This document describes the preferred coding style for the OpenCryptoki project and its related projects (openssl-ibmca and openssl-ibmpkcs11). Coding style is always of personal taste, but defining one coding style makes the maintenance of the project easier and gives a standard face for the source code, something that this projects have been lacking for the past years.
The inspiration and formatting of this document came from the Linux Kernel coding style document, but make no assumption as the coding style differ from each other on some aspects.
To help developers on checking if their code changes are following the coding style format, we created a pre-commit git hook which is shared under .githooks/ directory. This hook will use GNU indent to check your code changes.
You might wonder "why we ask for user confirmation?". Well, we don't want to create a overhead for developers that are working on feature branches and their code changes are not yet ready for a pull request.
To set up the pre-commit hook, each developer after cloning the project needs to run: $ ln -s ../../.githooks/pre-commit .git/hooks/pre-commit
Tabs are 4 space characters, differently from many projects that define it as 8 characters. The main idea behind this is that 4 characters should give you a clear idea about where a block of control starts and ends.
To keep the code readable and maintainable, the limit on the length of lines is 80 columns and this is a strongly preferred limit.
Here we follow Kernighan and Ritchie teachings. An opening brace is put last on the line, and put the closing brace first, e.g.:
if (x == 0) { do_y(); }
This applies to all non-function statement blocks (if, switch, for, while, do). Another example:
switch (value) { case 1: return "one"; case 2: return "two"; case 3: return "three"; default: return NULL; }
However, there is one special case, functions: their opening brace stays at the beginning of the next line, e.g.:
int func(int x) { do_something(); }
Follow other examples:
do { do_something(); } while (condition);
if (x == 1) { do_one(); } else if (x > 1) { do_two(); } else { do_three(); }
It is not necessary to use braces when there is only a single statement, e.g.:
if (x == 1) do_something();
and
if (x == 1) do_something(); else do_something_else();
This does not apply when only one branch in a conditional statement is a single statement. In this, case use braces in all branches, e.g.:
if (x == 1) { do_something(); do_something_more(); } else { do_something_else(); }
Always use a space after these keywords:
if, switch, case, for, do, while
E.g.:
if (condition) { .. }
The following keywords should not have a space between them and their
parentheses:
sizeof, typeof
E.g.:
s = sizeof(struct alg);
Do not add spaces around (inside) parenthesized expressions, e.g.:
if ( x == 1 ) { .. }
When declaring a pointer or a function that returns a pointer type, the *
must be put adjacent to the data name or function name, e.g.:
int *ptr; void ptrcopy(int *dest, char *src); int *get_address(int *ptr);
Use one space on each side of the following operators:
= + - < > * / % | & ^ <= >= == != ? :
but no space after unary operators:
& * + - ~ !
no space before postfix/after prefix increment and decrement operators:
++ --
and no space around the .
and ->
structure member operators.
Do not leave trailing whitespace at the end of lines.
Avoid using CamelCase. It is preferred to name variables and functions by including an underscore between words, e.g.:
int person_counter;
Comments in the code make everyone's life easier, but don't be too verbose. Focus on what your function does and less on how it does.
The preferred style for long multi-line comments is:
/* * This is a multi-line comment. * * A column of asterisks on the left side, with beginning and ending * almost-blank lines. */