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Code Guidelines
---------------
A few code guidelines to try to stick to, please comment if none of
these make sense, they are pretty basic and mostly apply to old code.
However for people who are looking at current code, they make take up
bad habits that exist in the current codebase.
Python Version
--------------
Python 2.6 is the minimum supported version, since it is the first
version to support Python 3 syntax. All exception handling should use
Python 3 'except' syntax, and the print function should be used instead
of Python 2's print statement (from __future__ import print_function).
Dependencies
------------
Python and Bash should be the only hard dependencies. Any other
dependencies, including external Python modules that are not included
with Python itself, must be optionally enabled by run-time detection.
Tabs
----
For legacy reasons, all leading whitespace should be tabs. All internal
whitespace should be regular spaces. Set tab stop to 4 to calculate line
width.
Line-Wrapping
-------------
Lines should typically not be longer than 80 characters; if they are an
attempt should be made to wrap them. Move code to the line below and
indent once (\t).
errors.append(MalformedMetadata(
errors.DESCRIPTION_TOO_LONG_ERROR % \
(length, max_desc_len),
attr='DESCRIPTION.toolong')
Do not do this:
errors.append(MalformedMetadata(
errors.DESCRIPTION_TOO_LONG_ERROR % \
(length, max_desc_len),
attr='DESCRIPTION.toolong')
The mixing of tabs and spaces means other developers can't read what you
did. This is why the python peps state spaces over tabs; because with
spaces the line wrapping is always clear (but you cannot convert spaces
as easily as tabwidth).
Comparisons
-----------
if foo != None
should be replaced with:
if foo is not None:
Is not does a reference comparison (address1 = address2 basically) and
the == forces a by value compare (with __eq__())
Dict Lookups
------------
Try not to use has_key, you can use
if foo in dict
instead of if dict.has_key(foo)
Also don't do stuff like:
if foo in dict and dict[foo]:
Generally you can do two things here, if you are messing with defaults..
dict.get(foo, some_default)
will try to retrieve foo from dict, if there is a KeyError, will insert
foo into dict with the value of some_default. This method is preferred
in cases where you are messing with defaults:
try:
dict[foo]
except KeyError:
dict[foo] = default_value
The get call is nicer (compact) and faster (try,except are slow).
Exceptions
----------
Don't use the format raise Exception, "string"
It will be removed in py3k.
YES:
raise KeyError("No key")
NO:
raise KeyError, "No key"
Imports
-------
Import things one per line
YES:
import os
import time
import sys
NO:
import os,sys,time
When importing from a module, you may import more than 1 thing at a
time.
YES:
from portage.module import foo, bar, baz
Multiline imports are ok (for now :))
Try to group system and package imports separately.
YES:
import os
import sys
import time
from portage.locks import lockfile
from portage.versions import vercmp
NO:
import os
import portage
import portage.util
import time
import sys
Try not to import large numbers of things into the namespace of a module.
I realize this is done all over the place in current code but it really
makes it a pain to do code reflection when the namespace is cluttered
with identifiers from other modules.
YES:
from portage import output
NO:
from portage.output import bold, create_color_func, darkgreen, \
green, nocolor, red, turquoise, yellow
The YES example imports the 'output' module into the current namespace.
The negative here is having to use output.COLOR all over the place
instead of just COLOR. However it means during introspection of the
current namespace 'green','red', 'yellow', etc. will not show up.
The NO example just imports a set of functions from the output module.
It is somewhat annoying because the import line needs to be modified
when functions are needed and often unused functions are left in the
import line until someone comes along with a linter to clean up (does
not happen often).
Commits
-------
Prefer small commits that change specific things to big commits that
change a lot of unrelated things. This makes it easier to see what
parts of the system have actually changed. It also makes it easier to
cherry-pick and revert commits. Use your common sense!
Commit messages
---------------
Commit messages should be in the imperative mood with a capitalised
header, optionally followed by a newline and a more detailed explanatory
text. The headline should be capped at 70 characters, the detailed text
at 72. Prefix the message with the component you touched if this makes
sense. Postfix the message with the bug it fixes, if it does. Example:
"
emerge: Fix --tree output (bug 555555)
Make sure newlines appear where they are supposed to. Fix a bug with
colourisation of --tree output when used in tandem with --verbose
--pretend --ask.
"
For a more detailed explanation (and rationalisation) of these rules:
<http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html>
Releases
--------
First update the NEWS and RELEASE-NOTES files and commit.
Second create a git tag for this release:
git tag v2.2.8
Then create the tarball and run the tests:
./mkrelease.sh --changelog-rev v2.2.7 --tag --runtests 2.2.8
Make sure you have all supported python versions installed first
(see PYTHON_SUPPORTED_VERSIONS in runtests.sh).
Version bump the ebuild and verify it can re-install itself:
emerge portage
emerge portage
Publish the results (no going back now):
- Push the new git tag
- Upload the tarball
- Commit the new ebuild version
Close the bugs blocking the tracker bug for this release.