[libvirt] [PATCH] Document preferred naming conventions

Daniel P. Berrange berrange at redhat.com
Fri Mar 3 09:48:23 UTC 2017


This documents the preferred conventions for naming files,
structs, enums, typedefs and functions.

Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange at redhat.com>
---
 HACKING              | 71 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 docs/hacking.html.in | 83 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 docs/hacking2.xsl    |  4 +++
 3 files changed, 158 insertions(+)

diff --git a/HACKING b/HACKING
index fff003b..16be5cf 100644
--- a/HACKING
+++ b/HACKING
@@ -239,6 +239,77 @@ on the subject, on Richard Jones' guide to working with open source projects
 <http://people.redhat.com/rjones/how-to-supply-code-to-open-source-projects/>.
 
 
+Naming conventions
+==================
+When reading libvirt code, a number of different naming conventions will be
+evident due to various changes in thinking over the course of the project's
+lifetime. The conventions documented below should be followed when creating
+any entirely new files in libvirt. When working on existing files, while it is
+desirable to apply these conventions, keeping a consistent style with existing
+code in that particular file is generally more important. The overall guiding
+rule is that every file, enum, struct, function, and typedef name must have a
+'vir' or 'VIR' prefix. All local scope variable names are exempt, and global
+variables are exempt, unless exported in a header file.
+
+*File names*
+
+File naming varies depending on the subdirectory. The preferred style is to
+have a 'vir' prefix, followed by a name which matches the name of the
+functions / objects inside the file. For example, a file containing an object
+'virHashtable' is stored in files 'virhashtable.c' and 'virhashtable.h'.
+Sometimes, methods which would otherwise be declared 'static' need to be
+exported for use by a test suite. For this purpose a second header file should
+be added with a suffix of 'priv'. e.g. 'virhashtablepriv.h'. USe of
+underscores in file names is discouraged when using the 'vir' prefix style.
+The 'vir' prefix naming applies to src/util, src/rpc and tests/ directories.
+Most other directories do not follow this convention.
+
+
+
+*Enum type & field names*
+
+All enums should have a 'vir' prefix in their typedef name, and each following
+word should have its first letter in uppercase. The enum name should match the
+typedef name with a leading underscore. The enum member names should be in all
+uppercase, and use an underscore to separate each word. The enum member name
+prefix should match the enum typedef name.
+
+    typedef enum _virSocketType virSocketType;
+    enum _virSocketType {
+        VIR_SOCKET_TYPE_IPV4,
+        VIR_SOCKET_TYPE_IPV6,
+    };
+
+
+*Struct type names*
+
+All structs should have a 'vir' prefix in their typedef name, and each
+following word should have its first letter in uppercase. The struct name
+should be the same as the typedef name with a leading underscore. A second
+typedef should be given for a pointer to the struct with a 'Ptr' suffix.
+
+    typedef struct _virHashTable virHashTable;
+    typedef virHashTable *virHashTablePtr;
+    struct _virHashTable {
+       ...
+    };
+
+
+*Function names*
+
+All functions should have a 'vir' prefix in their name, followed by one or
+more words with first letter of each word capitalized. Underscores should not
+be used in function names. If the function is operating on an object, then the
+function name prefix should match the object typedef name. For example, given
+an object 'virHashTable', all functions should have a name 'virHashTableXXXX'
+e.g. 'virHashTableLookup'. If there is no object associated with the function,
+then its name prefix should match the filename. For example, given a filename
+of 'virfile.h', all functions should have a name 'virFileXXXX' e.g.
+'virFileTouch'.
+
+
+
+
 Code indentation
 ================
 Libvirt's C source code generally adheres to some basic code-formatting
diff --git a/docs/hacking.html.in b/docs/hacking.html.in
index b1bb149..028536d 100644
--- a/docs/hacking.html.in
+++ b/docs/hacking.html.in
@@ -314,6 +314,89 @@
         Richard Jones' guide to working with open source projects</a>.
     </p>
 
+    <h2><a name="naming">Naming conventions</a></h2>
+
+    <p>
+      When reading libvirt code, a number of different naming conventions will
+      be evident due to various changes in thinking over the course of the
+      project's lifetime. The conventions documented below should be followed
+      when creating any entirely new files in libvirt. When working on existing
+      files, while it is desirable to apply these conventions, keeping a
+      consistent style with existing code in that particular file is generally
+      more important. The overall guiding rule is that every file, enum, struct,
+      function, and typedef name must have a 'vir' or 'VIR' prefix.  All local
+      scope variable names are exempt, and global variables are exempt, unless
+      exported in a header file.
+    </p>
+
+    <dl>
+      <dt>File names</dt>
+      <dd>
+        <p>
+          File naming varies depending on the subdirectory. The preferred
+          style is to have a 'vir' prefix, followed by a name which matches
+          the name of the functions / objects inside the file. For example,
+          a file containing an object  'virHashtable' is stored in files
+          'virhashtable.c' and 'virhashtable.h'. Sometimes, methods which
+          would otherwise be declared 'static' need to be exported for use
+          by a test suite. For this purpose a second header file should be
+          added with a suffix of 'priv'. e.g. 'virhashtablepriv.h'. USe of
+          underscores in file names is discouraged when using the 'vir'
+          prefix style. The 'vir' prefix naming applies to src/util,
+          src/rpc and tests/ directories. Most other directories do not
+          follow this convention.
+        </p>
+      </dd>
+      <dt>Enum type & field names</dt>
+      <dd>
+        <p>
+          All enums should have a 'vir' prefix in their typedef name,
+          and each following word should have its first letter in
+          uppercase. The enum name should match the typedef name with
+          a leading underscore. The enum member names should be in all
+          uppercase, and use an underscore to separate each word. The
+          enum member name prefix should match the enum typedef name.
+        </p>
+        <pre>
+    typedef enum _virSocketType virSocketType;
+    enum _virSocketType {
+        VIR_SOCKET_TYPE_IPV4,
+        VIR_SOCKET_TYPE_IPV6,
+    };</pre>
+      </dd>
+      <dt>Struct type names</dt>
+      <dd>
+        <p>
+          All structs should have a 'vir' prefix in their typedef name,
+          and each following word should have its first letter in
+          uppercase. The struct name should be the same as the typedef
+          name with a leading underscore. A second typedef should be
+          given for a pointer to the struct with a 'Ptr' suffix.
+        </p>
+        <pre>
+    typedef struct _virHashTable virHashTable;
+    typedef virHashTable *virHashTablePtr;
+    struct _virHashTable {
+       ...
+    };</pre>
+      </dd>
+      <dt>Function names</dt>
+      <dd>
+        <p>
+          All functions should have a 'vir' prefix in their name,
+          followed by one or more words with first letter of each
+          word capitalized. Underscores should not be used in function
+          names. If the function is operating on an object, then the
+          function name prefix should match the object typedef name.
+          For example, given an object 'virHashTable', all functions
+          should have a name 'virHashTableXXXX' e.g. 'virHashTableLookup'.
+          If there is no object associated with the function, then its
+          name prefix should match the filename. For example, given a
+          filename of 'virfile.h', all functions should have a name
+          'virFileXXXX' e.g. 'virFileTouch'.
+          </p>
+      </dd>
+    </dl>
 
     <h2><a name="indent">Code indentation</a></h2>
     <p>
diff --git a/docs/hacking2.xsl b/docs/hacking2.xsl
index 3595b7e..7e5ac82 100644
--- a/docs/hacking2.xsl
+++ b/docs/hacking2.xsl
@@ -114,6 +114,10 @@ from docs/hacking.html.in!
 <xsl:template match="html:li/html:ul/html:li">-- <xsl:apply-templates/><xsl:value-of select="$newline"/><xsl:value-of select="$newline"/>
 </xsl:template>
 
+<xsl:template match="html:dl/html:dt">*<xsl:apply-templates/>*<xsl:value-of select="$newline"/><xsl:value-of select="$newline"/>
+</xsl:template>
+<xsl:template match="html:dl/html:dd"><xsl:apply-templates/><xsl:value-of select="$newline"/><xsl:value-of select="$newline"/>
+</xsl:template>
 
 
 <!-- add newline before nested <ul> -->
-- 
2.9.3




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