xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/devel/style.rst (revision 226fad73)
1.. _coding-style:
2
3=================
4QEMU Coding Style
5=================
6
7.. contents:: Table of Contents
8
9Please use the script checkpatch.pl in the scripts directory to check
10patches before submitting.
11
12Formatting and style
13********************
14
15Whitespace
16==========
17
18Of course, the most important aspect in any coding style is whitespace.
19Crusty old coders who have trouble spotting the glasses on their noses
20can tell the difference between a tab and eight spaces from a distance
21of approximately fifteen parsecs.  Many a flamewar has been fought and
22lost on this issue.
23
24QEMU indents are four spaces.  Tabs are never used, except in Makefiles
25where they have been irreversibly coded into the syntax.
26Spaces of course are superior to tabs because:
27
28* You have just one way to specify whitespace, not two.  Ambiguity breeds
29  mistakes.
30* The confusion surrounding 'use tabs to indent, spaces to justify' is gone.
31* Tab indents push your code to the right, making your screen seriously
32  unbalanced.
33* Tabs will be rendered incorrectly on editors who are misconfigured not
34  to use tab stops of eight positions.
35* Tabs are rendered badly in patches, causing off-by-one errors in almost
36  every line.
37* It is the QEMU coding style.
38
39Do not leave whitespace dangling off the ends of lines.
40
41Multiline Indent
42----------------
43
44There are several places where indent is necessary:
45
46* if/else
47* while/for
48* function definition & call
49
50When breaking up a long line to fit within line width, we need a proper indent
51for the following lines.
52
53In case of if/else, while/for, align the secondary lines just after the
54opening parenthesis of the first.
55
56For example:
57
58.. code-block:: c
59
60    if (a == 1 &&
61        b == 2) {
62
63    while (a == 1 &&
64           b == 2) {
65
66In case of function, there are several variants:
67
68* 4 spaces indent from the beginning
69* align the secondary lines just after the opening parenthesis of the first
70
71For example:
72
73.. code-block:: c
74
75    do_something(x, y,
76        z);
77
78    do_something(x, y,
79                 z);
80
81    do_something(x, do_another(y,
82                               z));
83
84Line width
85==========
86
87Lines should be 80 characters; try not to make them longer.
88
89Sometimes it is hard to do, especially when dealing with QEMU subsystems
90that use long function or symbol names. If wrapping the line at 80 columns
91is obviously less readable and more awkward, prefer not to wrap it; better
92to have an 85 character line than one which is awkwardly wrapped.
93
94Even in that case, try not to make lines much longer than 80 characters.
95(The checkpatch script will warn at 100 characters, but this is intended
96as a guard against obviously-overlength lines, not a target.)
97
98Rationale:
99
100* Some people like to tile their 24" screens with a 6x4 matrix of 80x24
101  xterms and use vi in all of them.  The best way to punish them is to
102  let them keep doing it.
103* Code and especially patches is much more readable if limited to a sane
104  line length.  Eighty is traditional.
105* The four-space indentation makes the most common excuse ("But look
106  at all that white space on the left!") moot.
107* It is the QEMU coding style.
108
109Naming
110======
111
112Variables are lower_case_with_underscores; easy to type and read.  Structured
113type names are in CamelCase; harder to type but standing out.  Enum type
114names and function type names should also be in CamelCase.  Scalar type
115names are lower_case_with_underscores_ending_with_a_t, like the POSIX
116uint64_t and family.  Note that this last convention contradicts POSIX
117and is therefore likely to be changed.
118
119Variable Naming Conventions
120---------------------------
121
122A number of short naming conventions exist for variables that use
123common QEMU types. For example, the architecture independent CPUState
124is often held as a ``cs`` pointer variable, whereas the concrete
125CPUArchState is usually held in a pointer called ``env``.
126
127Likewise, in device emulation code the common DeviceState is usually
128called ``dev``.
129
130Function Naming Conventions
131---------------------------
132
133Wrapped version of standard library or GLib functions use a ``qemu_``
134prefix to alert readers that they are seeing a wrapped version, for
135example ``qemu_strtol`` or ``qemu_mutex_lock``.  Other utility functions
136that are widely called from across the codebase should not have any
137prefix, for example ``pstrcpy`` or bit manipulation functions such as
138``find_first_bit``.
139
140The ``qemu_`` prefix is also used for functions that modify global
141emulator state, for example ``qemu_add_vm_change_state_handler``.
142However, if there is an obvious subsystem-specific prefix it should be
143used instead.
144
145Public functions from a file or subsystem (declared in headers) tend
146to have a consistent prefix to show where they came from. For example,
147``tlb_`` for functions from ``cputlb.c`` or ``cpu_`` for functions
148from cpus.c.
149
150If there are two versions of a function to be called with or without a
151lock held, the function that expects the lock to be already held
152usually uses the suffix ``_locked``.
153
154
155Block structure
156===============
157
158Every indented statement is braced; even if the block contains just one
159statement.  The opening brace is on the line that contains the control
160flow statement that introduces the new block; the closing brace is on the
161same line as the else keyword, or on a line by itself if there is no else
162keyword.  Example:
163
164.. code-block:: c
165
166    if (a == 5) {
167        printf("a was 5.\n");
168    } else if (a == 6) {
169        printf("a was 6.\n");
170    } else {
171        printf("a was something else entirely.\n");
172    }
173
174Note that 'else if' is considered a single statement; otherwise a long if/
175else if/else if/.../else sequence would need an indent for every else
176statement.
177
178An exception is the opening brace for a function; for reasons of tradition
179and clarity it comes on a line by itself:
180
181.. code-block:: c
182
183    void a_function(void)
184    {
185        do_something();
186    }
187
188Rationale: a consistent (except for functions...) bracing style reduces
189ambiguity and avoids needless churn when lines are added or removed.
190Furthermore, it is the QEMU coding style.
191
192Declarations
193============
194
195Mixed declarations (interleaving statements and declarations within
196blocks) are generally not allowed; declarations should be at the beginning
197of blocks.
198
199Every now and then, an exception is made for declarations inside a
200#ifdef or #ifndef block: if the code looks nicer, such declarations can
201be placed at the top of the block even if there are statements above.
202On the other hand, however, it's often best to move that #ifdef/#ifndef
203block to a separate function altogether.
204
205Conditional statements
206======================
207
208When comparing a variable for (in)equality with a constant, list the
209constant on the right, as in:
210
211.. code-block:: c
212
213    if (a == 1) {
214        /* Reads like: "If a equals 1" */
215        do_something();
216    }
217
218Rationale: Yoda conditions (as in 'if (1 == a)') are awkward to read.
219Besides, good compilers already warn users when '==' is mis-typed as '=',
220even when the constant is on the right.
221
222Comment style
223=============
224
225We use traditional C-style /``*`` ``*``/ comments and avoid // comments.
226
227Rationale: The // form is valid in C99, so this is purely a matter of
228consistency of style. The checkpatch script will warn you about this.
229
230Multiline comment blocks should have a row of stars on the left,
231and the initial /``*`` and terminating ``*``/ both on their own lines:
232
233.. code-block:: c
234
235    /*
236     * like
237     * this
238     */
239
240This is the same format required by the Linux kernel coding style.
241
242(Some of the existing comments in the codebase use the GNU Coding
243Standards form which does not have stars on the left, or other
244variations; avoid these when writing new comments, but don't worry
245about converting to the preferred form unless you're editing that
246comment anyway.)
247
248Rationale: Consistency, and ease of visually picking out a multiline
249comment from the surrounding code.
250
251Language usage
252**************
253
254Preprocessor
255============
256
257Variadic macros
258---------------
259
260For variadic macros, stick with this C99-like syntax:
261
262.. code-block:: c
263
264    #define DPRINTF(fmt, ...)                                       \
265        do { printf("IRQ: " fmt, ## __VA_ARGS__); } while (0)
266
267Include directives
268------------------
269
270Order include directives as follows:
271
272.. code-block:: c
273
274    #include "qemu/osdep.h"  /* Always first... */
275    #include <...>           /* then system headers... */
276    #include "..."           /* and finally QEMU headers. */
277
278The "qemu/osdep.h" header contains preprocessor macros that affect the behavior
279of core system headers like <stdint.h>.  It must be the first include so that
280core system headers included by external libraries get the preprocessor macros
281that QEMU depends on.
282
283Do not include "qemu/osdep.h" from header files since the .c file will have
284already included it.
285
286C types
287=======
288
289It should be common sense to use the right type, but we have collected
290a few useful guidelines here.
291
292Scalars
293-------
294
295If you're using "int" or "long", odds are good that there's a better type.
296If a variable is counting something, it should be declared with an
297unsigned type.
298
299If it's host memory-size related, size_t should be a good choice (use
300ssize_t only if required). Guest RAM memory offsets must use ram_addr_t,
301but only for RAM, it may not cover whole guest address space.
302
303If it's file-size related, use off_t.
304If it's file-offset related (i.e., signed), use off_t.
305If it's just counting small numbers use "unsigned int";
306(on all but oddball embedded systems, you can assume that that
307type is at least four bytes wide).
308
309In the event that you require a specific width, use a standard type
310like int32_t, uint32_t, uint64_t, etc.  The specific types are
311mandatory for VMState fields.
312
313Don't use Linux kernel internal types like u32, __u32 or __le32.
314
315Use hwaddr for guest physical addresses except pcibus_t
316for PCI addresses.  In addition, ram_addr_t is a QEMU internal address
317space that maps guest RAM physical addresses into an intermediate
318address space that can map to host virtual address spaces.  Generally
319speaking, the size of guest memory can always fit into ram_addr_t but
320it would not be correct to store an actual guest physical address in a
321ram_addr_t.
322
323For CPU virtual addresses there are several possible types.
324vaddr is the best type to use to hold a CPU virtual address in
325target-independent code. It is guaranteed to be large enough to hold a
326virtual address for any target, and it does not change size from target
327to target. It is always unsigned.
328target_ulong is a type the size of a virtual address on the CPU; this means
329it may be 32 or 64 bits depending on which target is being built. It should
330therefore be used only in target-specific code, and in some
331performance-critical built-per-target core code such as the TLB code.
332There is also a signed version, target_long.
333abi_ulong is for the ``*``-user targets, and represents a type the size of
334'void ``*``' in that target's ABI. (This may not be the same as the size of a
335full CPU virtual address in the case of target ABIs which use 32 bit pointers
336on 64 bit CPUs, like sparc32plus.) Definitions of structures that must match
337the target's ABI must use this type for anything that on the target is defined
338to be an 'unsigned long' or a pointer type.
339There is also a signed version, abi_long.
340
341Of course, take all of the above with a grain of salt.  If you're about
342to use some system interface that requires a type like size_t, pid_t or
343off_t, use matching types for any corresponding variables.
344
345Also, if you try to use e.g., "unsigned int" as a type, and that
346conflicts with the signedness of a related variable, sometimes
347it's best just to use the *wrong* type, if "pulling the thread"
348and fixing all related variables would be too invasive.
349
350Finally, while using descriptive types is important, be careful not to
351go overboard.  If whatever you're doing causes warnings, or requires
352casts, then reconsider or ask for help.
353
354Pointers
355--------
356
357Ensure that all of your pointers are "const-correct".
358Unless a pointer is used to modify the pointed-to storage,
359give it the "const" attribute.  That way, the reader knows
360up-front that this is a read-only pointer.  Perhaps more
361importantly, if we're diligent about this, when you see a non-const
362pointer, you're guaranteed that it is used to modify the storage
363it points to, or it is aliased to another pointer that is.
364
365Typedefs
366--------
367
368Typedefs are used to eliminate the redundant 'struct' keyword, since type
369names have a different style than other identifiers ("CamelCase" versus
370"snake_case").  Each named struct type should have a CamelCase name and a
371corresponding typedef.
372
373Since certain C compilers choke on duplicated typedefs, you should avoid
374them and declare a typedef only in one header file.  For common types,
375you can use "include/qemu/typedefs.h" for example.  However, as a matter
376of convenience it is also perfectly fine to use forward struct
377definitions instead of typedefs in headers and function prototypes; this
378avoids problems with duplicated typedefs and reduces the need to include
379headers from other headers.
380
381Reserved namespaces in C and POSIX
382----------------------------------
383
384Underscore capital, double underscore, and underscore 't' suffixes should be
385avoided.
386
387Low level memory management
388===========================
389
390Use of the ``malloc/free/realloc/calloc/valloc/memalign/posix_memalign``
391APIs is not allowed in the QEMU codebase. Instead of these routines,
392use the GLib memory allocation routines
393``g_malloc/g_malloc0/g_new/g_new0/g_realloc/g_free``
394or QEMU's ``qemu_memalign/qemu_blockalign/qemu_vfree`` APIs.
395
396Please note that ``g_malloc`` will exit on allocation failure, so
397there is no need to test for failure (as you would have to with
398``malloc``). Generally using ``g_malloc`` on start-up is fine as the
399result of a failure to allocate memory is going to be a fatal exit
400anyway. There may be some start-up cases where failing is unreasonable
401(for example speculatively loading a large debug symbol table).
402
403Care should be taken to avoid introducing places where the guest could
404trigger an exit by causing a large allocation. For small allocations,
405of the order of 4k, a failure to allocate is likely indicative of an
406overloaded host and allowing ``g_malloc`` to ``exit`` is a reasonable
407approach. However for larger allocations where we could realistically
408fall-back to a smaller one if need be we should use functions like
409``g_try_new`` and check the result. For example this is valid approach
410for a time/space trade-off like ``tlb_mmu_resize_locked`` in the
411SoftMMU TLB code.
412
413If the lifetime of the allocation is within the function and there are
414multiple exist paths you can also improve the readability of the code
415by using ``g_autofree`` and related annotations. See :ref:`autofree-ref`
416for more details.
417
418Calling ``g_malloc`` with a zero size is valid and will return NULL.
419
420Prefer ``g_new(T, n)`` instead of ``g_malloc(sizeof(T) * n)`` for the following
421reasons:
422
423* It catches multiplication overflowing size_t;
424* It returns T ``*`` instead of void ``*``, letting compiler catch more type errors.
425
426Declarations like
427
428.. code-block:: c
429
430    T *v = g_malloc(sizeof(*v))
431
432are acceptable, though.
433
434Memory allocated by ``qemu_memalign`` or ``qemu_blockalign`` must be freed with
435``qemu_vfree``, since breaking this will cause problems on Win32.
436
437String manipulation
438===================
439
440Do not use the strncpy function.  As mentioned in the man page, it does *not*
441guarantee a NULL-terminated buffer, which makes it extremely dangerous to use.
442It also zeros trailing destination bytes out to the specified length.  Instead,
443use this similar function when possible, but note its different signature:
444
445.. code-block:: c
446
447    void pstrcpy(char *dest, int dest_buf_size, const char *src)
448
449Don't use strcat because it can't check for buffer overflows, but:
450
451.. code-block:: c
452
453    char *pstrcat(char *buf, int buf_size, const char *s)
454
455The same limitation exists with sprintf and vsprintf, so use snprintf and
456vsnprintf.
457
458QEMU provides other useful string functions:
459
460.. code-block:: c
461
462    int strstart(const char *str, const char *val, const char **ptr)
463    int stristart(const char *str, const char *val, const char **ptr)
464    int qemu_strnlen(const char *s, int max_len)
465
466There are also replacement character processing macros for isxyz and toxyz,
467so instead of e.g. isalnum you should use qemu_isalnum.
468
469Because of the memory management rules, you must use g_strdup/g_strndup
470instead of plain strdup/strndup.
471
472Printf-style functions
473======================
474
475Whenever you add a new printf-style function, i.e., one with a format
476string argument and following "..." in its prototype, be sure to use
477gcc's printf attribute directive in the prototype.
478
479This makes it so gcc's -Wformat and -Wformat-security options can do
480their jobs and cross-check format strings with the number and types
481of arguments.
482
483C standard, implementation defined and undefined behaviors
484==========================================================
485
486C code in QEMU should be written to the C99 language specification. A copy
487of the final version of the C99 standard with corrigenda TC1, TC2, and TC3
488included, formatted as a draft, can be downloaded from:
489
490    `<http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/WG14/www/docs/n1256.pdf>`_
491
492The C language specification defines regions of undefined behavior and
493implementation defined behavior (to give compiler authors enough leeway to
494produce better code).  In general, code in QEMU should follow the language
495specification and avoid both undefined and implementation defined
496constructs. ("It works fine on the gcc I tested it with" is not a valid
497argument...) However there are a few areas where we allow ourselves to
498assume certain behaviors because in practice all the platforms we care about
499behave in the same way and writing strictly conformant code would be
500painful. These are:
501
502* you may assume that integers are 2s complement representation
503* you may assume that right shift of a signed integer duplicates
504  the sign bit (ie it is an arithmetic shift, not a logical shift)
505
506In addition, QEMU assumes that the compiler does not use the latitude
507given in C99 and C11 to treat aspects of signed '<<' as undefined, as
508documented in the GNU Compiler Collection manual starting at version 4.0.
509
510.. _autofree-ref:
511
512Automatic memory deallocation
513=============================
514
515QEMU has a mandatory dependency either the GCC or CLang compiler. As
516such it has the freedom to make use of a C language extension for
517automatically running a cleanup function when a stack variable goes
518out of scope. This can be used to simplify function cleanup paths,
519often allowing many goto jumps to be eliminated, through automatic
520free'ing of memory.
521
522The GLib2 library provides a number of functions/macros for enabling
523automatic cleanup:
524
525  `<https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Miscellaneous-Macros.html>`_
526
527Most notably:
528
529* g_autofree - will invoke g_free() on the variable going out of scope
530
531* g_autoptr - for structs / objects, will invoke the cleanup func created
532  by a previous use of G_DEFINE_AUTOPTR_CLEANUP_FUNC. This is
533  supported for most GLib data types and GObjects
534
535For example, instead of
536
537.. code-block:: c
538
539    int somefunc(void) {
540        int ret = -1;
541        char *foo = g_strdup_printf("foo%", "wibble");
542        GList *bar = .....
543
544        if (eek) {
545           goto cleanup;
546        }
547
548        ret = 0;
549
550      cleanup:
551        g_free(foo);
552        g_list_free(bar);
553        return ret;
554    }
555
556Using g_autofree/g_autoptr enables the code to be written as:
557
558.. code-block:: c
559
560    int somefunc(void) {
561        g_autofree char *foo = g_strdup_printf("foo%", "wibble");
562        g_autoptr (GList) bar = .....
563
564        if (eek) {
565           return -1;
566        }
567
568        return 0;
569    }
570
571While this generally results in simpler, less leak-prone code, there
572are still some caveats to beware of
573
574* Variables declared with g_auto* MUST always be initialized,
575  otherwise the cleanup function will use uninitialized stack memory
576
577* If a variable declared with g_auto* holds a value which must
578  live beyond the life of the function, that value must be saved
579  and the original variable NULL'd out. This can be simpler using
580  g_steal_pointer
581
582
583.. code-block:: c
584
585    char *somefunc(void) {
586        g_autofree char *foo = g_strdup_printf("foo%", "wibble");
587        g_autoptr (GList) bar = .....
588
589        if (eek) {
590           return NULL;
591        }
592
593        return g_steal_pointer(&foo);
594    }
595
596
597QEMU Specific Idioms
598********************
599
600Error handling and reporting
601============================
602
603Reporting errors to the human user
604----------------------------------
605
606Do not use printf(), fprintf() or monitor_printf().  Instead, use
607error_report() or error_vreport() from error-report.h.  This ensures the
608error is reported in the right place (current monitor or stderr), and in
609a uniform format.
610
611Use error_printf() & friends to print additional information.
612
613error_report() prints the current location.  In certain common cases
614like command line parsing, the current location is tracked
615automatically.  To manipulate it manually, use the loc_``*``() from
616error-report.h.
617
618Propagating errors
619------------------
620
621An error can't always be reported to the user right where it's detected,
622but often needs to be propagated up the call chain to a place that can
623handle it.  This can be done in various ways.
624
625The most flexible one is Error objects.  See error.h for usage
626information.
627
628Use the simplest suitable method to communicate success / failure to
629callers.  Stick to common methods: non-negative on success / -1 on
630error, non-negative / -errno, non-null / null, or Error objects.
631
632Example: when a function returns a non-null pointer on success, and it
633can fail only in one way (as far as the caller is concerned), returning
634null on failure is just fine, and certainly simpler and a lot easier on
635the eyes than propagating an Error object through an Error ``*````*`` parameter.
636
637Example: when a function's callers need to report details on failure
638only the function really knows, use Error ``*````*``, and set suitable errors.
639
640Do not report an error to the user when you're also returning an error
641for somebody else to handle.  Leave the reporting to the place that
642consumes the error returned.
643
644Handling errors
645---------------
646
647Calling exit() is fine when handling configuration errors during
648startup.  It's problematic during normal operation.  In particular,
649monitor commands should never exit().
650
651Do not call exit() or abort() to handle an error that can be triggered
652by the guest (e.g., some unimplemented corner case in guest code
653translation or device emulation).  Guests should not be able to
654terminate QEMU.
655
656Note that &error_fatal is just another way to exit(1), and &error_abort
657is just another way to abort().
658
659
660trace-events style
661==================
662
6630x prefix
664---------
665
666In trace-events files, use a '0x' prefix to specify hex numbers, as in:
667
668.. code-block:: c
669
670    some_trace(unsigned x, uint64_t y) "x 0x%x y 0x" PRIx64
671
672An exception is made for groups of numbers that are hexadecimal by
673convention and separated by the symbols '.', '/', ':', or ' ' (such as
674PCI bus id):
675
676.. code-block:: c
677
678    another_trace(int cssid, int ssid, int dev_num) "bus id: %x.%x.%04x"
679
680However, you can use '0x' for such groups if you want. Anyway, be sure that
681it is obvious that numbers are in hex, ex.:
682
683.. code-block:: c
684
685    data_dump(uint8_t c1, uint8_t c2, uint8_t c3) "bytes (in hex): %02x %02x %02x"
686
687Rationale: hex numbers are hard to read in logs when there is no 0x prefix,
688especially when (occasionally) the representation doesn't contain any letters
689and especially in one line with other decimal numbers. Number groups are allowed
690to not use '0x' because for some things notations like %x.%x.%x are used not
691only in QEMU. Also dumping raw data bytes with '0x' is less readable.
692
693'#' printf flag
694---------------
695
696Do not use printf flag '#', like '%#x'.
697
698Rationale: there are two ways to add a '0x' prefix to printed number: '0x%...'
699and '%#...'. For consistency the only one way should be used. Arguments for
700'0x%' are:
701
702* it is more popular
703* '%#' omits the 0x for the value 0 which makes output inconsistent
704