Mercurial > audlegacy
view HACKING @ 4750:74134c731db6
make libSAD shared library, so plugins can use it
author | Andrew O. Shadoura <bugzilla@tut.by> |
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date | Wed, 06 Aug 2008 22:30:35 +0300 |
parents | 785b606fd504 |
children | 10cfc41149ff |
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Hacking / coding guide for Audacious and Audacious-plugins ========================================================== (C) Copyright 2008 Audacious Development Team Written by Matti 'ccr' Hämäläinen <ccr@tnsp.org>, and mercilessly edited by others. Preamble ======== This document describes the guidelines for people who wish to work on improving or cleaning up Audacious media player, or any of the plugins we distribute in the plugins package. It is probably obvious to anyone who has taken a look into the depths of Audacious source, that many of these guidelines are not actually followed currently in all places, if at all. In fact, the purpose of this document is to act as a target to aim at, when noticing and cleaning up uncompliant code.. or writing new code. Coding guidelines ================= - Public functions in Audacious core SHOULD be documented via Doxygen comments! In this case "public" means any functions that span modules OR are available to plugins. Of course, most functions currently lack documentation. If you have spare time, improve the situation. - We use Glib for portability. This means that we have sized integer types such as gint{16,32,64}, etc. and shorthand types like guint and guchar provided, so please do use them. Arguably C99 provides inttypes.h with similar types, but C99 support may not be complete on all platforms, it is both safer and more uniform to use glib types. - Use other glib functionality, especially string handling like: * g_snprintf(), g_strdup_printf(), g_strdup() ... - However, avoid following Glib things: * GString - Useless in most cases compared to normal 'C' string functions and introduces conversions back and forth. * GList - GList is slow, either use GQueue or libmowgli lists. - Be sure to know when you are handling UTF-8 or something else! Glib offers special g_ascii_*() functions for certain operations that you might need when handling non-unicode strings. - When reading data from files, it's usually a BIG mistake to read structs directly from the stream! This is not portable, as C does not guarantee a struct not to have alignment padding (unless the struct is "packed", but see below.) In effect sizeof(struct), unless packed, on some platform may not be equal to some other platform. Making struct "packed" via the C packed qualifier or "#pragma pack()" is a solution, but this must be used with care. Unaligned memory access causes performance penalties, and may cause other, more serious problems in some cases. For example, code written in assembler may not know about the un-alignment, and may thus fail with 'bus errors' on platforms that strictly required aligned data. The 100% safe way is to read individual members of the struct one by one from the stream. This may be bothersome, but by doing so, your code will be portable for sure. - Always use Glib sized types for reading integer data from file streams. Using plain C types (like 'long int' for example) is not wise, because they may be of different size on different platforms depending on the platform ABI. For example, on some 64-bit platforms, 'long int' is 64 bits, while on 32-bit platforms it is 32 bits. - Audacious core provides some helper functions for reading endian-dependant integers from VFS streams (aud_vfs_fget_{le,be}{16,32,64}), see vfs.h and documentation for more information. - Avoid reinventing wheels, avoid code duplication. If same thing is done in two places, it should be in a library, or possibly in Audacious core. Discuss about it with fellow developers. Additional style guidelines =========================== - Indentation: Use the same indentation style (also spaces vs. tabs) as the file you are editing. In new files/code, use indentation of 4 spaces (no tabs). When moving functions to new files, PLEASE reindent the code. - Whitespace usage in code: a = 1; if (b == d && !strcmp(a, c)) ... - Blocks: while (...) { do_something(...); } if (...) { do_stuff(); } else { do_other_stuff(); }