| <!-- | |
| Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <[email protected]>, et al. | |
| SPDX-License-Identifier: curl | |
| --> | |
| # How to do code reviews for curl | |
| Anyone and everyone is encouraged and welcome to review code submissions in | |
| curl. This is a guide on what to check for and how to perform a successful | |
| code review. | |
| ## All submissions should get reviewed | |
| All pull requests and patches submitted to the project should be reviewed by | |
| at least one experienced curl maintainer before that code is accepted and | |
| merged. | |
| ## Let the tools and tests take the first rounds | |
| On initial pull requests, let the tools and tests do their job first and then | |
| start out by helping the submitter understand the test failures and tool | |
| alerts. | |
| ## How to provide feedback to author | |
| Be nice. Ask questions. Provide examples or suggestions of improvements. | |
| Assume the best intentions. Remember language barriers. | |
| All first-time contributors can become regulars. Let's help them go there. | |
| ## Is this a change we want? | |
| If this is not a change that seems to be aligned with the project's path | |
| forward and as such cannot be accepted, inform the author about this sooner | |
| rather than later. Do it gently and explain why and possibly what could be | |
| done to make it more acceptable. | |
| ## API/ABI stability or changed behavior | |
| Changing the API and the ABI may be fine in a change but it needs to be done | |
| deliberately and carefully. If not, a reviewer must help the author to realize | |
| the mistake. | |
| curl and libcurl are similarly strict on not modifying existing behavior. API | |
| and ABI stability is not enough, the behavior should also remain intact as far | |
| as possible. | |
| ## Code style | |
| Most code style nits are detected by checksrc but not all. Only leave remarks | |
| on style deviation once checksrc does not find anymore. | |
| Minor nits from fresh submitters can also be handled by the maintainer when | |
| merging, in case it seems like the submitter is not clear on what to do. We | |
| want to make the process fun and exciting for new contributors. | |
| ## Encourage consistency | |
| Make sure new code is written in a similar style as existing code. Naming, | |
| logic, conditions, etc. | |
| ## Are pointers always non-NULL? | |
| If a function or code rely on pointers being non-NULL, take an extra look if | |
| that seems to be a fair assessment. | |
| ## Asserts | |
| Conditions that should never be false can be verified with `DEBUGASSERT()` | |
| calls to get caught in tests and debugging easier, while not having an impact | |
| on final or release builds. | |
| ## Memory allocation | |
| Can the mallocs be avoided? Do not introduce mallocs in any hot paths. If | |
| there are (new) mallocs, can they be combined into fewer calls? | |
| Are all allocations handled in error paths to avoid leaks and crashes? | |
| ## Thread-safety | |
| We do not like static variables as they break thread-safety and prevent | |
| functions from being reentrant. | |
| ## Should features be `#ifdef`ed? | |
| Features and functionality may not be present everywhere and should therefore | |
| be `#ifdef`ed. Additionally, some features should be possible to switch on/off | |
| in the build. | |
| Write `#ifdef`s to be as little of a "maze" as possible. | |
| ## Does it look portable enough? | |
| curl runs "everywhere". Does the code take a reasonable stance and enough | |
| precautions to be possible to build and run on most platforms? | |
| Remember that we live by C89 restrictions. | |
| ## Tests and testability | |
| New features should be added in conjunction with one or more test cases. | |
| Ideally, functions should also be written so that unit tests can be done to | |
| test individual functions. | |
| ## Documentation | |
| New features or changes to existing functionality **must** be accompanied by | |
| updated documentation. Submitting that in a separate follow-up pull request is | |
| not OK. A code review must also verify that the submitted documentation update | |
| matches the code submission. | |
| English is not everyone's first language, be mindful of this and help the | |
| submitter improve the text if it needs a rewrite to read better. | |
| ## Code should not be hard to understand | |
| Source code should be written to maximize readability and be easy to | |
| understand. | |
| ## Functions should not be large | |
| A single function should never be large as that makes it hard to follow and | |
| understand all the exit points and state changes. Some existing functions in | |
| curl certainly violate this ground rule but when reviewing new code we should | |
| propose splitting into smaller functions. | |
| ## Duplication is evil | |
| Anything that looks like duplicated code is a red flag. Anything that seems to | |
| introduce code that we *should* already have or provide needs a closer check. | |
| ## Sensitive data | |
| When credentials are involved, take an extra look at what happens with this | |
| data. Where it comes from and where it goes. | |
| ## Variable types differ | |
| `size_t` is not a fixed size. `time_t` can be signed or unsigned and have | |
| different sizes. Relying on variable sizes is a red flag. | |
| Also remember that endianness and >= 32-bit accesses to unaligned addresses | |
| are problematic areas. | |
| ## Integer overflows | |
| Be careful about integer overflows. Some variable types can be either 32-bit | |
| or 64-bit. Integer overflows must be detected and acted on *before* they | |
| happen. | |
| ## Dangerous use of functions | |
| Maybe use of `realloc()` should rather use the dynbuf functions? | |
| Do not allow new code that grows buffers without using dynbuf. | |
| Use of C functions that rely on a terminating zero must only be used on data | |
| that really do have a null-terminating zero. | |
| ## Dangerous "data styles" | |
| Make extra precautions and verify that memory buffers that need a terminating | |
| zero always have exactly that. Buffers *without* a null-terminator must not be | |
| used as input to string functions. | |
| # Commit messages | |
| Tightly coupled with a code review is making sure that the commit message is | |
| good. It is the responsibility of the person who merges the code to make sure | |
| that the commit message follows our standard (detailed in the | |
| [CONTRIBUTE](CONTRIBUTE.md) document). This includes making sure the PR | |
| identifies related issues and giving credit to reporters and helpers. | |