]> sigrok.org Git - libsigrok.git/blame - HACKING
demo: Rearrange driver and device options.
[libsigrok.git] / HACKING
CommitLineData
a2353f60
UH
1-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2HACKING
3-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4
5Coding style
6------------
7
8This project is programmed using the Linux kernel coding style, see
9http://lxr.linux.no/linux/Documentation/CodingStyle for details.
10
11Please use the same style for any code contributions, thanks!
12
13
14Contributions
15-------------
16
17 - Patches should be sent to the development mailinglist at
18 sigrok-devel@lists.sourceforge.net (please subscribe to the list first).
19
20 https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/sigrok-devel
21
22 - Alternatively, you can also clone the git repository and let us know
23 from where to pull/review your changes. You can use gitorious.org,
24 github.com, or any other public git hosting site.
25
26
2bba3dd3
UH
27Adding a new hardware driver
28----------------------------
29
30The simple, scripted way (recommended):
31---------------------------------------
32
33Use the 'new-driver' script from the sigrok-util repo:
34
35 $ git clone git://sigrok.org/sigrok-util
36 $ cd sigrok-util/source
37 $ ./new-driver "Tondaj SL-814"
38
39The example above generates a patch file against the current libsigrok
40development git tree which adds a simple "stub" driver for your device
41(the Tondaj SL-814 sound level meter in this case).
42
43You can apply it like this:
44
45 $ cd libsigrok
46 $ git am 0001-tondaj-sl-814-Initial-driver-skeleton.patch
47
ef1020f9
UH
48You can now edit the files in the hardware/tondaj-sl-814 directory as needed
49and implement your driver based on the skeleton files there. That means your
50patch submission later will consist of at least two patches: the initial one
51adding the skeleton driver, and one or more additional patches that actually
52implement the respective driver code.
2bba3dd3
UH
53
54
55The manual way:
56---------------
57
58This is a rough overview of what you need to do in order to add a new driver
59(using the Tondaj SL-814 device as example). It's basically what the
60'new-driver' script (see above) does for you:
61
62 - configure.ac:
63 - Add an --enable-tondaj-sl-814 option.
64 - Add "hardware/tondaj-sl-814/Makefile" to the AC_CONFIG_FILES list.
65 - Add and entry for the device in the "Enabled hardware drivers" list
66 at the bottom of the file.
67 - hardware/Makefile.am: Add "tondaj-sl-814" to the SUBDIRS variable.
68 - hwdriver.c: Add a tondaj_sl_814_driver_info entry in two places.
69 - hardware/tondaj-sl-814/ directory: Add the following files:
70 Makefile.am, api.c, protocol.c, protocol.h
71
72See existing drivers or the 'new-driver' output for the details.
73
74
a2353f60
UH
75Random notes
76------------
77
ef1020f9
UH
78 - Don't do variable declarations in compound statements, only at the
79 beginning of a function.
80
81 - Generally avoid assigning values to variables at declaration time,
82 especially so for complex and/or run-time dependent values.
83
a2353f60
UH
84 - Consistently use g_try_malloc() / g_try_malloc0(). Do not use standard
85 malloc()/calloc() if it can be avoided (sometimes other libs such
86 as libftdi can return malloc()'d memory, for example).
87
88 - Always properly match allocations with the proper *free() functions. If
89 glib's g_try_malloc()/g_try_malloc0() was used, use g_free() to free the
90 memory. Otherwise use standard free(). Never use the wrong function!
91
92 - Never use g_malloc() or g_malloc0(). These functions do not return NULL
93 if not enough memory is available but rather lead to an exit() or segfault
8ed26250 94 instead. This behaviour is not acceptable for libraries.
a2353f60
UH
95 Use g_try_malloc()/g_try_malloc0() instead and check the return value.
96
8ed26250 97 - You should never print any messages (neither to stdout nor stderr nor
a2353f60
UH
98 elsewhere) "manually" via e.g. printf() or g_log() or similar functions.
99 Only sr_err()/sr_warn()/sr_info()/sr_dbg()/sr_spew() should be used.
100
101 - Use glib's gboolean / TRUE / FALSE for boolean types consistently.
102 Do not use <stdbool.h> and its true / false, and do not invent private
103 definitions for this either.
104
105 - Consistently use the same naming convention for #include guards in headers:
106 <PROJECTNAME>_<PATH_TO_FILE>_<FILE>
107 This ensures that all #include guards are always unique and consistent.
ef1020f9 108 Examples: LIBSIGROK_LIBSIGROK_H, LIBSIGROK_HARDWARE_MIC_985XX_PROTOCOL_H
a2353f60
UH
109
110 - Consistently use the same naming convention for API functions:
111 <libprefix>_<groupname>_<action>().
112
113 Examples:
114 sr_log_loglevel_set(), sr_log_loglevel_get(), sr_log_handler_set(),
115 sr_log_handler_set_default(), and so on.
116 Or:
117 sr_session_new(), sr_session_destroy(), sr_session_load(), and so on.
118
119 Getter/setter function names should usually end with "_get" or "_set".
120 Functions creating new "objects" should end with "_new".
121 Functions destroying "objects" should end with "_destroy".
122 Functions adding or removing items (e.g. from lists) should end with
123 either "_add" or "_remove".
124 Functions operating on all items from a list (not on only one of them),
125 should end with "_all", e.g. "_remove_all", "_get_all", and so on.
126 Use "_remove_all" in favor of "_clear" for consistency.
127
f18297a5
UH
128 - All enums should generally use an explicit start number of 10000.
129 If there are multiple "categories" in the enum entries, each category
130 should be 10000 entries apart from the next one. The start of categories
131 are thus 10000, 20000, 30000, and so on.
132
133 Adding items to an enum MUST always append to a "category", never add
134 items in the middle of a category. The order of items MUST NOT be changed.
135 Any of the above would break the ABI.
136
137 The enum item 0 is special and is used as terminator in some lists, thus
138 enums should not use this for "valid" entries (and start at 10000 instead).
139
b4bd7088
UH
140
141Doxygen
142-------
143
a2353f60
UH
144 - In Doxygen comments, put an empty line between the block of @param lines
145 and the final @return line. The @param lines themselves (if there is more
146 than one) are not separated by empty lines.
147
b4bd7088
UH
148 - Mark private functions (SR_PRIV) with /** @private */, so that Doxygen
149 doesn't include them in the output. Functions that are "static" anyway
150 don't need to be marked like this.
151
152 - Mark private variables/#defines with /** @cond PRIVATE */ and
153 /** @endcond */, so that Doxygen doesn't include them in the output.
154 Variables that are "static" don't need to be marked like this.
155
9fb5f2df 156 - Mark all public API functions (SR_API) with a @since tag which indicates
ef1020f9
UH
157 in which release the respective function was added (e.g. "@since 0.1.0").
158
159 If the function has existed before, but its API changed later, the @since
160 tag should mention only the release when the API last changed.
161
162 Example: The sr_foo() call was added in 0.1.0, but the API changed in
163 the later 0.2.0 release. The docs should read "@since 0.2.0" in that case.
9fb5f2df
UH
164
165 Non-public functions (static ones, and those marked SR_PRIV) don't need
166 to have @since markers.
167
168 The @since tag should be the last one, i.e. it should come after @param,
169 @return, @see, and so on.
170
a2353f60 171
79bb0e97
UH
172Testsuite
173---------
174
175You can run the libsigrok testsuite using:
176
177 $ make check
178
179
a2353f60
UH
180Release engineering
181-------------------
182
183See
184
185 http://sigrok.org/wiki/Developers/Release_process
186
187for a list of items that need to be done when releasing a new tarball.
188