to libvir-list@redhat.com
</pre>
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        <p>As a rule, patches should be sent to the mailing list only: all
        developers are subscribed to libvir-list and read it regularly, so
        please don't CC individual developers unless they've explicitly
        asked you to.</p>
        <p>Avoid using mail clients for sending patches, as most of them
        will mangle the messages in some way, making them unusable for our
        purposes.  Gmail and other Web-based mail clients are particularly
        bad at this.</p>
        <p>If everything went well, your patch should show up on the
        <a href="https://www.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/">libvir-list
        archives</a> in a matter of minutes; if you still can't find it on
        there after an hour or so, you should double-check your setup.  Note
        that your very first post to the mailing list will be subject to
        moderation, and it's not uncommon for that to take around a day.</p>
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        <p>Please follow this as close as you can, especially the rebase and
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        <code>git send-email</code> part, as it makes life easier for other
        developers to review your patch set.</p>
        <p>One should avoid sending patches as attachments,
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        but rather send them in email body along with commit message. If a
        developer is sending another version of the patch (e.g. to address
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        review comments), they are advised to note differences to previous
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        versions after the <code>---</code> line in the patch so that it helps
        reviewers but doesn't become part of git history. Moreover, such patch
        needs to be prefixed correctly with
        <code>--subject-prefix=PATCHv2</code> appended to <code>git
            send-email</code> (substitute <code>v2</code> with the correct
        version if needed though).</p>
      </li>

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      <li><p>In your commit message, make the summary line reasonably
          short (60 characters is typical), followed by a blank line,
          followed by any longer description of why your patch makes
          sense.  If the patch fixes a regression, and you know what
          commit introduced the problem, mentioning that is useful.
          If the patch resolves a bugzilla report, mentioning the URL
          of the bug number is useful; but also summarize the issue
          rather than making all readers follow the link.  You can use
          'git shortlog -30' to get an idea of typical summary lines.
        </p>
      </li>

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      <li><p>Contributors to libvirt projects <strong>must</strong>
          assert that they are in compliance with the
          <a href="https://developercertificate.org/">Developer
          Certificate of Origin 1.1</a>. This is achieved by adding
          a "Signed-off-by" line containing the contributor's name
          and e-mail to every commit message. The presence
          of this line attests that the contributor has read the
          above lined DCO and agrees with its statements.
      </p></li>

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      <li><p>Split large changes into a series of smaller patches,
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        self-contained if possible, with an explanation of each patch
        and an explanation of how the sequence of patches fits
        together. Moreover, please keep in mind that it's required to
        be able to compile cleanly (<b>including</b> <code>make
        check</code> and <code>make syntax-check</code>) after each
        patch.  A feature does not have to work until the end of a
        series, but intermediate patches must compile and not cause
        test-suite failures (this is to preserve the usefulness
        of <code>git bisect</code>, among other things).</p>
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      </li>
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      <li>
        <p>Make sure your patches apply against libvirt GIT.  Developers
        only follow GIT and don't care much about released versions.</p>
      </li>

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      <li><p>Run the automated tests on your code before submitting any changes.
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          In particular, configure with compile warnings set to
          -Werror.  This is done automatically for a git checkout; from a
          tarball, use:</p>
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<pre>
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  ./configure --enable-werror
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</pre>
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        <p>
          and run the tests:
        </p>
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<pre>
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  make check
  make syntax-check
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  make -C tests valgrind
</pre>
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        <p><a href="http://valgrind.org/">Valgrind</a> is a test that checks
        for memory management issues, such as leaks or use of uninitialized
        variables.
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        </p>
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        <p>
          Some tests are skipped by default in a development environment,
          based on the time they take in comparison to the likelihood
          that those tests will turn up problems during incremental builds.
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          These tests default to being run when building from a
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          tarball or with the configure option --enable-expensive-tests;
          you can also force a one-time toggle of these tests by
          setting VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE to 0 or 1 at make time, as in:
        </p>
<pre>
  make check VIR_TEST_EXPENSIVE=1
</pre>
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        <p>
          If you encounter any failing tests, the VIR_TEST_DEBUG
          environment variable may provide extra information to debug
          the failures. Larger values of VIR_TEST_DEBUG may provide
          larger amounts of information:
        </p>
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<pre>
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  VIR_TEST_DEBUG=1 make check    (or)
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  VIR_TEST_DEBUG=2 make check
</pre>
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        <p>
          When debugging failures during development, it is possible
          to focus in on just the failing subtests by using TESTS and
          VIR_TEST_RANGE:
        </p>

<pre>
  make check VIR_TEST_DEBUG=1 VIR_TEST_RANGE=3-5 TESTS=qemuxml2argvtest
</pre>

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        <p>
          Also, individual tests can be run from inside the <code>tests/</code>
          directory, like:
        </p>
<pre>
  ./qemuxml2xmltest
</pre>
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        <p>
          If you are adding new test cases, or making changes that alter
          existing test output, you can use the environment variable
          VIR_TEST_REGENERATE_OUTPUT to quickly update the saved test data.
          Of course you still need to review the changes VERY CAREFULLY to
          ensure they are correct.
        </p>
<pre>
  VIR_TEST_REGENERATE_OUTPUT=1 ./qemuxml2argvtest
</pre>

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        <p>There is also a <code>./run</code> script at the top level,
          to make it easier to run programs that have not yet been
          installed, as well as to wrap invocations of various tests
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          under gdb or Valgrind.
        </p>

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        <p>When running our test suite it may happen that the test result is
        nondeterministic because of the test suite relying on a particular file
        in the system being accessible or having some specific value. To catch
        this kind of errors, the test suite has a module for that prints any
        path touched that fulfils constraints described above
        into a file. To enable it just set
        <code>VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS</code> environment variable.
        Then <code>VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS_OUTPUT</code> environment
        variable can alter location where the file is stored.</p>
<pre>
  VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS=1 VIR_TEST_FILE_ACCESS_OUTPUT="/tmp/file_access.txt" ./qemuxml2argvtest
</pre>

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      </li>
      <li><p>The Valgrind test should produce similar output to
          <code>make check</code>. If the output has traces within libvirt
          API's, then investigation is required in order to determine the
          cause of the issue. Output such as the following indicates some
          sort of leak:
        </p>
<pre>
==5414== 4 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 3 of 89
==5414==    at 0x4A0881C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==5414==    by 0x34DE0AAB85: xmlStrndup (in /usr/lib64/libxml2.so.2.7.8)
==5414==    by 0x4CC97A6: virDomainVideoDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:7410)
==5414==    by 0x4CD581D: virDomainDefParseXML (domain_conf.c:10188)
==5414==    by 0x4CD8C73: virDomainDefParseNode (domain_conf.c:10640)
==5414==    by 0x4CD8DDB: virDomainDefParse (domain_conf.c:10590)
==5414==    by 0x41CB1D: testCompareXMLToArgvHelper (qemuxml2argvtest.c:100)
==5414==    by 0x41E20F: virtTestRun (testutils.c:161)
==5414==    by 0x41C7CB: mymain (qemuxml2argvtest.c:866)
==5414==    by 0x41E84A: virtTestMain (testutils.c:723)
==5414==    by 0x34D9021734: (below main) (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so)
</pre>
        <p>In this example, the <code>virDomainDefParseXML()</code> had
           an error path where the <code>virDomainVideoDefPtr video</code>
           pointer was not properly disposed. By simply adding a
           <code>virDomainVideoDefFree(video);</code> in the error path,
           the issue was resolved.
        </p>

        <p>Another common mistake is calling a printing function, such as
           <code>VIR_DEBUG()</code> without initializing a variable to be
           printed.  The following example involved a call which could return
           an error, but not set variables passed by reference to the call.
           The solution was to initialize the variables prior to the call.
        </p>
<pre>
==4749== Use of uninitialised value of size 8
==4749==    at 0x34D904650B: _itoa_word (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so)
==4749==    by 0x34D9049118: vfprintf (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so)
==4749==    by 0x34D9108F60: __vasprintf_chk (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so)
==4749==    by 0x4CAEEF7: virVasprintf (stdio2.h:199)
==4749==    by 0x4C8A55E: virLogVMessage (virlog.c:814)
==4749==    by 0x4C8AA96: virLogMessage (virlog.c:751)
==4749==    by 0x4DA0056: virNetTLSContextCheckCertKeyUsage (virnettlscontext.c:225)
==4749==    by 0x4DA06DB: virNetTLSContextCheckCert (virnettlscontext.c:439)
==4749==    by 0x4DA1620: virNetTLSContextNew (virnettlscontext.c:562)
==4749==    by 0x4DA26FC: virNetTLSContextNewServer (virnettlscontext.c:927)
==4749==    by 0x409C39: testTLSContextInit (virnettlscontexttest.c:467)
==4749==    by 0x40AB8F: virtTestRun (testutils.c:161)
</pre>
        <p>Valgrind will also find some false positives or code paths
           which cannot be resolved by making changes to the libvirt code.
           For these paths, it is possible to add a filter to avoid the
           errors. For example:
        </p>
<pre>
==4643== 7 bytes in 1 blocks are possibly lost in loss record 4 of 20
==4643==    at 0x4A0881C: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==4643==    by 0x34D90853F1: strdup (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so)
==4643==    by 0x34EEC2C08A: ??? (in /usr/lib64/libnl.so.1.1)
==4643==    by 0x34EEC15B81: ??? (in /usr/lib64/libnl.so.1.1)
==4643==    by 0x34D8C0EE15: call_init.part.0 (in /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so)
==4643==    by 0x34D8C0EECF: _dl_init (in /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so)
==4643==    by 0x34D8C01569: ??? (in /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so)

</pre>
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        <p>In this instance, it is acceptable to modify the
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           <code>tests/.valgrind.supp</code> file in order to add a
           suppression filter. The filter should be unique enough to
           not suppress real leaks, but it should be generic enough to
           cover multiple code paths. The format of the entry can be
           found in the documentation found at the
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           <a href="http://valgrind.org/">Valgrind home page</a>.
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           The following trace was added to <code>tests/.valgrind.supp</code>
           in order to suppress the warning:
        </p>
<pre>
{
    dlInitMemoryLeak1
    Memcheck:Leak
    fun:?alloc
    ...
    fun:call_init.part.0
    fun:_dl_init
    ...
    obj:*/lib*/ld-2.*so*
}
</pre>
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      </li>
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      <li>
        <p>Update tests and/or documentation, particularly if you are adding
        a new feature or changing the output of a program.</p>
      </li>
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      <li>
        <p>Don't forget to update the <a href="news.html">release notes</a>
        by changing <code>docs/news.xml</code> if your changes are
        significant. All user-visible changes, such as adding new XML elements
        or fixing all but the most obscure bugs, must be (briefly) described
        in a release notes entry; changes that are only relevant to other
        libvirt developers, such as code refactoring, don't belong in the
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        release notes. Note that <code>docs/news.xml</code> should be updated
        in its own commit not to get in the way of backports.</p>
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      </li>
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    </ol>

    <p>
      There is more on this subject, including lots of links to background
      reading on the subject, on
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      <a href="http://people.redhat.com/rjones/how-to-supply-code-to-open-source-projects/">
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        Richard Jones' guide to working with open source projects</a>.
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    </p>

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    <h2><a id="tooling">Tooling</a></h2>
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    <p>
      libvirt includes support for some useful development tools right in its
      source repository, meaning users will be able to take advantage of them
      without little or no configuration. Examples include:
    </p>

    <ul>
      <li>
        <a href="https://github.com/jeaye/color_coded">color_coded</a>,
        a vim plugin for libclang-powered semantic syntax highlighting;
      </li>

      <li>
        <a href="http://valloric.github.io/YouCompleteMe/">YouCompleteMe</a>,
        a vim plugin for libclang-powered semantic code completion.
      </li>
    </ul>

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    <h2><a id="naming">Naming conventions</a></h2>
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    <p>
      When reading libvirt code, a number of different naming conventions will
      be evident due to various changes in thinking over the course of the
      project's lifetime. The conventions documented below should be followed
      when creating any entirely new files in libvirt. When working on existing
      files, while it is desirable to apply these conventions, keeping a
      consistent style with existing code in that particular file is generally
      more important. The overall guiding principal is that every file, enum,
      struct, function, macro and typedef name must have a 'vir' or 'VIR' prefix.
      All local scope variable names are exempt, and global variables are exempt,
      unless exported in a header file.
    </p>

    <dl>
      <dt>File names</dt>
      <dd>
        <p>
          File naming varies depending on the subdirectory. The preferred
          style is to have a 'vir' prefix, followed by a name which matches
          the name of the functions / objects inside the file. For example,
          a file containing an object  'virHashtable' is stored in files
          'virhashtable.c' and 'virhashtable.h'. Sometimes, methods which
          would otherwise be declared 'static' need to be exported for use
          by a test suite. For this purpose a second header file should be
          added with a suffix of 'priv', e.g. 'virhashtablepriv.h'. Use of
          underscores in file names is discouraged when using the 'vir'
          prefix style. The 'vir' prefix naming applies to src/util,
          src/rpc and tests/ directories. Most other directories do not
          follow this convention.
        </p>
      </dd>
      <dt>Enum type &amp; field names</dt>
      <dd>
        <p>
          All enums should have a 'vir' prefix in their typedef name,
          and each following word should have its first letter in
          uppercase. The enum name should match the typedef name with
          a leading underscore. The enum member names should be in all
          uppercase, and use an underscore to separate each word. The
          enum member name prefix should match the enum typedef name.
        </p>
        <pre>
    typedef enum _virSocketType virSocketType;
    enum _virSocketType {
        VIR_SOCKET_TYPE_IPV4,
        VIR_SOCKET_TYPE_IPV6,
    };</pre>
      </dd>
      <dt>Struct type names</dt>
      <dd>
        <p>
          All structs should have a 'vir' prefix in their typedef name,
          and each following word should have its first letter in
          uppercase. The struct name should be the same as the typedef
          name with a leading underscore. A second typedef should be
          given for a pointer to the struct with a 'Ptr' suffix.
        </p>
        <pre>
    typedef struct _virHashTable virHashTable;
    typedef virHashTable *virHashTablePtr;
    struct _virHashTable {
       ...
    };</pre>
      </dd>
      <dt>Function names</dt>
      <dd>
        <p>
          All functions should have a 'vir' prefix in their name,
          followed by one or more words with first letter of each
          word capitalized. Underscores should not be used in function
          names. If the function is operating on an object, then the
          function name prefix should match the object typedef name,
          otherwise it should match the filename. Following this
          comes the verb / action name, and finally an optional
          subject name. For example, given an object 'virHashTable',
          all functions should have a name 'virHashTable$VERB' or
          'virHashTable$VERB$SUBJECT", e.g. 'virHashTableLookup'
          or 'virHashTableGetValue'.
        </p>
      </dd>
      <dt>Macro names</dt>
      <dd>
        <p>
          All macros should have a "VIR" prefix in their name, followed
          by one or more uppercase words separated by underscores. The
          macro argument names should be in lowercase. Aside from having
          a "VIR" prefix there are no common practices for the rest of
          the macro name.
        </p>
      </dd>
    </dl>
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    <h2><a id="indent">Code indentation</a></h2>
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    <p>
      Libvirt's C source code generally adheres to some basic code-formatting
      conventions.  The existing code base is not totally consistent on this
      front, but we do prefer that contributed code be formatted similarly.
      In short, use spaces-not-TABs for indentation, use 4 spaces for each
      indentation level, and other than that, follow the K&amp;R style.
    </p>

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    <p>
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      If you use Emacs, the project includes a file .dir-locals.el
      that sets up the preferred indentation. If you use vim,
      append the following to your ~/.vimrc file:
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    </p>
<pre>
  set nocompatible
  filetype on
  set autoindent
  set smartindent
  set cindent
  set tabstop=8
  set shiftwidth=4
  set expandtab
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  set cinoptions=(0,:0,l1,t0,L3
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  filetype plugin indent on
  au FileType make setlocal noexpandtab
  au BufRead,BufNewFile *.am setlocal noexpandtab
  match ErrorMsg /\s\+$\| \+\ze\t/
</pre>
    <p>
      Or if you don't want to mess your ~/.vimrc up, you can save the above
      into a file called .lvimrc (not .vimrc) located at the root of libvirt
      source, then install a vim script from
      http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=1408,
      which will load the .lvimrc only when you edit libvirt code.
    </p>

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    <h2><a id="formatting">Code formatting (especially for new code)</a></h2>
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    <p>
      With new code, we can be even more strict.
      Please apply the following function (using GNU indent) to any new code.
      Note that this also gives you an idea of the type of spacing we prefer
      around operators and keywords:
    </p>

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<pre>
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  indent-libvirt()
  {
    indent -bad -bap -bbb -bli4 -br -ce -brs -cs -i4 -l75 -lc75 \
      -sbi4 -psl -saf -sai -saw -sbi4 -ss -sc -cdw -cli4 -npcs -nbc \
      --no-tabs "$@"
  }
</pre>

    <p>
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      Note that sometimes you'll have to post-process that output further, by
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      piping it through <code>expand -i</code>, since some leading TABs can get through.
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      Usually they're in macro definitions or strings, and should be converted
      anyhow.
    </p>

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    <p>
      Libvirt requires a C99 compiler for various reasons.  However,
      most of the code base prefers to stick to C89 syntax unless
      there is a compelling reason otherwise.  For example, it is
      preferable to use <code>/* */</code> comments rather
      than <code>//</code>.  Also, when declaring local variables, the
      prevailing style has been to declare them at the beginning of a
      scope, rather than immediately before use.
    </p>

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    <h2><a id="bracket_spacing">Bracket spacing</a></h2>
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    <p>
      The keywords <code>if</code>, <code>for</code>, <code>while</code>,
      and <code>switch</code> must have a single space following them
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      before the opening bracket. E.g.
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    </p>
    <pre>
      if(foo)   // Bad
      if (foo)  // Good
</pre>

    <p>
      Function implementations must <strong>not</strong> have any whitespace
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      between the function name and the opening bracket. E.g.
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    </p>
    <pre>
      int foo (int wizz)  // Bad
      int foo(int wizz)   // Good
</pre>

    <p>
      Function calls must <strong>not</strong> have any whitespace
556
      between the function name and the opening bracket. E.g.
557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565
    </p>
    <pre>
      bar = foo (wizz);  // Bad
      bar = foo(wizz);   // Good
</pre>

    <p>
      Function typedefs must <strong>not</strong> have any whitespace
      between the closing bracket of the function name and opening
566
      bracket of the arg list. E.g.
567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574
    </p>
    <pre>
      typedef int (*foo) (int wizz);  // Bad
      typedef int (*foo)(int wizz);   // Good
</pre>

    <p>
      There must not be any whitespace immediately following any
575
      opening bracket, or immediately prior to any closing bracket. E.g.
576 577 578 579 580 581
    </p>
    <pre>
      int foo( int wizz );  // Bad
      int foo(int wizz);    // Good
</pre>

582
    <h2><a id="comma">Commas</a></h2>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618

    <p>
      Commas should always be followed by a space or end of line, and
      never have leading space; this is enforced during 'make
      syntax-check'.
    </p>
    <pre>
      call(a,b ,c);// Bad
      call(a, b, c); // Good
</pre>

    <p>
      When declaring an enum or using a struct initializer that
      occupies more than one line, use a trailing comma.  That way,
      future edits to extend the list only have to add a line, rather
      than modify an existing line to add the intermediate comma.  Any
      sentinel enumerator value with a name ending in _LAST is exempt,
      since you would extend such an enum before the _LAST element.
      Another reason to favor trailing commas is that it requires less
      effort to produce via code generators.  Note that the syntax
      checker is unable to enforce a style of trailing commas, so
      there are counterexamples in existing code which do not use it;
      also, while C99 allows trailing commas, remember that JSON and
      XDR do not.
    </p>
    <pre>
      enum {
          VALUE_ONE,
          VALUE_TWO // Bad
      };
      enum {
          VALUE_THREE,
          VALUE_FOUR, // Good
      };
</pre>

619
    <h2><a id="semicolon">Semicolons</a></h2>
620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647

    <p>
      Semicolons should never have a space beforehand.  Inside the
      condition of a <code>for</code> loop, there should always be a
      space or line break after each semicolon, except for the special
      case of an infinite loop (although more infinite loops
      use <code>while</code>).  While not enforced, loop counters
      generally use post-increment.
    </p>
    <pre>
      for (i = 0 ;i &lt; limit ; ++i) { // Bad
      for (i = 0; i &lt; limit; i++) { // Good
      for (;;) { // ok
      while (1) { // Better
</pre>
    <p>
      Empty loop bodies are better represented with curly braces and a
      comment, although use of a semicolon is not currently rejected.
    </p>
    <pre>
      while ((rc = waitpid(pid, &amp;st, 0) == -1) &amp;&amp;
             errno == EINTR); // ok
      while ((rc = waitpid(pid, &amp;st, 0) == -1) &amp;&amp;
             errno == EINTR) { // Better
          /* nothing */
      }
</pre>

648
    <h2><a id="curly_braces">Curly braces</a></h2>
649 650

    <p>
651
      Omit the curly braces around an <code>if</code>, <code>while</code>,
652 653
      <code>for</code> etc. body only when both that body and the condition
      itself occupy a single line.  In every other case we require
654
      the braces.  This ensures that it is trivially easy to identify a
655
      single-<i>statement</i> loop: each has only one <i>line</i> in its body.
656 657
    </p>

658
<pre>
659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670
  while (expr)             // single line body; {} is forbidden
      single_line_stmt();
</pre>

<pre>
  while (expr(arg1,
              arg2))      // indentation makes it obvious it is single line,
      single_line_stmt(); // {} is optional (not enforced either way)
</pre>

<pre>
  while (expr1 &amp;&amp;
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         expr2) {         // multi-line, at same indentation, {} required
672
      single_line_stmt();
H
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673
  }
674
</pre>
675 676

    <p>
E
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677
      However, the moment your loop/if/else body extends on to a second
678 679 680 681 682 683
      line, for whatever reason (even if it's just an added comment), then
      you should add braces.  Otherwise, it would be too easy to insert a
      statement just before that comment (without adding braces), thinking
      it is already a multi-statement loop:
    </p>

684
<pre>
685 686
  while (true) // BAD! multi-line body with no braces
      /* comment... */
687 688
      single_line_stmt();
</pre>
689 690 691
    <p>
      Do this instead:
    </p>
692
<pre>
693 694
  while (true) { // Always put braces around a multi-line body.
      /* comment... */
695 696 697
      single_line_stmt();
  }
</pre>
698 699 700 701
    <p>
      There is one exception: when the second body line is not at the same
      indentation level as the first body line:
    </p>
702
<pre>
703
  if (expr)
704 705 706
      die("a diagnostic that would make this line"
          " extend past the 80-column limit"));
</pre>
707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717

    <p>
      It is safe to omit the braces in the code above, since the
      further-indented second body line makes it obvious that this is still
      a single-statement body.
    </p>

    <p>
      To reiterate, don't do this:
    </p>

718
<pre>
719 720 721
  if (expr)            // BAD: no braces around...
      while (expr_2) { // ... a multi-line body
          ...
722 723
      }
</pre>
724 725 726 727 728

    <p>
      Do this, instead:
    </p>

729
<pre>
730 731 732 733
  if (expr) {
      while (expr_2) {
          ...
      }
734 735
  }
</pre>
736 737 738 739

    <p>
      However, there is one exception in the other direction, when even a
      one-line block should have braces.  That occurs when that one-line,
740 741 742 743 744 745 746
      brace-less block is an <code>if</code> or <code>else</code>
      block, and the counterpart block <b>does</b> use braces.  In
      that case, put braces around both blocks.  Also, if
      the <code>else</code> block is much shorter than
      the <code>if</code> block, consider negating the
      <code>if</code>-condition and swapping the bodies, putting the
      short block first and making the longer, multi-line block be the
747
      <code>else</code> block.
748 749
    </p>

750
<pre>
751 752 753 754 755
  if (expr) {
      ...
      ...
  }
  else
756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764
      x = y;    // BAD: braceless "else" with braced "then",
                // and short block last

  if (expr)
      x = y;    // BAD: braceless "if" with braced "else"
  else {
      ...
      ...
  }
765
</pre>
766 767

    <p>
768 769
      Keeping braces consistent and putting the short block first is
      preferred, especially when the multi-line body is more than a
770 771 772 773 774
      few lines long, because it is easier to read and grasp the semantics of
      an if-then-else block when the simpler block occurs first, rather than
      after the more involved block:
    </p>

775
<pre>
776
  if (!expr) {
777
    x = y; // putting the smaller block first is more readable
778
  } else {
779 780
      ...
      ...
781 782
  }
</pre>
783 784

    <p>
785 786
      But if negating a complex condition is too ugly, then at least
      add braces:
787 788
    </p>

789
<pre>
790
  if (complex expr not worth negating) {
791 792 793 794
      ...
      ...
  } else {
      x = y;
795 796
  }
</pre>
797

798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828
    <p>Use hanging braces for compound statements: the opening brace
      of a compound statement should be on the same line as the
      condition being tested.  Only top-level function bodies, nested
      scopes, and compound structure declarations should ever have {
      on a line by itself.
    </p>

<pre>
  void
  foo(int a, int b)
  {                          // correct - function body
      int 2d[][] = {
        {                    // correct - complex initialization
          1, 2,
        },
      };
      if (a)
      {                      // BAD: compound brace on its own line
          do_stuff();
      }
      {                      // correct - nested scope
          int tmp;
          if (a &lt; b) {       // correct - hanging brace
              tmp = b;
              b = a;
              a = tmp;
          }
      }
  }
</pre>

829
    <h2><a id="preprocessor">Preprocessor</a></h2>
830

831 832 833 834
    <p>Macros defined with an ALL_CAPS name should generally be
      assumed to be unsafe with regards to arguments with side-effects
      (that is, MAX(a++, b--) might increment a or decrement b too
      many or too few times).  Exceptions to this rule are explicitly
835
      documented for macros in viralloc.h and virstring.h.
836 837
    </p>

838 839
    <p>
      For variadic macros, stick with C99 syntax:
840
    </p>
841
<pre>
842
  #define vshPrint(_ctl, ...) fprintf(stdout, __VA_ARGS__)
843
</pre>
844 845 846

    <p>Use parenthesis when checking if a macro is defined, and use
    indentation to track nesting:
847
    </p>
848
<pre>
849
  #if defined(HAVE_POSIX_FALLOCATE) &amp;&amp; !defined(HAVE_FALLOCATE)
M
Michal Privoznik 已提交
850
  # define fallocate(a, ignored, b, c) posix_fallocate(a, b, c)
851
  #endif
852
</pre>
853

854
    <h2><a id="types">C types</a></h2>
855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862

    <p>
      Use the right type.
    </p>

    <h3>Scalars</h3>

    <ul>
863 864
      <li>If you're using <code>int</code> or <code>long</code>, odds are
          good that there's a better type.</li>
865
      <li>If a variable is counting something, be sure to declare it with an
M
Matthew Booth 已提交
866
        unsigned type.</li>
867 868 869 870 871
      <li>If it's memory-size-related, use <code>size_t</code> (use
        <code>ssize_t</code> only if required).</li>
      <li>If it's file-size related, use uintmax_t, or maybe <code>off_t</code>.</li>
      <li>If it's file-offset related (i.e., signed), use <code>off_t</code>.</li>
      <li>If it's just counting small numbers use <code>unsigned int</code>;
M
Matthew Booth 已提交
872 873
        (on all but oddball embedded systems, you can assume that that
        type is at least four bytes wide).</li>
874 875 876
      <li>If a variable has boolean semantics, give it the <code>bool</code> type
        and use the corresponding <code>true</code> and <code>false</code> macros.
         It's ok to include &lt;stdbool.h&gt;, since libvirt's use of gnulib ensures
M
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877
          that it exists and is usable.</li>
878
      <li>In the unusual event that you require a specific width, use a
879 880 881 882
        standard type like <code>int32_t</code>, <code>uint32_t</code>,
        <code>uint64_t</code>, etc.</li>
      <li>While using <code>bool</code> is good for readability, it comes with
          minor caveats:
M
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883
        <ul>
884
          <li>Don't use <code>bool</code> in places where the type size must be constant across
M
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885
            all systems, like public interfaces and on-the-wire protocols.  Note
886 887 888 889 890 891 892
            that it would be possible (albeit wasteful) to use <code>bool</code> in libvirt's
            logical wire protocol, since XDR maps that to its lower-level <code>bool_t</code>
            type, which <b>is</b> fixed-size.</li>
          <li>Don't compare a bool variable against the literal, <code>true</code>,
            since a value with a logical non-false value need not be <code>1</code>.
            I.e., don't write <code>if (seen == true) ...</code>.  Rather,
            write <code>if (seen)...</code>.</li>
M
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893
        </ul>
894 895 896 897 898
      </li>
    </ul>

    <p>
      Of course, take all of the above with a grain of salt.  If you're about
899 900 901
      to use some system interface that requires a type like <code>size_t</code>,
      <code>pid_t</code> or <code>off_t</code>, use matching types for any
      corresponding variables.
902 903 904
    </p>

    <p>
905
      Also, if you try to use e.g., <code>unsigned int</code> as a type, and that
906
      conflicts with the signedness of a related variable, sometimes
907
      it's best just to use the <b>wrong</b> type, if <i>pulling the thread</i>
908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919
      and fixing all related variables would be too invasive.
    </p>

    <p>
      Finally, while using descriptive types is important, be careful not to
      go overboard.  If whatever you're doing causes warnings, or requires
      casts, then reconsider or ask for help.
    </p>

    <h3>Pointers</h3>

    <p>
920
      Ensure that all of your pointers are <i>const-correct</i>.
921
      Unless a pointer is used to modify the pointed-to storage,
922
      give it the <code>const</code> attribute.  That way, the reader knows
923 924 925 926 927 928
      up-front that this is a read-only pointer.  Perhaps more
      importantly, if we're diligent about this, when you see a non-const
      pointer, you're guaranteed that it is used to modify the storage
      it points to, or it is aliased to another pointer that is.
    </p>

929
    <h2><a id="memalloc">Low level memory management</a></h2>
930 931 932 933 934

    <p>
      Use of the malloc/free/realloc/calloc APIs is deprecated in the libvirt
      codebase, because they encourage a number of serious coding bugs and do
      not enable compile time verification of checks for NULL. Instead of these
935
      routines, use the macros from viralloc.h.
936 937 938
    </p>

    <ul>
939 940
      <li><p>To allocate a single object:</p>

941
<pre>
942
  virDomainPtr domain;
943

944
  if (VIR_ALLOC(domain) &lt; 0)
945 946 947
      return NULL;
</pre>
      </li>
948

949
      <li><p>To allocate an array of objects:</p>
950
<pre>
951
  virDomainPtr domains;
952
  size_t ndomains = 10;
953

954
  if (VIR_ALLOC_N(domains, ndomains) &lt; 0)
955 956 957
      return NULL;
</pre>
      </li>
958

959
      <li><p>To allocate an array of object pointers:</p>
960
<pre>
961
  virDomainPtr *domains;
962
  size_t ndomains = 10;
963

964
  if (VIR_ALLOC_N(domains, ndomains) &lt; 0)
965 966 967
      return NULL;
</pre>
      </li>
968

969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976
      <li><p>To re-allocate the array of domains to be 1 element
      longer (however, note that repeatedly expanding an array by 1
      scales quadratically, so this is recommended only for smaller
      arrays):</p>
<pre>
  virDomainPtr domains;
  size_t ndomains = 0;

977
  if (VIR_EXPAND_N(domains, ndomains, 1) &lt; 0)
978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985
      return NULL;
  domains[ndomains - 1] = domain;
</pre></li>

      <li><p>To ensure an array has room to hold at least one more
      element (this approach scales better, but requires tracking
      allocation separately from usage)</p>

986
<pre>
987 988 989 990
  virDomainPtr domains;
  size_t ndomains = 0;
  size_t ndomains_max = 0;

991
  if (VIR_RESIZE_N(domains, ndomains_max, ndomains, 1) &lt; 0)
992
      return NULL;
993
  domains[ndomains++] = domain;
994 995
</pre>
      </li>
996

997 998
      <li><p>To trim an array of domains from its allocated size down
      to the actual used size:</p>
999 1000

<pre>
1001 1002 1003 1004
  virDomainPtr domains;
  size_t ndomains = x;
  size_t ndomains_max = y;

1005
  VIR_SHRINK_N(domains, ndomains_max, ndomains_max - ndomains);
1006 1007
</pre></li>

1008
      <li><p>To free an array of domains:</p>
1009
<pre>
1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018
  virDomainPtr domains;
  size_t ndomains = x;
  size_t ndomains_max = y;
  size_t i;

  for (i = 0; i &lt; ndomains; i++)
      VIR_FREE(domains[i]);
  VIR_FREE(domains);
  ndomains_max = ndomains = 0;
1019
</pre>
1020
      </li>
1021 1022
    </ul>

1023
    <h2><a id="file_handling">File handling</a></h2>
1024

1025
    <p>
1026 1027
      Usage of the <code>fdopen()</code>, <code>close()</code>, <code>fclose()</code>
      APIs is deprecated in libvirt code base to help avoiding double-closing of files
J
Ján Tomko 已提交
1028 1029
      or file descriptors, which is particularly dangerous in a multi-threaded
      application. Instead of these APIs, use the macros from virfile.h
1030 1031
    </p>

1032
   <ul>
1033
      <li><p>Open a file from a file descriptor:</p>
1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043

<pre>
  if ((file = VIR_FDOPEN(fd, "r")) == NULL) {
      virReportSystemError(errno, "%s",
                           _("failed to open file from file descriptor"));
      return -1;
  }
  /* fd is now invalid; only access the file using file variable */
</pre></li>

1044
      <li><p>Close a file descriptor:</p>
1045
<pre>
1046
  if (VIR_CLOSE(fd) &lt; 0) {
1047
      virReportSystemError(errno, "%s", _("failed to close file"));
1048
  }
1049 1050
</pre></li>

1051
      <li><p>Close a file:</p>
1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057

<pre>
  if (VIR_FCLOSE(file) &lt; 0) {
      virReportSystemError(errno, "%s", _("failed to close file"));
  }
</pre></li>
1058

1059 1060
      <li><p>Close a file or file descriptor in an error path, without losing
             the previous <code>errno</code> value:</p>
1061 1062

<pre>
1063
  VIR_FORCE_CLOSE(fd);
1064
  VIR_FORCE_FCLOSE(file);
1065 1066
</pre>
      </li>
1067
    </ul>
1068

1069
    <h2><a id="string_comparision">String comparisons</a></h2>
1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077

    <p>
      Do not use the strcmp, strncmp, etc functions directly. Instead use
      one of the following semantically named macros
    </p>

    <ul>
      <li><p>For strict equality:</p>
1078 1079 1080
<pre>
  STREQ(a,b)
  STRNEQ(a,b)
1081 1082 1083
</pre>
      </li>

1084
      <li><p>For case insensitive equality:</p>
1085 1086 1087
<pre>
  STRCASEEQ(a,b)
  STRCASENEQ(a,b)
1088 1089 1090 1091
</pre>
      </li>

      <li><p>For strict equality of a substring:</p>
1092 1093 1094
<pre>
  STREQLEN(a,b,n)
  STRNEQLEN(a,b,n)
1095 1096 1097
</pre>
      </li>

1098
      <li><p>For case insensitive equality of a substring:</p>
1099 1100 1101
<pre>
  STRCASEEQLEN(a,b,n)
  STRCASENEQLEN(a,b,n)
1102 1103 1104 1105
</pre>
      </li>

      <li><p>For strict equality of a prefix:</p>
1106 1107
<pre>
  STRPREFIX(a,b)
1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113
</pre>
      </li>
      <li><p>To avoid having to check if a or b are NULL:</p>
<pre>
  STREQ_NULLABLE(a, b)
  STRNEQ_NULLABLE(a, b)
1114 1115 1116 1117 1118
</pre>
      </li>
    </ul>


1119
    <h2><a id="string_copying">String copying</a></h2>
D
David Allan 已提交
1120 1121 1122 1123

    <p>
      Do not use the strncpy function.  According to the man page, it
      does <b>not</b> guarantee a NULL-terminated buffer, which makes
1124 1125
      it extremely dangerous to use.  Instead, use one of the replacement
      functions provided by libvirt:
D
David Allan 已提交
1126
    </p>
1127 1128 1129 1130

<pre>
  virStrncpy(char *dest, const char *src, size_t n, size_t destbytes)
</pre>
D
David Allan 已提交
1131
    <p>
1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139
      The first two arguments have the same meaning as for strncpy,
      namely the destination and source of the copy operation.  Unlike
      strncpy, the function will always copy exactly the number of bytes
      requested and make sure the destination is NULL-terminated, as the
      source is required to be; sanity checks are performed to ensure the
      size of the destination, as specified by the last argument, is
      sufficient for the operation to succeed.  On success, 0 is returned;
      on failure, a value &lt;0 is returned instead.
D
David Allan 已提交
1140 1141
    </p>

1142 1143 1144
<pre>
  virStrcpy(char *dest, const char *src, size_t destbytes)
</pre>
D
David Allan 已提交
1145 1146
    <p>
      Use this variant if you know you want to copy the entire src
1147 1148
      string into dest.
    </p>
D
David Allan 已提交
1149

1150 1151 1152
<pre>
  virStrcpyStatic(char *dest, const char *src)
</pre>
D
David Allan 已提交
1153 1154
    <p>
      Use this variant if you know you want to copy the entire src
1155
      string into dest <b>and</b> you know that your destination string is
D
David Allan 已提交
1156 1157
      a static string (i.e. that sizeof(dest) returns something
      meaningful).  Note that this is a macro, so arguments could be
1158
      evaluated more than once.
D
David Allan 已提交
1159 1160
    </p>

1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166
<pre>
  VIR_STRDUP(char *dst, const char *src);
  VIR_STRNDUP(char *dst, const char *src, size_t n);
</pre>
    <p>
      You should avoid using strdup or strndup directly as they do not report
1167 1168 1169 1170
      out-of-memory error, and do not allow a NULL source. Use
      VIR_STRDUP or VIR_STRNDUP macros instead, which return 0 for
      NULL source, 1 for successful copy, and -1 for allocation
      failure with the error already reported. In very
1171 1172 1173 1174 1175
      specific cases, when you don't want to report the out-of-memory error, you
      can use VIR_STRDUP_QUIET or VIR_STRNDUP_QUIET, but such usage is very rare
      and usually considered a flaw.
    </p>

1176
    <h2><a id="strbuf">Variable length string buffer</a></h2>
1177 1178 1179 1180

    <p>
      If there is a need for complex string concatenations, avoid using
      the usual sequence of malloc/strcpy/strcat/snprintf functions and
J
Ján Tomko 已提交
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      make use of the virBuffer API described in virbuffer.h
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    </p>

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    <p>Typical usage is as follows:</p>
1185

1186
<pre>
1187
  char *
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  somefunction(...)
  {
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     virBuffer buf = VIR_BUFFER_INITIALIZER;

     ...

     virBufferAddLit(&amp;buf, "&lt;domain&gt;\n");
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     virBufferAsprintf(&amp;buf, "  &lt;memory&gt;%d&lt;/memory&gt;\n", memory);
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     ...
     virBufferAddLit(&amp;buf, "&lt;/domain&gt;\n");

1199
     ...
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Ján Tomko 已提交
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     if (virBufferCheckError(&amp;buf) &lt; 0)
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         return NULL;

     return virBufferContentAndReset(&amp;buf);
  }
</pre>


1209
    <h2><a id="includes">Include files</a></h2>
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    <p>
      There are now quite a large number of include files, both libvirt
      internal and external, and system includes.  To manage all this
      complexity it's best to stick to the following general plan for all
      *.c source files:
    </p>

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<pre>
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  /*
   * Copyright notice
   * ....
   * ....
   * ....
   *
   */

  #include &lt;config.h&gt;             Must come first in every file.

  #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;              Any system includes you need.
  #include &lt;string.h&gt;
  #include &lt;limits.h&gt;

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  #if WITH_NUMACTL                Some system includes aren't supported
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  # include &lt;numa.h&gt;              everywhere so need these #if guards.
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  #endif

  #include "internal.h"           Include this first, after system includes.

  #include "util.h"               Any libvirt internal header files.
  #include "buf.h"

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  static int
  myInternalFunc()                The actual code.
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  {
1245
      ...
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</pre>

    <p>
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Osier Yang 已提交
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      Of particular note: <b>Do not</b> include libvirt/libvirt.h,
      libvirt/virterror.h, libvirt/libvirt-qemu.h, or libvirt/libvirt-lxc.h.
      They are included by "internal.h" already and there are some special reasons
      why you cannot include these files explicitly. One of the special cases,
      "libvirt/libvirt.h" is included prior to "internal.h" in "remote_protocol.x",
      to avoid exposing *_LAST enum elements.
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    </p>


1258
    <h2><a id="printf">Printf-style functions</a></h2>
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    <p>
      Whenever you add a new printf-style function, i.e., one with a format
      string argument and following "..." in its prototype, be sure to use
      gcc's printf attribute directive in the prototype.  For example, here's
      the one for virAsprintf, in util.h:
    </p>

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<pre>
  int virAsprintf(char **strp, const char *fmt, ...)
      ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT(printf, 2, 3);
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</pre>

    <p>
      This makes it so gcc's -Wformat and -Wformat-security options can do
      their jobs and cross-check format strings with the number and types
      of arguments.
    </p>

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Eric Blake 已提交
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    <p>
      When printing to a string, consider using virBuffer for
      incremental allocations, virAsprintf for a one-shot allocation,
      and snprintf for fixed-width buffers.  Do not use sprintf, even
      if you can prove the buffer won't overflow, since gnulib does
      not provide the same portability guarantees for sprintf as it
      does for snprintf.
    </p>

1287
    <h2><a id="goto">Use of goto</a></h2>
D
David Allan 已提交
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    <p>
      The use of goto is not forbidden, and goto is widely used
      throughout libvirt.  While the uncontrolled use of goto will
      quickly lead to unmaintainable code, there is a place for it in
      well structured code where its use increases readability and
      maintainability.  In general, if goto is used for error
      recovery, it's likely to be ok, otherwise, be cautious or avoid
      it all together.
    </p>

    <p>
      The typical use of goto is to jump to cleanup code in the case
      of a long list of actions, any of which may fail and cause the
      entire operation to fail.  In this case, a function will have a
      single label at the end of the function.  It's almost always ok
      to use this style.  In particular, if the cleanup code only
      involves free'ing memory, then having multiple labels is
      overkill.  VIR_FREE() and every function named XXXFree() in
      libvirt is required to handle NULL as its arg.  Thus you can
      safely call free on all the variables even if they were not yet
      allocated (yes they have to have been initialized to NULL).
      This is much simpler and clearer than having multiple labels.
    </p>

    <p>
      There are a couple of signs that a particular use of goto is not
      ok:
    </p>

    <ul>
      <li>You're using multiple labels.  If you find yourself using
      multiple labels, you're strongly encouraged to rework your code
      to eliminate all but one of them.</li>
      <li>The goto jumps back up to a point above the current line of
      code being executed.  Please use some combination of looping
      constructs to re-execute code instead; it's almost certainly
      going to be more understandable by others.  One well-known
      exception to this rule is restarting an i/o operation following
      EINTR.</li>
      <li>The goto jumps down to an arbitrary place in the middle of a
      function followed by further potentially failing calls.  You
      should almost certainly be using a conditional and a block
      instead of a goto.  Perhaps some of your function's logic would
      be better pulled out into a helper function.</li>
    </ul>

    <p>
      Although libvirt does not encourage the Linux kernel wind/unwind
      style of multiple labels, there's a good general discussion of
      the issue archived at
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      <a href="http://kerneltrap.org/node/553/2131">KernelTrap</a>
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David Allan 已提交
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    </p>

    <p>
      When using goto, please use one of these standard labels if it
      makes sense:
    </p>

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<pre>
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David Allan 已提交
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      error: A path only taken upon return with an error code
    cleanup: A path taken upon return with success code + optional error
  no_memory: A path only taken upon return with an OOM error code
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      retry: If needing to jump upwards (e.g., retry on EINTR)
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</pre>
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David Allan 已提交
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Ján Tomko 已提交
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    <p>
    Top-level labels should be indented by one space (putting them on
    the beginning of the line confuses function context detection in git):
    </p>

<pre>
int foo()
{
    /* ... do stuff ... */
 cleanup:
    /* ... do other stuff ... */
}
</pre>

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1370
    <h2><a id="committers">Libvirt committer guidelines</a></h2>
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    <p>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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      The AUTHORS files indicates the list of people with commit access right
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      who can actually merge the patches.
    </p>

    <p>
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      The general rule for committing a patch is to make sure
      it has been reviewed
      properly in the mailing-list first, usually if a couple of people gave an
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      ACK or +1 to a patch and nobody raised an objection on the list it should
1382 1383
      be good to go. If the patch touches a part of the code where you're not
      the main maintainer, or where you do not have a very clear idea of
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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      how things work, it's better
      to wait for a more authoritative feedback though. Before committing, please
      also rebuild locally, run 'make check syntax-check', and make sure you
      don't raise errors. Try to look for warnings too; for example,
      configure with
1389
    </p>
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Eric Blake 已提交
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<pre>
1391
  --enable-compile-warnings=error
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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</pre>
1393
    <p>
1394 1395 1396 1397
      which adds -Werror to compile flags, so no warnings get missed
    </p>

    <p>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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      An exception to 'review and approval on the list first' is fixing failures
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      to build:
    </p>
    <ul>
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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      <li>if a recently committed patch breaks compilation on a platform
        or for a given driver, then it's fine to commit a minimal fix
M
Matthew Booth 已提交
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        directly without getting the review feedback first</li>
1405
      <li>if make check or make syntax-check breaks, if there is
M
Matthew Booth 已提交
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        an obvious fix, it's fine to commit immediately.
        The patch should still be sent to the list (or tell what the fix was if
E
Eric Blake 已提交
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        trivial), and 'make check syntax-check' should pass too, before committing
M
Matthew Booth 已提交
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        anything</li>
1410
      <li>
M
Matthew Booth 已提交
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        fixes for documentation and code comments can be managed
        in the same way, but still make sure they get reviewed if non-trivial.
1413 1414
      </li>
    </ul>
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    <h2><a id="coverage">Code coverage reports</a></h2>

    <p>
      Code coverage HTML reports can be generated with:
    </p>

<pre>
  make coverage
</pre>

    <p>
      Reports will be generated in the <code>cov/</code> directory. Point a
      web browser at <code>cov/index.html</code> for the full report.
    </p>

    <p>
      The <code>make coverage</code> target is provided by <code>gnulib</code>.
      It is a convenience helper for calling the following 3 targets in order.
      It may be useful to occasionally call these directly.

    <ul>
      <li><code>make init-coverage</code>: run <code>make clean</code> and
          remove all code coverage counter files (*.gcno, etc.)</li>
      <li><code>make build-coverage</code>: run <code>make</code> and
          <code>make check</code> with <code>CFLAGS</code> filled in with
          necessary coverage flags</li>
      <li><code>make gen-coverage</code>: generate the HTML report</li>
    </ul>
    </p>
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  </body>
</html>