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687 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
687 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
Hacking ELinks
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--------------
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Welcome, mere mortal, to the realm of evil unindented code, heaps of one or
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two-letter variables, seas of gotos accompanied with 30-letters labels in Czech
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language with absolutely no meaning, welcome to the realm of ELinks code!
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[We're going to extend this file slowly, basing on daily practice ;]
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Don't take this file as a law. We may or may not be right in these issues.
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Motto: I didn't expect someone to look at the source, so it's unreadable.
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--Mikulas
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Language files
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each UI output should use language files in order to be able to translate the
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messages to a desired language. Those language files reside in the po/ subdir. If
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you want to update a .po file, please read the gettext manual available at
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<http://www.gnu.org/manual/gettext>. In order to actually use your updates on
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your own system, you have to have the gettext tools installed.
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ELinks philosophy
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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ELinks is based on the philosophy of asynchronism. That means, you pass a
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callback to each function, and when the requested task finishes sometime in the
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unclear future, the callback will be called in order to notify you that you can
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go on.
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When you use multiple elinks instances at once, normally only one of them is a
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'master', and the rest of them are just kinda dumb terminals. So if you want
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to test some new feature, you have to start elinks with the '-no-connect'
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parameter, otherwise it will just connect to an already running elinks and you
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won't see your great new feature that you just added with such much pain.
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There are two basic structures in ELinks. Connection and session - their names
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should be self-descriptive. Only note that connections may or may not have
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sessions attached. I.e. if you type some URL, then start loading it and then
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press ACT_BACK (KEY_LEFT), the connection will lose its session. So you should
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never pretend that it has one.
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The UI plainly needs a rewrite as it's extremely ugly ;-). Cut'n'paste from
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some existing code and modify appropriately, if you want one :).
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Some common used functions (e.g., malloc() or free()) have their own clones
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inside ELinks and you should use them (e.g., mem_alloc() or mem_free()) instead.
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If you want to have anything else documented here, write a description and send
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us a patch.
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Various parts are described either below or in README* file(s) of appropriate
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directory.
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HTML parser
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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The following was found in the mailing list archive - Mikulas wrote it:
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The entry of the parser is parse_html. This function gets an html source to
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parse (pointers html and eof) and the functions it should call when it wants to
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produce output (put_chars, line_break, init, special). f is a pointer that is
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passed to that function, head is the HTTP header (for refresh). The function
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uses a stack (struct list_head html_stack; it is set up by the caller of
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parse_html), places formatting info into it, and calls output functions.
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put_chars to write text, line_break for new line, init (currently unused),
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special (tags, forms, etc...). These functions read the parameters from the
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stack (struct html_element) and do the actual rendering (some while ago, people
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wanted to use the parser for a graphics browser, so I wrote it so that it could
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produce graphics output by replacing the output functions).
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Html renderer is in html_r.c. html_interpret formats the whole screen. It
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calls cached_format_html which formats one document (frame) or returns directly
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a formatted document from the cache. cached_format_html then calls
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format_html, which sets up rendering and calls format_html_part.
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format_html_part is used for formatting the whole document or formatting parts
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of tables. It calls parse_html.
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The rendering functions put_chars_conv, line_break, html_special receive struct
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part * from the parser. They render the text or calculate the size of the text
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(in case of tables). struct part has a pointer to struct f_data - a structure
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that holds the actual formatted data. If the pointer is NULL, rendering
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functions only calculate size.
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Documents management
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Just a few words regarding the document structures. To understand the code, it
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is important to note the difference between rendered documents and document
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views.
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A document is rendered (or formatted) one time once it is loaded - then it
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stays formatted in a cache for some time, and whoever opens the document just
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attaches that formatted document. That is, if you open the same document in
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three tabs, they all show contents of the same single underlying struct
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document and family.
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However, each of the tabs gets own struct document_view. That structure
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contains information about the currently active link, the position in the document,
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the size of the viewport, search terms currently highlighted etc. This structure
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stays around only when the document is displayed in some session, thus its
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lifespan is always shorter than struct document's. document_view to document
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mapping is many to one.
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There is a third structure, struct view_state. This structure contains
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information about the current link and position, contents of forms fields,
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and so. Like struct document_view, it contains information specific to
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a certain view of the document, and the mapping to document is many to one.
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Unlike document_view, though, its lifespan is much longer. When you chain
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those view_states up, you get a session history.
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Lua support
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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Peter Wang wrote this on the mailing list:
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The parts of the Links-Lua and ELinks code that related to Lua are mostly
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wrapped inside #ifdef HAVE_LUA ... #endif conditions, so they're easy to find.
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And also lua.c.
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In certain situations, I put some hooks into the C code. These prepare the C
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code to run some Lua code, run it, then translate the return values to
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something meaningful to the C code. They are really simple, but I had to put
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in some cruft.
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.The code implementing the Go To URL dialog box hook :
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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void goto_url_with_hook(struct session *ses, unsigned char *url)
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{
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#ifndef HAVE_LUA
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goto_url(ses, url);
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#else
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lua_State *L = lua_state;
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int err;
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lua_getglobal(L, "goto_url_hook"); <1>
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if (lua_isnil(L, -1)) {
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lua_pop(L, 1);
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goto_url(ses, url);
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return;
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}
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lua_pushstring(L, url); <2>
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if (list_empty(ses->history)) lua_pushnil(L);
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else lua_pushstring(L, cur_loc(ses)->vs.url);
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if (prepare_lua(ses)) return; <3>
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err = lua_call(L, 2, 1); <4>
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finish_lua(); <5>
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if (err) return;
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if (lua_isstring(L, -1)) <6>
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goto_url(ses, (unsigned char *) lua_tostring(L, -1));
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else if (!lua_isnil(L, -1))
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alert_lua_error("goto_url_hook must return a string or nil");
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lua_pop(L, 1);
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#endif
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}
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Quick description of what it does:
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<1> Get the value named `goto_url_hook' from the Lua state. If it doesn't
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exist, the user hasn't installed a hook so continue the normal way.
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<2> Push the arguments onto the Lua stack for the function call.
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`goto_url_hook' takes two parameters, the new URL and the current URL, so
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we push them on.
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<3> Some stuff to prepare for running Lua. This is in case, for example, the
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Lua function contains bugs, we want to trap some of that. It's supposed to
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enable a mechanism where ^C will break out of infinite loops and such, but
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that's not working so good.
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<4> Call the Lua function, i.e. goto_url_hook
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<5> Disable the error trapping stuff.
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<6> Look at the return value of goto_url_hook and do something appropriate.
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[ If you want to know the lua_* functions, you're going to have to read the
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Lua API manual ]
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That's basically all the Links-Lua stuff is, a bunch of hooks that pass
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arguments to some arbitrary Lua code, then read in return values and interpret
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them. But it works because Lua is a programming language, and that enables you
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to do what you would from C, as long as you stick to the C<->Lua interface.
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The code to allow binding Lua code to a keypress is slightly different then the
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hooks, but not much. Instead of branching off to some C code when a key is
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pressed, we branch off to some Lua code.
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Coding style
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Mikulas once said that 'it was hard to code, so it should be hard to read' -
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and he drove by this when he was writing links. However, we do NOT drive by
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this rule anymore ;-). We strongly welcome cleanup patches and you have 99%
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chance that they will be applied, if they are correct.
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Variable names should be descriptive. Well, in worst case we'll accept 'i' for
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index, but if possible don't do even this :). You should try to declare them
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on the lowest level possible, so their declaration and initialization will be
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near their usage and you will also prevent reuse of one variable for two
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completely different things. Yes, that's another thing you shouldn't do. If
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reasonable, initialize variables during their declaration and don't group too
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many variables in one line. ALWAYS make a blank line after the declaration
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part.
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Be sure to prefix all local functions with 'static'.
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Indent shift width is 8 characters--that means one tab character.
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'{' should be on the same line as conditions near for, if, while, switch etc.,
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but on separate lines near function headers in function definitions.
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Please _USE_ one tab instead of 8 spaces! It makes things easier.
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Always place spaces around '=', after ',' and - if reasonable - around other
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operators as well. You shouldn't make assignments in conditionals:
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.Use:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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foo = mem_alloc(1234);
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if (!foo) panic("out of memory");
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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if (!(foo = mem_alloc(1234))) panic("out of memory");
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Note that thou shalt ALWAYS test for success on everything - we are supposed
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to die with honor if we are to die!
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One good point is regarding what language we actually code in. We use C89
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_exclusively_ (if we don't, we provide a fall-back way for survival in C89
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environment). ELinks is supposed to work on a large number of more or less
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weird and ancient systems and we are already used to C89 anyway. The most
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remarkable implication of no C99 are no C++ (//) comments and declarations
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at the start of block only.
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Comments
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~~~~~~~~
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Use blank lines frequently to separate chunks of code. And use magic `/\*` and
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`*/` to give others an idea about what it does and about possible pitfalls.
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(Do not use //, as that is not a feature of ANSI C a.k.a. C89.)
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Keep in mind that if there's an object and verb in the comment (and it is, in
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most cases), it is a sentence, so it has to start with a capital letter and end
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with a fullstop ;-). If you want to share your opinion or investigations, you
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should sign yourself; e.g.,
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/* TODO: Move this far away! --pasky */
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Comments should be written in _ENGLISH_ only.
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All three following styles of comments are acceptable:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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/*
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* Bla bla bla.
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* blabla?
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*/
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/* Bla bla bla.
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* blabla?
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*/
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/* Bla bla bla.
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* blabla? */
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The best one usually depends on the actual context.
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If you describe a structure, make either:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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char *name; /* name of the tag */
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void (*func)(unsigned char *); /* function hopefully handling the
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* content of the tag */
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int linebreak; /* needed for break of a line? */
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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or
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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/* Name of the tag */
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char *name;
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/* Function hopefully handling the content of the tag */
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void (*func)(unsigned char *);
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/* Do we need to break a line? */
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int linebreak;
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Same if you comment the code. If the comment is
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/* then do it now! */
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place it on the same line as the command, if it's
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/* We have to parse this crap now, as it is going to be freed in free_crap() */
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place it on the preceding line.
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3.2, More about style
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Note: We use short variables names and stupid examples here, do not take that
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as a guideline for _REAL_ coding. Always use descriptive variables
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names and do not write stupid code ;).
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General style is:
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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[blank line]
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/* This is a comment about that function */
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int
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func(int a, int b)
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{
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int c;
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c = a * b;
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if (c) {
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int d;
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...
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} else {
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int e;
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...
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}
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return (c * d);
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}
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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You should observe the following rules:
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Always have a blank line before a function declaration or comment.
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Please add a comment about what the function does.
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A function's type must be on first line while the function's name is on the
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second line.
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If the parameters list exceeds 80 columns then wrap them after a comma to
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the next line and align them using tabs and/or spaces with the first
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parameter.
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.Use:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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int
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func(int p1, int p2, int p3,
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struct very_long_name_for_a_structure *s,
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unsigned long last_parameter)
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{
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int v;
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...
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}
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The start of a function's body should be alone on the first column.
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Always have a blank line after declarations.
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Always have spaces around operators.
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.Use:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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c = a * b - (a + b);
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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c=a*b-(a+b);
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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- Keep affectation outside of conditional tests.
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.Use:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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c = a;
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if (c == b) {...
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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if ((c = a) == b) {...
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Never use spaces within ().
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.Use:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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if (a) ...
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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if ( a ) ...
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Indent.
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.Use:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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foreach (a, b)
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if (a == c)
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...
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else
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...
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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foreach(a, b) if (a == c) ... else ...
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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If you have a chain of if () { .. } else if () { .. } else { .. } with longer
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statements, you can insert a blank line before each else line.
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Label names should start on the first column and with have a blank line before
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it.
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.Use:
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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some_code(aaa);
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label:
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some_other_code(bbb);
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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some_code(aaa);
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label:
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some_other_code(bbb);
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Wrap conditions on spaces before operators like && or ||.
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.Use:
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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if (some_very_long_thing1 == some_very_long_thing2
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&& (test1 == test2
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|| some_very_long_thing3 == some_very_long_thing4)) {
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....
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Please remove useless spaces or tabs at the end of lines. Vim has a syntax
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file called "Whitespace (add)" ...
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Please keep includes in alphabetical order unless a specific order is required
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for compilation on weird systems (then please at least make a proper comment
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about that).
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Please declare functions without parameters as taking void parameter:
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.Use:
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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int
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func(void)
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{
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some_code();
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.Instead of:
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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int
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func()
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{
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some_code();
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}
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Please write if (), while (), switch (), for (), .... instead of if(),
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while(), switch(), for()... Same thing apply for all iterators and tests
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(e.g. foreach, foreachback).
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Please write sizeof(something) instead of sizeof something.
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Use assert() and assertm() where applicable. It will prevent hidden bugs.
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If you see code in ELinks that doesn't follow these rules, fix it or tell us
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about it.
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All the .c files MUST start by a short one-line description:
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/* <short one-line description> */
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All the .h files MUST start by a CVS Id tag and then anti-reinclusion ifdef.
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The macro is
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EL_<path_relative_to_src:s/[\/.]/_/>.
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There are obviously exceptions to these rules, but don't make a rule from your
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exception and be prepared to defend your exception at anytime ;).
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Coding practices
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Use bitfields to store boolean values
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If speed is not critical and especially if you are messing with some struct
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where size might matter, feel encouraged to use bitfields to store boolean (or
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tristate or tetrastate ;) values (e.g. unsigned int foo:1 for one-bit field).
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HOWEVER please ALWAYS specify signedness of all such fields. It is very easy
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to reach the top bit in these cases, and with int foo:1, foo would be either 0
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or -1, which is probably not what you want.
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Wrap hard initializations of structures with macros
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This should be done if the structure's initializers are going to be spread
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widely (so that we can grep for them easily), there are massive typecasts
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needed in most of the initializers, you feel that order of the fields in
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structure is unstable yet and it is likely to change (and you don't want to
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change the initializers everytime you do so), or in similar cases.
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.You can do it like:
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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struct example {
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int a;
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int b;
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char *c;
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};
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#define INIT_EXAMPLE(a, b, c) {a, b, c}
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#define NULL_EXAMPLE {0, 0, NULL}
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struct example t[] = {
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INIT_EXAMPLE(1, 2, "abc"),
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INIT_EXAMPLE(3, 4, "def"),
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NULL_EXAMPLE
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};
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struct example t = NULL_EXAMPLE;
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Please try to keep order of fields
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Please try to keep order of fields from max. to min. of size of each type of
|
|
fields, especially in structures:
|
|
|
|
.Use:
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
long a;
|
|
int b;
|
|
char c;
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
.Instead of:
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
char c;
|
|
int b;
|
|
long b;
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
It will help to reduce memory padding on some architectures. Note that this
|
|
applies only if this will not affect logical division of the structure. The
|
|
logical composition always takes precedence over this optimization, modulo
|
|
some very rare critical structures.
|
|
|
|
Please do not use sizeof(struct item_struct_name)
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Instead use sizeof(*item) when possible.
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
struct example {
|
|
int *integers;
|
|
void **pointers;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
struct example *item;
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
.Use:
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
item = mem_alloc(sizeof(*item));
|
|
memset(item, 0, sizeof(*item));
|
|
item->integers = mem_calloc(10, sizeof(*item->integers));
|
|
item->pointers = mem_calloc(10, sizeof(*item->pointers));
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
.Instead of:
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
item = mem_alloc(sizeof(struct example));
|
|
memset(item, 0, sizeof(struct example));
|
|
item->integers = mem_calloc(10, sizeof(int));
|
|
item->pointers = mem_calloc(10, sizeof(void *));
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The preferred form eases future changes in types, and maintain size vs type
|
|
coherence.
|
|
|
|
Please postfix defined types with _T
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
typedef int (some_func_T)(void *);
|
|
typedef long long our_long_T;
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
Patches
|
|
~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Please send unified patches only.
|
|
|
|
.The recommended way is:
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
cp -a elinks/ elinks+mysuperfeature/
|
|
cd elinks+mysuperfeature/
|
|
*clap clap*
|
|
*clickety clickey*
|
|
make
|
|
./elinks -no-connect
|
|
*goto clap*
|
|
cd ..
|
|
diff -ru elinks/ elinks+mysuperfeature/ >elinks-mysuperfeature.patch
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Please manually remove any bloat like changes in ./configure, whitespace
|
|
changes etc. ;-).
|
|
|
|
We also accept output from `cvs diff -u` :). The statement about bloat
|
|
removing above still applies.
|
|
|
|
Big patches are hard to review so if your feature involves a lot of changes
|
|
please consider splitting it in appropriate bits. Appropriate could mean:
|
|
|
|
- Keep trivial changes like indenting, renaming, fixing comments separate.
|
|
|
|
- Keep movements of (bigger) code snippets separate from changes in them.
|
|
|
|
Note that it makes no sense to separate patches by directories. The
|
|
important thing is to separate big changes to smaller ones and smaller ones,
|
|
breaking it to the "thinnest" possible level where the change is still
|
|
sufficiently self-contained.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Advantages of `--enable-debug` configure option
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Since ELinks 0.4pre11, a memory debugger can be enabled using the
|
|
`--enable-debug` configure script option. It may help to find memleaks and more
|
|
which is why everybody concerned with ELinks develepment should use it:
|
|
|
|
In 0.5 versions `--enable-debug` add some fancy things:
|
|
- many data integrity checking (see `lists.h`)
|
|
- hotkey debugging: especially cool for translators, it highlights redundant
|
|
hotkeys in a menu.
|
|
- more errors messages
|
|
- low bug tolerance: it will core dump on some errors instead of just writing
|
|
an error description.
|
|
- internal backtrace feature (always enabled if possible)
|
|
- and more...
|
|
|
|
Before sending a patch, always try to compile and test it with
|
|
`--enable-debug`, then in normal mode, then in `--fast-mem` mode. If it fails
|
|
to compile or execute in one of these modes, then rework it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Happy hacking!
|
|
|
|
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|
|
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
|