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# -*- Outline -*-
#
# Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This file is part of GNU Radio
#
# GNU Radio is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
#
# GNU Radio is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with GNU Radio; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
# the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street,
# Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
#
Random notes on coding conventions, some explanations about why things
aren't done differently, etc, etc,
* C++ and Python
GNU Radio is now a hybrid system. Some parts of the system are built
in C++ and some of it in Python. In general, prefer Python to C++.
Signal processing primitives are still built in C++ for performance.
It is no longer possible to build user applications entirely in C++.
Essential parts of the runtime system have been moved into Python.
* C++ namespaces
In the cleanup process, I considered putting everything in the
gnuradio namespace and dropping the Gr|gr prefix. In fact, I think
it's probably the right idea, but when I tested it out, I ran into
problems with SWIG's handling of namespaces. Bottom line, SWIG
(1.3.21) got confused and generated bad code when I started playing
around with namespaces in a not particularly convoluted way. I saw
problems using the boost::shared_ptr template in combination with
classes defined in the gnuradio namespace. It wasn't pretty...
* Naming conventions
Death to CamelCaseNames! We've returned to a kinder, gentler era.
We're now using the "STL style" naming convention with a couple of
modifications since we're not using namespaces.
With the exception of macros and other constant values, all
identifiers shall be lower case with words_separated_like_this.
Macros and constant values (e.g., enumerated values,
static const int FOO = 23) shall be in UPPER_CASE.
** Global names
All globally visible names (types, functions, variables, consts, etc)
shall begin with a "package prefix", followed by an '_'. The bulk of
the code in GNU Radio logically belongs to the "gr" package, hence
names look like gr_open_file (...).
Large coherent bodies of code may use other package prefixes, but
let's try to keep them to a well thought out list. See the list
below.
*** Package prefixes
These are the current package prefixes:
gr_ Almost everything
gri_ Implementation primitives. Sometimes we
have both a gr_<foo> and a gri_<foo>. In that case,
gr_<foo> would be derived from gr_block and gri_<foo>
would be the low level guts of the function.
atsc_ Code related to the Advanced Television
Standards Committee HDTV implementation
usrp_ Universal Software Radio Peripheral
qa_ Quality Assurance. Test code.
** Class data members (instance variables)
All class data members shall begin with d_<foo>.
The big win is when you're staring at a block of code it's obvious
which of the things being assigned to persist outside of the block.
This also keeps you from having to be creative with parameter names
for methods and constructors. You just use the same name as the
instance variable, without the d_.
class gr_wonderfulness {
std::string d_name;
double d_wonderfulness_factor;
public:
gr_wonderfulness (std::string name, double wonderfulness_factor)
: d_name (name), d_wonderfulness_factor (wonderfulness_factor)
{
...
}
...
};
** Class static data members (class variables)
All class static data members shall begin with s_<foo>.
** File names
Each significant class shall be contained in it's own file. The
declaration of class gr_foo shall be in gr_foo.h, the definition in
gr_foo.cc.
* Storage management
Strongly consider using the boost smart pointer templates, scoped_ptr
and shared_ptr. scoped_ptr should be used for locals that contain
pointers to objects that we need to delete when we exit the current
scope. shared_ptr implements transparent reference counting and is a
major win. You never have to worry about calling delete. The right
thing happens.
See http://www.boost.org/libs/smart_ptr/smart_ptr.htm
* Unit tests
Build unit tests for everything non-trivial and run them after every
change. Check out Extreme Programming:
http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?ExtremeProgrammingRoadmap
Unit tests should also be written for all examples. This should kill
off the bit rot we've been plagued with.
** C++ unit tests
For C++ we're using the cppunit framework. cppunit has its bad
smells, but it's mostly workable. http://cppunit.sf.net
Currently each directory <dirname> contains files qa_<dirname>.{h,cc}
that bring together all the qa_<foo> test suites in the directory.
We ought to be able to automate this without too much trouble.
The directory gnuradio-core/src/tests contains programs that run
the tests. test_all runs all of the registered C++ unit tests.
As far as I can tell, the cppunit TestFactoryRegistry maybe able to be
tricked into doing what we want. As is, I don't think it's enough by
itself, since there's nothing dragging the qa* files out of the
library and into the program. I haven't tested out this idea.
** Python unit tests
We use the standard unittest package for unit testing of Python code.
* Subversion line ending styles
All text files in the tree should have the subversion property
'svn:eol-style' set to 'native', with the following exceptions:
config/*.m4
configure.ac
gr-howto-write-a-block/config/*.m4
gr-howto-write-a-block/configure.ac
The easiest way to ensure this is to add or edit the following lines in
your svn client configuration file (~/.subversion/config):
enable-auto-props=yes
[auto-props]
*.c = svn:eol-style=native
*.cc = svn:eol-style=native
*.i = svn:eol-style=native
*.h = svn:eol-style=native
*.am = svn:eol-style=native
*.py = svn:eol-style=native
*.ac = svn:eol-style=LF
*.m4 = svn:eol-style=LF
* Misc tips
ccache, a compiler cache, can really speed up your builds.
See http://ccache.samba.org/
Be sure to create links for gcc and g++
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