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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Contributing is easy. If you want to contribute; fork the repository, make your changes, and send us a pull request.

If it passes testing, code review, and any other arbitrary constraints we come up with, we'll add your name and your code to the repository.

What needs to be done?

We have a rather large amount of issues in the github issue-tracking system.

The general rule appears to be if it's not assigned, it's fair game. Some tickets have a larger scope than others and this isn't really defined anywhere. If the ticket is just really vague but seems important, it's probably a discussion thing.

Of course, contributions should not be limited to the ticketing system. If you want to add support for something, go ahead. The worst we can do is belittle you and your code (we probably won't, though).

General Guidelines

Code Style

  • Use C-style comments (/* ... */). This is an entirely arbitrary decision. I just don't want the github language processing thing thinking we have a C++ project.
  • Try to keep lines under 79 columns. This is not a hard rule, it's more like a goal. If it breaks the congruency and readability of your code, don't bother with this one.
  • Keep functions small. Theres no hard limit for this one either, you can usually just tell when a function is too large.
  • Stay POSIX compliant. No weird #define _GNU_SOURCE stuff.
  • Avoid code duplication. This one is important. If you're copying and pasting code, refactor it out to a common function. Code duplication causes bugs.
  • Make sure your code is clear. This means comments and clear variable names. If we see stuff like:
ol_bucket *c, *v, *u, *zx;

We're probably not going to accept that pull request.

  • No tabs, just spaces
  • All the above applies for the C code, for the Go frontend we use gofmt rules (default settings)

Architecture Decisions

Communication is key. If you're making a rather big architecture decision, discuss it with others. A second pair of eyes often does wonders to reveal weird or bad ideas.
If you don't feel like making an issue or want quick feedback on it, hit us on IRC, we do most of our discussions in there.

Code Review

All code should be code-reviewed by at least one other person before being merged into master. Master is considered stable and should always pass tests. Ping @qpfiffer for quick commentary.

Documentation

This one is kind of tough. We autogenerate documentation for the OlegDB website via a custom templating language (hahaha). Generally, if it's in oleg.h it's going to need to be documented with the xXx KEY=VALUE xXx syntax. You can see many examples of this in that file.

Most other files you don't have to worry about as they're external. That is not to say that we don't want or need documentation in these files, but a simple comment will suffice.