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authorDrew DeVault <sir@cmpwn.com>2018-10-06 11:52:17 -0400
committerDrew DeVault <sir@cmpwn.com>2018-10-06 11:52:28 -0400
commit85961f63bfe922831011f75860b3acde3d890a9f (patch)
treea6544fad6ee8fd081382a29fb683b10c59decf17
parent0f45aa4ea9115f3f6a586efe7ff748e26d70bf7e (diff)
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Update CONTRIBUTING.md
-rw-r--r--CONTRIBUTING.md363
1 files changed, 188 insertions, 175 deletions
diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md
index f450563..a5a5111 100644
--- a/CONTRIBUTING.md
+++ b/CONTRIBUTING.md
@@ -1,30 +1,12 @@
# Contributing to sway
Contributing just involves sending a pull request. You will probably be more
-successful with your contribution if you visit the [IRC
-channel](http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=sway-devel&uio=d4) upfront and discuss
-your plans.
+successful with your contribution if you visit
+[#sway-devel](https://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=sway-devel) on
+irc.freenode.net upfront and discuss your plans.
-## Release Cycle
-
-The master branch of sway is always working towards becoming the next release.
-That release will go through each of these three stages:
-
-**In development**: during this time the release lives in the master branch and
-is considered unstable. All pull requests merged during this time will land in
-the release. Only developers are encouraged to run this version.
-
-**Release candidate**: at some point (usually when development is fairly quiet),
-SirCmpwn will announce an upcoming release candidate, often 2 weeks in
-advance. When the two weeks are up, a branch is cut (i.e. 0.8-rc1) and from
-that point only bugfixes land in this branch. Each week, if bugfixes landed
-during the week, a new RC is cut. During the RC phase, more adventurous users
-are encouraged to upgrade and start looking for and reporting bugs (especially
-in new features).
-
-**Stable release**: when no substantial changes are merged into an RC for one
-week, it's released as a new stable version of sway. At this point, all users
-are encouraged to upgrade.
+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.
## Pull Requests
@@ -33,34 +15,44 @@ don't, however, allow me to make a suggestion: feature branches pulled from
upstream. Try this:
1. Fork sway
-2. Clone your fork
-3. git remote add upstream git://github.com/swaywm/sway.git
+2. `git clone https://github.com/username/sway && cd sway`
+3. `git remote add upstream https://github.com/swaywm/sway`
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:
-1. git fetch upstream
-2. git checkout -b add-so-and-so-feature upstream/master
-3. work
-4. git push -u origin add-so-and-so-feature
-5. Make pull request from your feature branch
+1. `git fetch upstream`
+2. `git checkout -b add-so-and-so-feature upstream/master`
+3. Add and commit your changes
+4. `git push -u origin add-so-and-so-feature`
+5. 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.
+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 seperated from the subject line by a single
+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](https://help.github.com/articles/closing-issues-via-commit-messages/),
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 seperated into
+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.
@@ -68,157 +60,178 @@ 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.
-## Coding Style
-
-Sway is written in C. The style guidelines is [kernel
-style](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst), but all braces go
-on the same line (*"but K&R says so!" is a silly way of justifying something*).
-Some points to note:
-
-* Do not use typedefs unless you have a good reason
-* Do not use macros unless you have a *really* good reason
-* Align `case` with `switch`
-* Tabs, not spaces
-* `char *pointer` - note position of `*`
-* Use logging with reckless abandon
-* Always include braces for if/for/while/etc, even for one-liners
-
-An example of well formatted code:
-
-```C
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#include "log.h"
-#include "example.h"
-
-struct foobar {
- char *foo;
- int bar;
- long baz;
-}; // Do not typedef without a good reason
-
-int main(int argc, const char **argv) {
- if (argc != 4) {
- sway_abort("Do not run this program manually. See man 5 sway and look for output options.");
+See [here](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/) 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:
+
+1. **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).
+2. **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.
+3. **Execute** the test plan, if present.
+4. **Merge** the pull request when all reviewers approve.
+5. **File** follow-up tickets if appropriate.
+
+## Style Reference
+
+Sway is written in C with a style similar to the [kernel
+style](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst), 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.
+```c
+void function(void) {
+ if (condition1) {
+ do_thing1();
}
- if (!registry->desktop_shell) {
- sway_abort("swaybg requires the compositor to support the desktop-shell extension.");
+ 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.
+
+```c
+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 to
+balance the lines.
+
+### 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 `sway_submodule_` (e.g.
+`struct sway_output`, `sway_output_destroy`). For static functions and
+types local to a file, the names chosen aren't as important. Static functions
+shouldn't have a `sway_` 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.
- int desired_output = atoi(argv[1]);
- sway_log(WLR_INFO, "Using output %d of %d", desired_output, registry->outputs->length);
- int i;
- struct output_state *output = registry->outputs->items[desired_output];
- struct window *window = window_setup(registry, 100, 100, false);
- if (!window) {
- sway_abort("Failed to create surfaces.");
+### 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 a `malloc`ed chunk of memory, and will `free` it in `destroy`.
+
+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.
+
+### Macros
+
+Keep the use of macros to a minimum, especially if a function can do the job. If
+you do need to use them, try to keep them close to where they're being used and
+`#undef` them after.
+
+### Example
+
+```c
+struct wlr_backend *wlr_backend_autocreate(struct wl_display *display) {
+ struct wlr_backend *backend;
+ if (getenv("WAYLAND_DISPLAY") || getenv("_WAYLAND_DISPLAY")) {
+ backend = attempt_wl_backend(display);
+ if (backend) {
+ return backend;
+ }
}
- window->width = output->width;
- window->height = output->height;
- desktop_shell_set_background(registry->desktop_shell, output->output, window->surface);
- list_add(surfaces, window);
-
- cairo_surface_t *image = cairo_image_surface_create_from_png(argv[2]);
- double width = cairo_image_surface_get_width(image);
- double height = cairo_image_surface_get_height(image);
-
- const char *scaling_mode_str = argv[3];
- enum scaling_mode scaling_mode;
- if (strcmp(scaling_mode_str, "stretch") == 0) {
- scaling_mode = SCALING_MODE_STRETCH;
- } else if (strcmp(scaling_mode_str, "fill") == 0) {
- scaling_mode = SCALING_MODE_FILL;
- } else if (strcmp(scaling_mode_str, "fit") == 0) {
- scaling_mode = SCALING_MODE_FIT;
- } else if (strcmp(scaling_mode_str, "center") == 0) {
- scaling_mode = SCALING_MODE_CENTER;
- } else if (strcmp(scaling_mode_str, "tile") == 0) {
- scaling_mode = SCALING_MODE_TILE;
- } else {
- sway_abort("Unsupported scaling mode: %s", scaling_mode_str);
+
+ const char *x11_display = getenv("DISPLAY");
+ if (x11_display) {
+ return wlr_x11_backend_create(display, x11_display);
}
- for (i = 0; i < surfaces->length; ++i) {
- struct window *window = surfaces->items[i];
- if (window_prerender(window) && window->cairo) {
- switch (scaling_mode) {
- case SCALING_MODE_STRETCH:
- cairo_scale(window->cairo,
- (double) window->width / width,
- (double) window->height / height);
- cairo_set_source_surface(window->cairo, image, 0, 0);
- break;
- case SCALING_MODE_FILL:
- {
- double window_ratio = (double) window->width / window->height;
- double bg_ratio = width / height;
-
- if (window_ratio > bg_ratio) {
- double scale = (double) window->width / width;
- cairo_scale(window->cairo, scale, scale);
- cairo_set_source_surface(window->cairo, image,
- 0,
- (double) window->height/2 / scale - height/2);
- } else {
- double scale = (double) window->height / height;
- cairo_scale(window->cairo, scale, scale);
- cairo_set_source_surface(window->cairo, image,
- (double) window->width/2 / scale - width/2,
- 0);
- }
- break;
- }
- case SCALING_MODE_FIT:
- {
- double window_ratio = (double) window->width / window->height;
- double bg_ratio = width / height;
-
- if (window_ratio > bg_ratio) {
- double scale = (double) window->height / height;
- cairo_scale(window->cairo, scale, scale);
- cairo_set_source_surface(window->cairo, image,
- (double) window->width/2 / scale - width/2,
- 0);
- } else {
- double scale = (double) window->width / width;
- cairo_scale(window->cairo, scale, scale);
- cairo_set_source_surface(window->cairo, image,
- 0,
- (double) window->height/2 / scale - height/2);
- }
- break;
- }
- case SCALING_MODE_CENTER:
- cairo_set_source_surface(window->cairo, image,
- (double) window->width/2 - width/2,
- (double) window->height/2 - height/2);
- break;
- case SCALING_MODE_TILE:
- {
- cairo_pattern_t *pattern = cairo_pattern_create_for_surface(image);
- cairo_pattern_set_extend(pattern, CAIRO_EXTEND_REPEAT);
- cairo_set_source(window->cairo, pattern);
- break;
- }
- default:
- sway_abort("Scaling mode '%s' not implemented yet!", scaling_mode_str);
- }
-
- cairo_paint(window->cairo);
-
- window_render(window);
- }
+ // Attempt DRM+libinput
+
+ struct wlr_session *session = wlr_session_create(display);
+ if (!session) {
+ wlr_log(WLR_ERROR, "Failed to start a DRM session");
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ int gpu = wlr_session_find_gpu(session);
+ if (gpu == -1) {
+ wlr_log(WLR_ERROR, "Failed to open DRM device");
+ goto error_session;
}
- while (wl_display_dispatch(registry->display) != -1);
+ backend = wlr_multi_backend_create(session);
+ if (!backend) {
+ goto error_gpu;
+ }
- for (i = 0; i < surfaces->length; ++i) {
- struct window *window = surfaces->items[i];
- window_teardown(window);
+ struct wlr_backend *libinput = wlr_libinput_backend_create(display, session);
+ if (!libinput) {
+ goto error_multi;
}
- list_free(surfaces);
- registry_teardown(registry);
- return 0;
+
+ struct wlr_backend *drm = wlr_drm_backend_create(display, session, gpu);
+ if (!drm) {
+ goto error_libinput;
+ }
+
+ wlr_multi_backend_add(backend, libinput);
+ wlr_multi_backend_add(backend, drm);
+ return backend;
+
+error_libinput:
+ wlr_backend_destroy(libinput);
+error_multi:
+ wlr_backend_destroy(backend);
+error_gpu:
+ wlr_session_close_file(session, gpu);
+error_session:
+ wlr_session_destroy(session);
+ return NULL;
}
```