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9f0a2e77a0
This was widely used by U-Boot for a long time, but is not used anymore, with Gitlab and Azure taking over. Drop the text. Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Heinrich Schuchardt <xypron.glpk@gmx.de>
252 lines
8.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
252 lines
8.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+:
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U-Boot Coding Style
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===================
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The following Coding Style requirements shall be mandatory for all code contributed to
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the U-Boot project.
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Exceptions are only allowed if code from other projects is integrated with no
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or only minimal changes.
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The following rules apply:
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* All contributions to U-Boot should conform to the `Linux kernel
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coding style <https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html>`_
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and the `Lindent script <https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/scripts/Lindent>`_.
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* The exception for net files to the `multi-line comment
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<https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html#commenting>`_
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applies only to Linux, not to U-Boot. Only large hunks which are copied
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unchanged from Linux may retain that comment format.
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* Use patman to send your patches (``tools/patman/patman -H`` for full
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instructions). With a few tags in your commits this will check your patches
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and take care of emailing them.
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* If you don't use patman, make sure to run ``scripts/checkpatch.pl``. For
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more information, read :doc:`checkpatch`. Note that this should be done
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*before* posting on the mailing list!
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* Source files originating from different projects (for example the MTD
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subsystem or the hush shell code from the BusyBox project) may, after
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careful consideration, be exempted from these rules. For such files, the
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original coding style may be kept to ease subsequent migration to newer
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versions of those sources.
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* Please also stick to the following formatting rules:
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* Remove any trailing white space
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* Use TAB characters for indentation and vertical alignment, not spaces
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* The exception here is Python which requires 4 spaces instead.
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* All source files need to be in "Unix" and not "DOS" or "Windows" format,
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with respect to line ends.
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* Do not add more than 2 consecutive empty lines to source files
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* Do not add trailing empty lines to source files
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* Using the option ``git config --global color.diff auto`` will help to
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visually see whitespace problems in ``diff`` output from ``git``.
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* In Emacs one can use ``=M-x whitespace-global-mode=`` to get visual
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feedback on the nasty details. ``=M-x whitespace-cleanup=`` does The Right
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Thing (tm)
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Submissions of new code or patches that do not conform to these requirements
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shall be rejected with a request to reformat the changes.
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U-Boot Code Documentation
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-------------------------
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U-Boot adopted the kernel-doc annotation style, this is the only exception from
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multi-line comment rule of Coding Style. While not mandatory, adding
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documentation is strongly advised. The Linux kernel `kernel-doc
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<https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/doc-guide/kernel-doc.html>`_
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documentation applies with no changes.
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Use structures for I/O access
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-----------------------------
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U-Boot typically uses a C structure to map out the registers in an I/O region,
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rather than offsets. The reasons for this are:
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* It dissociates the register location (offset) from the register type, which
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means the developer has to make sure the type is right for each access,
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whereas with the struct method, this is checked by the compiler;
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* It avoids actually writing all offsets, which is (more) error-prone;
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* It allows for better compile time sanity-checking of values we write to registers.
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Some reasons why you might not use C structures:
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* Where the registers appear at different offsets in different hardware
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revisions supported by the same driver
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* Where the driver only uses a small subset of registers and it is not worth
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defining a struct to cover them all, with large empty regions
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* Where the offset of a register might be hard to figure out when buried a long
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way down a structure, possibly with embedded sub-structures
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* This may need to change to the kernel model if we allow for more run-time
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detection of what drivers are appropriate for what we're running on.
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Please use the check_member() macro to verify that your structure is the
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expected size, or that particular members appear at the right offset.
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Include files
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-------------
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You should follow this ordering in U-Boot. The common.h header (which is going
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away at some point) should always be first, followed by other headers in order,
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then headers with directories, then local files:
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.. code-block:: C
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#include <common.h>
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#include <bootstage.h>
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#include <dm.h>
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#include <others.h>
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#include <asm/...>
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#include <arm/arch/...>
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#include <dm/device_compat/.h>
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#include <linux/...>
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#include "local.h"
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Within that order, sort your includes.
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It is important to include common.h first since it provides basic features used
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by most files, e.g. CONFIG options.
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For files that need to be compiled for the host (e.g. tools), you need to use
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``#ifndef USE_HOSTCC`` to avoid including common.h since it includes a lot of
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internal U-Boot things. See common/image.c for an example.
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If your file uses driver model, include <dm.h> in the C file. Do not include
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dm.h in a header file. Try to use forward declarations (e.g. ``struct
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udevice``) instead.
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Filenames
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---------
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For .c and .h files try to use underscore rather than hyphen unless you want
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the file to stand out (e.g. driver-model uclasses should be named xxx-uclass.h.
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Avoid upper case and keep the names fairly short.
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Function and struct comments
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----------------------------
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Non-trivial functions should have a comment which describes what they do. If it
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is an exported function, put the comment in the header file so the API is in
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one place. If it is a static function, put it in the C file.
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If the function returns errors, mention that and list the different errors that
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are returned. If it is merely passing errors back from a function it calls,
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then you can skip that.
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See `here
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<https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/doc-guide/kernel-doc.html#function-documentation>`_
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for style.
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Driver model
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------------
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When declaring a device, try to use ``struct udevice *dev``, i.e. ``dev`` as the name:
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.. code-block:: C
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struct udevice *dev;
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Use ``ret`` as the return value:
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.. code-block:: C
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struct udevice *dev;
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int ret;
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ret = uclass_first_device_err(UCLASS_ACPI_PMC, &dev);
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if (ret)
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return log_msg_ret("pmc", dev);
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Consider using log_ret() or log_msg_ret() to return a value (see above).
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Add a ``p`` suffix on return arguments:
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.. code-block:: C
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int dm_pci_find_class(uint find_class, int index, struct udevice **devp)
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{
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...
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*devp = dev;
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return 0;
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}
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There are standard variable names that you should use in drivers:
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* ``struct xxx_priv`` and ``priv`` for dev_get_priv()
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* ``struct xxx_plat`` and ``plat`` for dev_get_platdata()
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For example:
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.. code-block:: C
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struct simple_bus_plat {
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u32 base;
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u32 size;
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u32 target;
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};
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/* Davinci MMC board definitions */
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struct davinci_mmc_priv {
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struct davinci_mmc_regs *reg_base; /* Register base address */
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uint input_clk; /* Input clock to MMC controller */
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struct gpio_desc cd_gpio; /* Card Detect GPIO */
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struct gpio_desc wp_gpio; /* Write Protect GPIO */
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};
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struct rcar_gpio_priv *priv = dev_get_priv(dev);
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struct pl01x_serial_platdata *plat = dev_get_platdata(dev);
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Other
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-----
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Some minor things:
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* Put a blank line before the last ``return`` in a function unless it is the only line:
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.. code-block:: C
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struct udevice *pci_get_controller(struct udevice *dev)
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{
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while (device_is_on_pci_bus(dev))
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dev = dev->parent;
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return dev;
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}
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Tests
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-----
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Please add tests when you add code. Please change or expand tests when you change code.
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Run the tests with::
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make check
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make qcheck (skips some tests)
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Python tests are in test/py/tests - see the docs in test/py for info.
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Try to write your tests in C if you can. For example, tests to check a command
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will be much faster (10-100x or more) if they can directly call run_command()
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and ut_check_console_line() instead of using Python to send commands over a
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pipe to U-Boot.
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Tests run all supported CI systems (GitLab, Azure) using scripts in the root of
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the U-Boot tree.
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