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162 lines
4.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
162 lines
4.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
:Copyright:
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Copyright 2003, 2006 Vladimir Prus
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:License:
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Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
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(See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
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Boost.Build contributor guidelines
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==================================
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Boost.Build is an open-source project. This means that we welcome and appreciate
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all contributions --- be it ideas, bug reports, or patches. This document
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contains guidelines which helps to assure that development goes on smoothly, and
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changes are made quickly.
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The guidelines are not mandatory, and you can decide for yourself which one to
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follow. But note, that 10 mins that you spare writing a comment, for example,
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might lead to significally longer delay for everyone.
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Before contributing, make sure you are subscribed to our mailing list
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at boost-build@lists.boost.org.
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Additional resources include
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- The issue tracker
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http://trac.lvk.cs.msu.su/boost.build/
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- mailing list
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boost-build@lists.boost.org
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http://lists.boost.org/boost-build/
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BUGS and PATCHES
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----------------
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Both bugs and patches can be send to our mailing list.
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When reporting a bug, please try to provide the following information.
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- What you did.
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- A minimal reproducible testcase is very much appreciated.
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- Shell script with some annotations is much better than verbose description
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of the problem.
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- A regression test is the best (see test/test_system.html).
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- What you got.
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- What you expected.
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- What version of Boost.Build and Boost.Jam did you use. If possible,
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please try to test with the CVS HEAD state.
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When submitting a patch, please:
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- make a single patch for a single logical change
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- follow the policies and coding conventions below,
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- send patches in unified diff format, (using either "cvs diff -u" or "diff -u")
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- provide a log message together with the patch
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- put the patch and the log message as attachment to your email.
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The purpose of log message serves to communicate what was changed, and *why*.
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Without a good log message, you might spend a lot of time later, wondering where
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a strange piece of code came from and why it was necessary.
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The good log message mentions each changed file and each rule/method, saying
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what happend to it, and why. Consider, the following log message
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::
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Better direct request handling.
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* new/build-request.jam
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(directly-requested-properties-adjuster): Redo.
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* new/targets.jam
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(main-target.generate-really): Adjust properties here.
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* new/virtual-target.jam
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(register-actual-name): New rule.
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(virtual-target.actualize-no-scanner): Call the above, to detected bugs,
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where two virtual target correspond to one Jam target name.
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The log messages for the last two files are good. They tell what was changed.
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The change to the first file is clearly undercommented.
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It's OK to use terse log messages for uninteresting changes, like ones induced
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by interface changes elsewhere.
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POLICIES.
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---------
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1. Testing.
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All serious changes must be tested. New rules must be tested by the module where
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they are declared. Test system (test/test_system.html) should be used to verify
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user-observable behaviour.
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2. Documentation.
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It turns out that it's hard to have too much comments, but it's easy to have too
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little. Please prepend each rule with a comment saying what the rule does and
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what arguments mean. Stop for a minute and consider if the comment makes sense
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for anybody else, and completely describes what the rules does. Generic phrases
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like "adjusts properties" are really not enough.
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When applicable, make changes to the user documentation as well.
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CODING CONVENTIONS.
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-------------------
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1. All names of rules and variables are lowercase with "-" to separate
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words.
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::
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rule call-me-ishmael ( ) ...
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2. Names with dots in them are "intended globals". Ordinary globals use a
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dot prefix:
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::
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.foobar
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$(.foobar)
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3. Pseudofunctions or associations are <parameter>.<property>:
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::
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$(argument).name = hello ;
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$($(argument).name)
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4. Class attribute names are prefixed with "self.":
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::
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self.x
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$(self.x)
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5. Builtin rules are called via their ALL_UPPERCASE_NAMES:
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::
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DEPENDS $(target) : $(sources) ;
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6. Opening and closing braces go on separate lines:
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::
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if $(a)
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{
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#
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}
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else
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{
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#
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}
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