7.4 KiB
Contributing to waybox
Contributing just involves sending a pull request. You will probably be more successful with your contribution if you visit #sway-devel on irc.freenode.net upfront and discuss your plans.
Note: rules are made to be broken. Adjust or ignore any/all of these as you see fit, but be prepared to justify it to your peers.
This was amended from wlroots for the most part
Pull Requests
If you already have your own pull request habits, feel free to use them. If you don't, however, allow me to make a suggestion: feature branches pulled from upstream. Try this:
- Fork wlroots
git clone https://github.com/username/waybox && cd wlrootsgit remote add upstream https://github.com/wizbright/waybox
You only need to do this once. You're never going to use your fork's master branch. Instead, when you start working on a feature, do this:
git fetch upstreamgit checkout -b add-so-and-so-feature upstream/master- Add and commit your changes
git push -u origin add-so-and-so-feature- Make a pull request from your feature branch
When you submit your pull request, your commit log should do most of the talking when it comes to describing your changes and their motivation. In addition to this, your pull request's comments will ideally include a test plan that the reviewers can use to (1) demonstrate the problem on master, if applicable and (2) verify that the problem no longer exists with your changes applied (or that your new features work correctly). Document all of the edge cases you're aware of so we can adequately test them - then verify the test plan yourself before submitting.
Commit Messages
Please strive to write good commit messages. Here's some guidelines to follow:
The first line should be limited to 50 characters and should be a sentence that completes the thought [When applied, this commit will...] "Implement cmd_move" or "Fix #742" or "Improve performance of arrange_windows on ARM" or similar.
The subsequent lines should be separated from the subject line by a single
blank line, and include optional details. In this you can give justification
for the change, reference Github
issues,
or explain some of the subtler details of your patch. This is important because
when someone finds a line of code they don't understand later, they can use the
git blame command to find out what the author was thinking when they wrote
it. It's also easier to review your pull requests if they're separated into
logical commits that have good commit messages and justify themselves in the
extended commit description.
As a good rule of thumb, anything you might put into the pull request description on Github is probably fair game for going into the extended commit message as well.
See here for more details.
Code Review
When your changes are submitted for review, one or more core committers will look over them. Smaller changes might be merged with little fanfare, but larger changes will typically see review from several people. Be prepared to receive some feedback - you may be asked to make changes to your work. Our code review process is:
- Triage the pull request. Do the commit messages make sense? Is a test plan necessary and/or present? Add anyone as reviewers that you think should be there (using the relevant GitHub feature, if you have the permissions, or with an @mention if necessary).
- Review the code. Look for code style violations, naming convention violations, buffer overflows, memory leaks, logic errors, non-portable code (including GNU-isms), etc. For significant changes to the public API, loop in a couple more people for discussion.
- Execute the test plan, if present.
- Merge the pull request when all reviewers approve.
- File follow-up tickets if appropriate.
Style Reference
wlroots is written in C with a style similar to the kernel style, but with a few notable differences.
Try to keep your code conforming to C11 and POSIX as much as possible, and do not use GNU extensions.
Brackets
Brackets always go on the same line, including in functions. Always include brackets for if/while/for, even if it's a single statement.
void function(void) {
if (condition1) {
do_thing1();
}
if (condition2) {
do_thing2();
} else {
do_thing3();
}
}
Indentation
Indentations are a single tab.
For long lines that need to be broken, the continuation line should be indented with an additional tab. If the line being broken is opening a new block (functions, if, while, etc.), the continuation line should be indented with two tabs, so they can't be misread as being part of the block.
really_long_function(argument1, argument2, ...,
argument3, argument4);
if (condition1 && condition2 && ...
condition3 && condition4) {
do_thing();
}
Try to break the line in the place which you think is the most appropriate.
Line Length
Try to keep your lines under 80 columns, but you can go up to 100 if it improves readability. Don't break lines indiscriminately, try to find nice breaking points so your code is easy to read.
Names
Global function and type names should be prefixed with wb_submodule_ (e.g.
struct wb_output, wb_output_set_cursor). For static functions and
types local to a file, the names chosen aren't as important. Local function
names shouldn't have a wb_ prefix.
For include guards, use the header's filename relative to include. Uppercase all of the characters, and replace any invalid characters with an underscore.
Construction/Destruction Functions
For functions that are responsible for constructing and destructing an object, they should be written as a pair of one of two forms:
init/finish: These initialize/deinitialize a type, but are NOT responsible for allocating it. They should accept a pointer to some pre-allocated memory (e.g. a member of a struct).create/destroy: These also initialize/deinitialize, but will return a pointer to amalloced chunk of memory, and willfreeit indestroy.
A destruction function should always be able to accept a NULL pointer or a zeroed value and exit cleanly; this simplifies error handling a lot.
Error Codes
For functions not returning a value, they should return a (stdbool.h) bool to indicated if they succeeded or not.
Wayland protocol implementation
Each protocol generally lives in a file with the same name, usually containing
at least one struct for each interface in the protocol. For instance,
xdg_shell lives in types/wlr_xdg_shell.h and has a wlr_xdg_surface struct.
Globals
Global interfaces generally have public constructors and destructors. Their
struct has a field holding the wl_global itself, a list of resources clients
created by binding to the global, a destroy signal and a wl_display destroy
listener. Example:
struct wb_compositor {
struct wl_global *global;
struct wl_list resources;
…
struct wl_listener display_destroy;
struct {
struct wl_signal new_surface;
struct wl_signal destroy;
} events;
};
When the destructor is called, it should emit the destroy signal, remove the
display destroy listener, destroy the wl_global, destroy all bound resources
and then destroy the struct.