| Busybox Style Guide |
| =================== |
| |
| This document describes the coding style conventions used in Busybox. If you |
| add a new file to Busybox or are editing an existing file, please format your |
| code according to this style. If you are the maintainer of a file that does |
| not follow these guidelines, please -- at your own convenience -- modify the |
| file(s) you maintain to bring them into conformance with this style guide. |
| Please note that this is a low priority task. |
| |
| To help you format the whitespace of your programs, an ".indent.pro" file is |
| included in the main Busybox source directory that contains option flags to |
| format code as per this style guide. This way you can run GNU indent on your |
| files by typing 'indent myfile.c myfile.h' and it will magically apply all the |
| right formatting rules to your file. Please _do_not_ run this on all the files |
| in the directory, just your own. |
| |
| |
| |
| Declaration Order |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Here is the order in which code should be laid out in a file: |
| |
| - commented program name and one-line description |
| - commented author name and email address(es) |
| - commented GPL boilerplate |
| - commented longer description / notes for the program (if needed) |
| - #includes of .h files with angle brackets (<>) around them |
| - #includes of .h files with quotes ("") around them |
| - #defines (if any, note the section below titled "Avoid the Preprocessor") |
| - const and global variables |
| - function declarations (if necessary) |
| - function implementations |
| |
| |
| |
| Whitespace and Formatting |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| This is everybody's favorite flame topic so let's get it out of the way right |
| up front. |
| |
| |
| Tabs vs. Spaces in Line Indentation |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The preference in Busybox is to indent lines with tabs. Do not indent lines |
| with spaces and do not indents lines using a mixture of tabs and spaces. (The |
| indentation style in the Apache and Postfix source does this sort of thing: |
| \s\s\s\sif (expr) {\n\tstmt; --ick.) The only exception to this rule is |
| multi-line comments that use an asterisk at the beginning of each line, i.e.: |
| |
| /t/* |
| /t * This is a block comment. |
| /t * Note that it has multiple lines |
| /t * and that the beginning of each line has a tab plus a space |
| /t * except for the opening '/*' line where the slash |
| /t * is used instead of a space. |
| /t */ |
| |
| Furthermore, The preference is that tabs be set to display at four spaces |
| wide, but the beauty of using only tabs (and not spaces) at the beginning of |
| lines is that you can set your editor to display tabs at *whatever* number of |
| spaces is desired and the code will still look fine. |
| |
| |
| Operator Spacing |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Put spaces between terms and operators. Example: |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| for(i=0;i<num_items;i++){ |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < num_items; i++) { |
| |
| While it extends the line a bit longer, the spaced version is more |
| readable. An allowable exception to this rule is the situation where |
| excluding the spacing makes it more obvious that we are dealing with a |
| single term (even if it is a compound term) such as: |
| |
| if (str[idx] == '/' && str[idx-1] != '\\') |
| |
| or |
| |
| if ((argc-1) - (optind+1) > 0) |
| |
| |
| Bracket Spacing |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If an opening bracket starts a function, it should be on the |
| next line with no spacing before it. However, if a bracket follows an opening |
| control block, it should be on the same line with a single space (not a tab) |
| between it and the opening control block statement. Examples: |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| while (!done) |
| { |
| |
| do |
| { |
| |
| Don't do this either: |
| |
| while (!done){ |
| |
| do{ |
| |
| And for heaven's sake, don't do this: |
| |
| while (!done) |
| { |
| |
| do |
| { |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| while (!done) { |
| |
| do { |
| |
| |
| Spacing around Parentheses |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Put a space between C keywords and left parens, but not between |
| function names and the left paren that starts it's parameter list (whether it |
| is being declared or called). Examples: |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| while(foo) { |
| for(i = 0; i < n; i++) { |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| while (foo) { |
| for (i = 0; i < n; i++) { |
| |
| But do functions like this: |
| |
| static int my_func(int foo, char bar) |
| ... |
| baz = my_func(1, 2); |
| |
| Also, don't put a space between the left paren and the first term, nor between |
| the last arg and the right paren. |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| if ( x < 1 ) |
| strcmp( thisstr, thatstr ) |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| if (x < 1) |
| strcmp(thisstr, thatstr) |
| |
| |
| Cuddled Elses |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Also, please "cuddle" your else statements by putting the else keyword on the |
| same line after the right bracket that closes an 'if' statement. |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| if (foo) { |
| stmt; |
| } |
| else { |
| stmt; |
| } |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| if (foo) { |
| stmt; |
| } else { |
| stmt; |
| } |
| |
| The exception to this rule is if you want to include a comment before the else |
| block. Example: |
| |
| if (foo) { |
| stmts... |
| } |
| /* otherwise, we're just kidding ourselves, so re-frob the input */ |
| else { |
| other_stmts... |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Variable and Function Names |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Use the K&R style with names in all lower-case and underscores occasionally |
| used to separate words (e.g., "variable_name" and "numchars" are both |
| acceptable). Using underscores makes variable and function names more readable |
| because it looks like whitespace; using lower-case is easy on the eyes. |
| |
| Frowned upon: |
| |
| hitList |
| TotalChars |
| szFileName |
| pf_Nfol_TriState |
| |
| Preferred: |
| |
| hit_list |
| total_chars |
| file_name |
| sensible_name |
| |
| Exceptions: |
| |
| - Enums, macros, and constant variables should all be in upper-case with |
| words optionally seperatedy by underscores (i.e. FIFOTYPE, ISBLKDEV()). |
| |
| - Nobody is going to get mad at you for using 'pvar' as the name of a |
| variable that is a pointer to 'var'. |
| |
| Note: The Busybox codebase is very much a mixture of code gathered from a |
| variety of sources. This explains why the current codebase contains such a |
| hodge-podge of different naming styles (Java, Pascal, K&R, just-plain-weird, |
| etc.). The K&R guideline explained above should therefore be used on new files |
| that are added to the repository. Furthermore, the maintainer of an existing |
| file that uses alternate naming conventions should -- at his own convenience |
| -- convert those names over to K&R style; converting variable names is a very |
| low priority task. Perhaps in the future we will include some magical Perl |
| script that can go through and convert variable names, left as an exercise for |
| the reader for now. |
| |
| For the time being, if you want to do a search-and-replace of a variable name |
| in different files, do the following in the busybox directory: |
| |
| $ perl -pi -e 's/\bOldVar\b/new_var/g' *.[ch] |
| |
| |
| |
| Avoid The Preprocessor |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| At best, the preprocessor is a necessary evil, helping us account for platform |
| and architecture differences. Using the preprocessor unnecessarily is just |
| plain evil. |
| |
| |
| The Folly of #define |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Use 'const <type> var' for declaring constants. |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| #define var 80 |
| |
| Do this instead, when the variable is in a header file and will be used in |
| several source files: |
| |
| const int var = 80; |
| |
| Or do this when the variable is used only in a single source file: |
| |
| static const int var = 80; |
| |
| Declaring variables as '[static] const' gives variables an actual type and |
| makes the compiler do type checking for you; the preprocessor does _no_ type |
| checking whatsoever, making it much more error prone. Declaring variables with |
| '[static] const' also makes debugging programs much easier since the value of |
| the variable can be easily queried and displayed. |
| |
| |
| The Folly of Macros |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Use 'static inline' instead of a macro. |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| #define mini_func(param1, param2) (param1 << param2) |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| static inline int mini_func(int param1, param2) |
| { |
| return (param1 << param2); |
| } |
| |
| Static inline functions are greatly preferred over macros. They provide type |
| safety, have no length limitations, no formatting limitations, and under gcc |
| they are as cheap as macros. Besides, really long macros with backslashes at |
| the end of each line are ugly as sin. |
| |
| |
| The Folly of #ifdef |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Code cluttered with ifdefs is difficult to read and maintain. Don't do it. |
| Instead, put your ifdefs in a header, and conditionally define 'static inline' |
| functions, (or *maybe* macros), which are used in the code. |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| ret = my_func(bar, baz); |
| if (!ret) |
| return -1; |
| #ifdef BB_FEATURE_FUNKY |
| maybe_do_funky_stuff(bar, baz); |
| #endif |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| (in .h header file) |
| |
| #ifdef BB_FEATURE_FUNKY |
| static inline void maybe_do_funky_stuff (int bar, int baz) |
| { |
| /* lotsa code in here */ |
| } |
| #else |
| static inline void maybe_do_funky_stuff (int bar, int baz) {} |
| #endif |
| |
| (in the .c source file) |
| |
| ret = my_func(bar, baz); |
| if (!ret) |
| return -1; |
| maybe_do_funky_stuff(bar, baz); |
| |
| The great thing about this approach is that the compiler will optimize away |
| the "no-op" case (the empty function) when the feature is turned off. |
| |
| Note also the use of the word 'maybe' in the function name to indicate |
| conditional execution. |
| |
| |
| |
| Notes on Strings |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Strings in C can get a little thorny. Here's some guidelines for dealing with |
| strings in Busybox. (There is surely more that could be added to this |
| section.) |
| |
| |
| String Files |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Put all help/usage messages in usage.c. Put other strings in messages.c. |
| Putting these strings into their own file is a calculated decision designed to |
| confine spelling errors to a single place and aid internationalization |
| efforts, if needed. (Side Note: we might want to use a single file - maybe |
| called 'strings.c' - instead of two, food for thought). |
| |
| |
| Testing String Equivalence |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| There's a right way and a wrong way to test for sting equivalence with |
| strcmp(): |
| |
| The wrong way: |
| |
| if (!strcmp(string, "foo")) { |
| ... |
| |
| The right way: |
| |
| if (strcmp(string, "foo") == 0){ |
| ... |
| |
| The use of the "equals" (==) operator in the latter example makes it much more |
| obvious that you are testing for equivalence. The former example with the |
| "not" (!) operator makes it look like you are testing for an error. In a more |
| perfect world, we would have a streq() function in the string library, but |
| that ain't the world we're living in. |
| |
| |
| Avoid Dangerous String Functions |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Unfortunately, the way C handles strings makes them prone to overruns when |
| certain library functions are (mis)used. The following table offers a summary |
| of some of the more notorious troublemakers: |
| |
| function overflows preferred |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| strcpy dest string strncpy |
| strcat dest string strncat |
| gets string it gets fgets |
| getwd buf string getcwd |
| [v]sprintf str buffer [v]snprintf |
| realpath path buffer use with pathconf |
| [vf]scanf its arguments just avoid it |
| |
| |
| The above is by no means a complete list. Be careful out there. |
| |
| |
| |
| Avoid Big Static Buffers |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| First, some background to put this discussion in context: Static buffers look |
| like this in code: |
| |
| /* in a .c file outside any functions */ |
| static char *buffer[BUFSIZ]; /* happily used by any function in this file, |
| but ick! big! */ |
| |
| The problem with these is that any time any busybox app is run, you pay a |
| memory penalty for this buffer, even if the applet that uses said buffer is |
| not run. This can be fixed, thusly: |
| |
| static char *buffer; |
| ... |
| other_func() |
| { |
| strcpy(buffer, lotsa_chars); /* happily uses global *buffer */ |
| ... |
| foo_main() |
| { |
| buffer = xmalloc(sizeof(char)*BUFSIZ); |
| ... |
| |
| However, this approach trades bss segment for text segment. Rather than |
| mallocing the buffers (and thus growing the text size), buffers can be |
| declared on the stack in the *_main() function and made available globally by |
| assigning them to a global pointer thusly: |
| |
| static char *pbuffer; |
| ... |
| other_func() |
| { |
| strcpy(pbuffer, lotsa_chars); /* happily uses global *pbuffer */ |
| ... |
| foo_main() |
| { |
| char *buffer[BUFSIZ]; /* declared locally, on stack */ |
| pbuffer = buffer; /* but available globally */ |
| ... |
| |
| This last approach has some advantages (low code size, space not used until |
| it's needed), but can be a problem in some low resource machines that have |
| very limited stack space (e.g., uCLinux). |
| |
| A macro is declared in busybox.h that implements compile-time selection |
| between xmalloc() and stack creation, so you can code the line in question as |
| |
| RESERVE_BB_BUFFER(buffer, BUFSIZ); |
| |
| and the right thing will happen, based on your configuration. |
| |
| |
| |
| Miscellaneous Coding Guidelines |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| The following are important items that don't fit into any of the above |
| sections. |
| |
| |
| Model Busybox Applets After GNU Counterparts |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| When in doubt about the proper behavior of a Busybox program (output, |
| formatting, options, etc.), model it after the equivalent GNU program. |
| Doesn't matter how that program behaves on some other flavor of *NIX; doesn't |
| matter what the POSIX standard says or doesn't say, just model Busybox |
| programs after their GNU counterparts and nobody has to get hurt. |
| |
| The only time we deviate from emulating the GNU behavior is when: |
| |
| - We are deliberately not supporting a feature (such as a command line |
| switch) |
| - Emulating the GNU behavior is prohibitively expensive (lots more code |
| would be required, lots more memory would be used, etc.) |
| - The difference is minor or cosmetic |
| |
| A note on the 'cosmetic' case: Output differences might be considered |
| cosmetic, but if the output is significant enough to break other scripts that |
| use the output, it should really be fixed. |
| |
| |
| Scope |
| ~~~~~ |
| |
| If a const variable is used only in a single source file, put it in the source |
| file and not in a header file. Likewise, if a const variable is used in only |
| one function, do not make it global to the file. Instead, declare it inside |
| the function body. Bottom line: Make a conscious effort to limit declarations |
| to the smallest scope possible. |
| |
| Inside applet files, all functions should be declared static so as to keep the |
| global name space clean. The only exception to this rule is the "applet_main" |
| function which must be declared extern. |
| |
| If you write a function that performs a task that could be useful outside the |
| immediate file, turn it into a general-purpose function with no ties to any |
| applet and put it in the utility.c file instead. |
| |
| |
| Brackets Are Your Friends |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Please use brackets on all if and else statements, even if it is only one |
| line. Example: |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| if (foo) |
| stmt1; |
| stmt2 |
| stmt3; |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| if (foo) { |
| stmt1; |
| } |
| stmt2 |
| stmt3; |
| |
| The "bracketless" approach is error prone because someday you might add a line |
| like this: |
| |
| if (foo) |
| stmt1; |
| new_line(); |
| stmt2 |
| stmt3; |
| |
| And the resulting behavior of your program would totally bewilder you. (Don't |
| laugh, it happens to us all.) Remember folks, this is C, not Python. |
| |
| |
| Function Declarations |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Do not use old-style function declarations that declare variable types between |
| the parameter list and opening bracket. Example: |
| |
| Don't do this: |
| |
| int foo(parm1, parm2) |
| char parm1; |
| float parm2; |
| { |
| .... |
| |
| Do this instead: |
| |
| int foo(char parm1, float parm2) |
| { |
| .... |
| |
| The only time you would ever need to use the old declaration syntax is to |
| support ancient, antediluvian compilers. To our good fortune, we have access |
| to more modern compilers and the old declaration syntax is neither necessary |
| nor desired. |
| |
| |
| Emphasizing Logical Blocks |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Organization and readability are improved by putting extra newlines around |
| blocks of code that perform a single task. These are typically blocks that |
| begin with a C keyword, but not always. |
| |
| Furthermore, you should put a single comment (not necessarily one line, just |
| one comment) before the block, rather than commenting each and every line. |
| There is an optimal ammount of commenting that a program can have; you can |
| comment too much as well as too little. |
| |
| A picture is really worth a thousand words here, so here is an example that |
| illustrates emphasizing logical blocks: |
| |
| while (line = get_line_from_file(fp)) { |
| |
| /* eat the newline, if any */ |
| if (line[strlen(line)-1] == '\n') { |
| line[strlen(line)-1] = '\0'; |
| } |
| |
| /* ignore blank lines */ |
| if (strlen(file_to_act_on) == 0) { |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| /* if the search string is in this line, print it, |
| * unless we were told to be quiet */ |
| if (strstr(line, search) && !be_quiet) { |
| puts(line); |
| } |
| |
| /* clean up */ |
| free(line); |
| } |
| |
| |
| Processing Options with getopt |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If your applet needs to process command-line switches, please use getopt() to |
| do so. Numerous examples can be seen in many of the existing applets, but |
| basically it boils down to two things: at the top of the .c file, have this |
| line in the midst of your #includes: |
| |
| #include <getopt.h> |
| |
| And a code block similar to the following near the top of your applet_main() |
| routine: |
| |
| while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "abc")) > 0) { |
| switch (opt) { |
| case 'a': |
| do_a_opt = 1; |
| break; |
| case 'b': |
| do_b_opt = 1; |
| break; |
| case 'c': |
| do_c_opt = 1; |
| break; |
| default: |
| show_usage(); /* in utility.c */ |
| } |
| } |
| |
| If your applet takes no options (such as 'init'), there should be a line |
| somewhere in the file reads: |
| |
| /* no options, no getopt */ |
| |
| That way, when people go grepping to see which applets need to be converted to |
| use getopt, they won't get false positives. |
| |
| Additional Note: Do not use the getopt_long library function and do not try to |
| hand-roll your own long option parsing. Busybox applets should only support |
| short options, plus explanations and examples in usage.h. |