Version 6 (modified by 17 years ago) (diff) | ,
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BOINC coding style
All languages
Code factoring
- If code is repeated, factor it out and make it into a function.
- If a function becomes longer than 100 lines or so, split it up.
- If a file is becoming 'landfill', split it up.
- C++
.h
files often contain both interface and implementation. Clearly divide these.
Code documentation
.C
files have a comment at the top saying what's in the file (and perhaps what isn't).- Functions are preceded by a comment saying what they do.
- structs and classes are preceded by a comment saying what they are.
Naming
- Names should be descriptive without being verbose (local variables names may be short).
- Class and type names, and #defined symbols, are all upper case, with underscores to separate words.
- Variable and function names are all lower case, with underscores to separate words.
- No mixed case names.
Indentation
- Each level of indentation is 4 spaces (not a tab).
- Multi-line function call:
func( blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah );
switch
statements:case
labels are at same indent level asswitch
:switch (foo) { case 1: ... break; case 2: ... break; }
Constants
- There should be few numeric constants in code. Generally they should be
#define
s.
Braces
- Opening curly brace goes at end of line (not next line):
if (foobar) { ... } else if (blah) { ... } else { ... }
- Always use curly braces on multi-line
if
statements.if (foo) return blah; // WRONG
- 1-line
if()
statements are OK:if (foo) return blah;
Comments and #ifdefs
- Use
//
for all comments. - Comment out blocks of code as follows:
#if 0 ... #endif
C++ specific
Includes
- A
.C
file should have the minimum set of #includes to get that particular file to compile (e.g. the includes needed byfoo.C
should be infoo.C
, notfoo.h
). - Includes should be ordered from general (
<stdio.h>
) to specific (thisfile.h
).
Extern declarations
foo.h
should have 'extern
' declarations for all public functions and variables infoo.C
There should be no 'extern
' statements in.C
files.
Use of static
- If a function or variable is used in only one file, declare it
static
.
Things to avoid unless there's a truly compelling reason:
- Inline functions.
- Operator or function overloading.
- Templates.
Things to avoid
- Use
typedef
(not#define
) to define types. - Don't use
memset()
ormemcpy()
to initialize or copy classes that are non-C compatible. Write a default constructor and a copy constructor instead.
Error codes
- (Almost) all functions should return an integer error code. Nonzero means error. See lib/error_numbers.h for a list of error codes.
- Calls to functions that return an error code should check the code. Generally they should return on error, e.g.:
retval = blah(); if (retval) return retval;
Structure definitions
struct FOO { ... };
You can then declare variables as:
FOO x;
PHP specific
Getting POST and GET data
Remember that hackers can pass arbitrary values in POST and GET, and they can use this to do SQL injections and other exploits.
- Do not access
$_POST
or$_GET
directly. - Use
get_int()
,get_str()
,post_int()
andpost_str()
(fromutil.inc
) to get POST and GET data. - If a POST or GET value will be used in a SQL query, use
process_user_text()
to escape it.