From: Uwe Hermann Date: Sun, 3 Nov 2013 15:06:15 +0000 (+0100) Subject: HACKING: Updates, some additions. X-Git-Tag: libsigrok-0.2.2~15 X-Git-Url: https://sigrok.org/gitweb/?p=libsigrok.git;a=commitdiff_plain;h=ef1020f9cba528b542968b32fe662241e96e6119 HACKING: Updates, some additions. --- diff --git a/HACKING b/HACKING index cf407c98..0e818c21 100644 --- a/HACKING +++ b/HACKING @@ -45,7 +45,11 @@ You can apply it like this: $ cd libsigrok $ git am 0001-tondaj-sl-814-Initial-driver-skeleton.patch -You can now edit the files in the hardware/tondaj-sl-814 directory as needed. +You can now edit the files in the hardware/tondaj-sl-814 directory as needed +and implement your driver based on the skeleton files there. That means your +patch submission later will consist of at least two patches: the initial one +adding the skeleton driver, and one or more additional patches that actually +implement the respective driver code. The manual way: @@ -71,6 +75,12 @@ See existing drivers or the 'new-driver' output for the details. Random notes ------------ + - Don't do variable declarations in compound statements, only at the + beginning of a function. + + - Generally avoid assigning values to variables at declaration time, + especially so for complex and/or run-time dependent values. + - Consistently use g_try_malloc() / g_try_malloc0(). Do not use standard malloc()/calloc() if it can be avoided (sometimes other libs such as libftdi can return malloc()'d memory, for example). @@ -95,7 +105,7 @@ Random notes - Consistently use the same naming convention for #include guards in headers: __ This ensures that all #include guards are always unique and consistent. - Examples: LIBSIGROK_LIBSIGROK_H, LIBSIGROK_HARDWARE_ASIX_SIGMA_ASIX_SIGMA_H + Examples: LIBSIGROK_LIBSIGROK_H, LIBSIGROK_HARDWARE_MIC_985XX_PROTOCOL_H - Consistently use the same naming convention for API functions: __(). @@ -144,8 +154,13 @@ Doxygen Variables that are "static" don't need to be marked like this. - Mark all public API functions (SR_API) with a @since tag which indicates - in which release the respective function was added. If the function has - existed before, but its API changed later, document this as well. + in which release the respective function was added (e.g. "@since 0.1.0"). + + If the function has existed before, but its API changed later, the @since + tag should mention only the release when the API last changed. + + Example: The sr_foo() call was added in 0.1.0, but the API changed in + the later 0.2.0 release. The docs should read "@since 0.2.0" in that case. Non-public functions (static ones, and those marked SR_PRIV) don't need to have @since markers. @@ -153,12 +168,6 @@ Doxygen The @since tag should be the last one, i.e. it should come after @param, @return, @see, and so on. - Examples: - - @since 0.1.0 - - @since 0.1.1 (but the API changed in 0.2.0) - Testsuite ---------