# Contributing to wlroots Contributing just involves sending a pull request. You will probably be more successful with your contribution if you visit the [IRC channel](irc://chat.freenode.net/sway-devel) upfront and discuss your plans. ## Pull Requests If you already have your own pull request habits, feel free to use them. If you don't, however, allow me to make a suggestion: feature branches pulled from upstream. Try this: 1. Fork wlroots 2. `git clone https://github.com/username/wlroots && cd wlroots` 3. `git remote add upstream https://github.com/SirCmpwn/wlroots` You only need to do this once. You're never going to use your fork's master branch. Instead, when you start working on a feature, do this: 1. `git fetch upstream` 2. `git checkout -b add-so-and-so-feature upstream/master` 3. Add and commit your changes 4. `git push -u origin add-so-and-so-feature` 5. Make a pull request from your feature branch ## Commit Messages Please strive to write good commit messages. Here's some guidelines to follow: The first line should be limited to 50 characters and should be a sentence that completes the thought [When applied, this commit will...] *"Implement cmd_move"* or *"Fix #742"* or *"Improve performance of arrange_windows on ARM"* or similar. The subsequent lines should be separated from the subject line by a single blank line, and include optional details. In this you can give justification for the change, [reference Github issues](https://help.github.com/articles/closing-issues-via-commit-messages/), or explain some of the subtler details of your patch. This is important because when someone finds a line of code they don't understand later, they can use the `git blame` command to find out what the author was thinking when they wrote it. It's also easier to review your pull requests if they're separated into logical commits that have good commit messages and justify themselves in the extended commit description. As a good rule of thumb, anything you might put into the pull request description on Github is probably fair game for going into the extended commit message as well. See [here](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/) for more details. ## Coding Style wlroots is written in C with a style similar to the [kernel style](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/process/coding-style.rst), but with a few notable differences. Try to keep your code conforming to C11 and POSIX as much as possible, and do not use GNU extensions. ### Brackets Brackets always go on the same line, including in functions. Always include brackets for if/while/for, even if it's a single statement. ```c void function() { if (condition1) { do_thing1(); } if (condition2) { do_thing2(); } else { do_thing3(); } } ``` ### Indentation Indentations are a single tab. For long lines that need to be broken, the continuation line should be indented with an additional tab. If the line being broken is opening a new block (functions, if, while, etc.), the continuation line should be indented with two tabs, so they can't be misread as being part of the block. ```c really_long_function(argument1, argument2, ..., argument3, argument4); if (condition1 && condition2 && ... condition3 && condition4) { do_thing(); } ``` Try to break the line in the place which you think is the most appropriate. ### Line Length Try to keep your lines under 80 columns, but you can go up to 100 if it improves readability. ### Names Function and type names should be prefixed with `wlr_submodule_` (e.g. `struct wlr_drm_plane`, `wlr_output_set_cursor`). For static functions and types local to a file, the names chosen aren't as important. ### Construction/Destruction Functions For functions that are responsible for constructing and destructing an object, they should be written as a pair of one of two forms: * `init`/`finish`: These initialize/deinitialize a type, but are **NOT** responsible for allocating it. They should accept a pointer to some pre-allocated memory (e.g. a member of a struct). * `create`/`destroy`: These also initialize/deinitialize, but will return a pointer to a `malloc`ed chunk of memory, and will `free` it in `destroy`. A destruction function should always be able to accept a NULL pointer or a zeroed value and exit cleanly; this simplifies error handling a lot. ### Error Codes For functions not returning a value, they should return a (stdbool.h) bool to indicated if they succeeded or not. ### Macros Try to keep the use of macros to a minimum, especially if a function can do the job. If you do need to use them, try to keep them close to where they're being used and `#undef` them after. ## Meson Coding Style The Meson style is similar to the C style, but indentations are 2 spaces.