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476 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
476 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
Guidelines For Developers
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=========================
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This document provides guidelines for making changes to the fish-shell
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project. This includes rules for how to format the code, naming
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conventions, et cetera.
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In short:
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- Be conservative in what you need (``C++11``, few dependencies)
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- Use automated tools to help you (including ``make test``, ``build_tools/style.fish`` and ``make lint``)
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General
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-------
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Fish uses C++11. Newer C++ features should not be used to make it possible to use on older systems.
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It does not use exceptions, they are disabled at build time with ``-fno-exceptions``.
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Don't introduce new dependencies unless absolutely necessary, and if you do,
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please make it optional with graceful failure if possible.
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Add any new dependencies to the README.rst under the *Running* and/or *Building* sections.
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This also goes for completion scripts and functions - if at all possible, they should only use
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POSIX-compatible invocations of any tools, and no superfluous dependencies.
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E.g. some completions deal with JSON data. In those it's preferable to use python to handle it,
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as opposed to ``jq``, because fish already optionally uses python elsewhere. (It also happens to be quite a bit *faster*)
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Lint Free Code
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--------------
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Automated analysis tools like cppcheck and oclint can point out
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potential bugs or code that is extremely hard to understand. They also
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help ensure the code has a consistent style and that it avoids patterns
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that tend to confuse people.
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To make linting the code easy there are two make targets: ``lint`` and
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``lint-all``. The latter does exactly what the name implies. The former
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will lint any modified but not committed ``*.cpp`` files. If there is no
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uncommitted work it will lint the files in the most recent commit.
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Fish has custom cppcheck rules in the file ``.cppcheck.rule``. These
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help catch mistakes such as using ``wcwidth()`` rather than
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``fish_wcwidth()``. Please add a new rule if you find similar mistakes
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being made.
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Dealing With Lint Warnings
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You are strongly encouraged to address a lint warning by refactoring the
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code, changing variable names, or whatever action is implied by the
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warning.
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Suppressing Lint Warnings
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Once in a while the lint tools emit a false positive warning. For
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example, cppcheck might suggest a memory leak is present when that is
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not the case. To suppress that cppcheck warning you should insert a line
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like the following immediately prior to the line cppcheck warned about:
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::
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// cppcheck-suppress memleak // addr not really leaked
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The explanatory portion of the suppression comment is optional. For
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other types of warnings replace “memleak” with the value inside the
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parenthesis (e.g., “nullPointerRedundantCheck”) from a warning like the
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following:
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::
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[src/complete.cpp:1727]: warning (nullPointerRedundantCheck): Either the condition 'cmd_node' is redundant or there is possible null pointer dereference: cmd_node.
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Suppressing oclint warnings is more complicated to describe so I’ll
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refer you to the `OCLint
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HowTo <http://docs.oclint.org/en/latest/howto/suppress.html#annotations>`__
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on the topic.
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Ensuring Your Changes Conform to the Style Guides
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-------------------------------------------------
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The following sections discuss the specific rules for the style that
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should be used when writing fish code. To ensure your changes conform to
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the style rules you simply need to run
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::
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build_tools/style.fish
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before committing your change. That will run ``git-clang-format`` to
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rewrite only the lines you’re modifying.
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If you’ve already committed your changes that’s okay since it will then
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check the files in the most recent commit. This can be useful after
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you’ve merged another person’s change and want to check that it’s style
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is acceptable. However, in that case it will run ``clang-format`` to
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ensure the entire file, not just the lines modified by the commit,
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conform to the style.
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If you want to check the style of the entire code base run
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::
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build_tools/style.fish --all
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That command will refuse to restyle any files if you have uncommitted
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changes.
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Configuring Your Editor for Fish C++ Code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Vim
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^^^
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As of Vim 7.4 it does not recognize triple-slash comments as used by
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Doxygen and the OS X Xcode IDE to flag comments that explain the
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following C symbol. This means the ``gq`` key binding to reformat such
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comments doesn’t behave as expected. You can fix that by adding the
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following to your vimrc:
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::
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autocmd Filetype c,cpp setlocal comments^=:///
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If you use Vim I recommend the `vim-clang-format
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plugin <https://github.com/rhysd/vim-clang-format>`__ by
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[@rhysd](https://github.com/rhysd).
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Emacs
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^^^^^
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If you use Emacs: TBD
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Configuring Your Editor for Fish Scripts
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you use Vim: Install `vim-fish <https://github.com/dag/vim-fish>`__,
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make sure you have syntax and filetype functionality in ``~/.vimrc``:
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::
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syntax enable
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filetype plugin indent on
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Then turn on some options for nicer display of fish scripts in
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``~/.vim/ftplugin/fish.vim``:
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::
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" Set up :make to use fish for syntax checking.
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compiler fish
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" Set this to have long lines wrap inside comments.
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setlocal textwidth=79
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" Enable folding of block structures in fish.
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setlocal foldmethod=expr
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If you use Emacs: Install
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`fish-mode <https://github.com/wwwjfy/emacs-fish>`__ (also available in
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melpa and melpa-stable) and ``(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil)`` for
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it (via a hook or in ``use-package``\ s “:init” block). It can also be
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made to run fish_indent via e.g.
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.. code:: elisp
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(add-hook 'fish-mode-hook (lambda ()
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(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'fish_indent-before-save)))
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Suppressing Reformatting of C++ Code
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can tell ``clang-format`` to not reformat a block by enclosing it in
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comments like this:
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::
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// clang-format off
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code to ignore
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// clang-format on
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Fish Script Style Guide
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-----------------------
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1. All fish scripts, such as those in the *share/functions* and *tests*
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directories, should be formatted using the ``fish_indent`` command.
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2. Function names should be in all lowercase with words separated by
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underscores. Private functions should begin with an underscore. The
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first word should be ``fish`` if the function is unique to fish.
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3. The first word of global variable names should generally be ``fish``
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for public vars or ``_fish`` for private vars to minimize the
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possibility of name clashes with user defined vars.
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C++ Style Guide
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---------------
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1. The `Google C++ Style
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Guide <https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html>`__ forms
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the basis of the fish C++ style guide. There are two major deviations
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for the fish project. First, a four, rather than two, space indent.
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Second, line lengths up to 100, rather than 80, characters.
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2. The ``clang-format`` command is authoritative with respect to
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indentation, whitespace around operators, etc.
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3. All names in code should be ``small_snake_case``. No Hungarian
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notation is used. The names for classes and structs should be
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followed by ``_t``.
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4. Always attach braces to the surrounding context.
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5. Indent with spaces, not tabs and use four spaces per indent.
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6. Document the purpose of a function or class with doxygen-style
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comment blocks. e.g.:
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::
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/**
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* Sum numbers in a vector.
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*
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* @param values Container whose values are summed.
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* @return sum of `values`, or 0.0 if `values` is empty.
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*/
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double sum(std::vector<double> & const values) {
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...
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}
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*/
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or
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::
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/// brief description of somefunction()
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void somefunction() {
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Testing
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-------
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The source code for fish includes a large collection of tests. If you
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are making any changes to fish, running these tests is a good way to make
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sure the behaviour remains consistent and regressions are not
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introduced. Even if you don’t run the tests on your machine, they will
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still be run via Github Actions.
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You are strongly encouraged to add tests when changing the functionality
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of fish, especially if you are fixing a bug to help ensure there are no
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regressions in the future (i.e., we don’t reintroduce the bug).
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The tests can be found in three places:
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- src/fish_tests.cpp for tests to the core C++ code
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- tests/checks for script tests, run by `littlecheck <https://github.com/ridiculousfish/littlecheck>`__
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- tests/pexpects for interactive tests using `pexpect <https://pexpect.readthedocs.io/en/stable/>`__
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When in doubt, the bulk of the tests should be added as a littlecheck test in tests/checks, as they are the easiest to modify and run, and much faster and more dependable than pexpect tests. The syntax is fairly self-explanatory. It's a fish script with the expected output in ``# CHECK:`` or ``# CHECKERR:`` (for stderr) comments.
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fish_tests.cpp is mostly useful for unit tests - if you wish to test that a function does the correct thing for given input, use it.
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The pexpects are written in python and can simulate input and output to/from a terminal, so they are needed for anything that needs actual interactivity. The runner is in build_tools/pexpect_helper.py, in case you need to modify something there.
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Local testing
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The tests can be run on your local computer on all operating systems.
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::
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cmake path/to/fish-shell
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make test
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Git hooks
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~~~~~~~~~
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Since developers sometimes forget to run the tests, it can be helpful to
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use git hooks (see githooks(5)) to automate it.
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One possibility is a pre-push hook script like this one:
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.. code:: sh
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#!/bin/sh
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#### A pre-push hook for the fish-shell project
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# This will run the tests when a push to master is detected, and will stop that if the tests fail
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# Save this as .git/hooks/pre-push and make it executable
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protected_branch='master'
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# Git gives us lines like "refs/heads/frombranch SOMESHA1 refs/heads/tobranch SOMESHA1"
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# We're only interested in the branches
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while read from _ to _; do
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if [ "x$to" = "xrefs/heads/$protected_branch" ]; then
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isprotected=1
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fi
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done
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if [ "x$isprotected" = x1 ]; then
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echo "Running tests before push to master"
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make test
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RESULT=$?
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if [ $RESULT -ne 0 ]; then
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echo "Tests failed for a push to master, we can't let you do that" >&2
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exit 1
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fi
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fi
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exit 0
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This will check if the push is to the master branch and, if it is, only
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allow the push if running ``make test`` succeeds. In some circumstances
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it may be advisable to circumvent this check with
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``git push --no-verify``, but usually that isn’t necessary.
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To install the hook, place the code in a new file
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``.git/hooks/pre-push`` and make it executable.
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Coverity Scan
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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We use Coverity’s static analysis tool which offers free access to open
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source projects. While access to the tool itself is restricted,
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fish-shell organization members should know that they can login
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`here <https://scan.coverity.com/projects/fish-shell-fish-shell?tab=overview>`__
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with their GitHub account. Currently, tests are triggered upon merging
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the ``master`` branch into ``coverity_scan_master``. Even if you are not
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a fish developer, you can keep an eye on our statistics there.
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Installing the Required Tools
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-----------------------------
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Installing the Linting Tools
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To install the lint checkers on Mac OS X using Homebrew:
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::
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brew tap oclint/formulae
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brew install oclint
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brew install cppcheck
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To install the lint checkers on Debian-based Linux distributions:
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::
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sudo apt-get install clang
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sudo apt-get install oclint
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sudo apt-get install cppcheck
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Installing the Formatting Tools
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Mac OS X:
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::
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brew install clang-format
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Debian-based:
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::
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sudo apt-get install clang-format
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Message Translations
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--------------------
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Fish uses the GNU gettext library to translate messages from English to
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other languages.
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All non-debug messages output for user consumption should be marked for
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translation. In C++, this requires the use of the ``_`` (underscore)
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macro:
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::
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streams.out.append_format(_(L"%ls: There are no jobs\n"), argv[0]);
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All messages in fish script must be enclosed in single or double quote
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characters. They must also be translated via a subcommand. This means
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that the following are **not** valid:
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::
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echo (_ hello)
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_ "goodbye"
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Above should be written like this instead:
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::
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echo (_ "hello")
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echo (_ "goodbye")
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Note that you can use either single or double quotes to enclose the
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message to be translated. You can also optionally include spaces after
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the opening parentheses and once again before the closing parentheses.
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Creating and updating translations requires the Gettext tools, including
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``xgettext``, ``msgfmt`` and ``msgmerge``. Translation sources are
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stored in the ``po`` directory, named ``LANG.po``, where ``LANG`` is the
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two letter ISO 639-1 language code of the target language (eg ``de`` for
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German).
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To create a new translation, for example for German:
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* generate a ``messages.pot`` file by running ``build_tools/fish_xgettext.fish`` from
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the source tree
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* copy ``messages.pot`` to ``po/LANG.po``
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To update a translation:
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* generate a ``messages.pot`` file by running
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``build_tools/fish_xgettext.fish`` from the source tree
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* update the existing translation by running
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``msgmerge --update --no-fuzzy-matching po/LANG.po messages.pot``
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Many tools are available for editing translation files, including
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command-line and graphical user interface programs.
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Be cautious about blindly updating an existing translation file. Trivial
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changes to an existing message (eg changing the punctuation) will cause
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existing translations to be removed, since the tools do literal string
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matching. Therefore, in general, you need to carefully review any
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recommended deletions.
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Read the `translations
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wiki <https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/wiki/Translations>`__ for
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more information.
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Versioning
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----------
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The fish version is constructed by the *build_tools/git_version_gen.sh*
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script. For developers the version is the branch name plus the output of
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``git describe --always --dirty``. Normally the main part of the version
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will be the closest annotated tag. Which itself is usually the most
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recent release number (e.g., ``2.6.0``).
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Include What You Use
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--------------------
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You should not depend on symbols being visible to a ``*.cpp`` module
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from ``#include`` statements inside another header file. In other words
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if your module does ``#include "common.h"`` and that header does
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``#include "signal.h"`` your module should not assume the sub-include is
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present. It should instead directly ``#include "signal.h"`` if it needs
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any symbol from that header. That makes the actual dependencies much
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clearer. It also makes it easy to modify the headers included by a
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specific header file without having to worry that will break any module
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(or header) that includes a particular header.
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To help enforce this rule the ``make lint`` (and ``make lint-all``)
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command will run the
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`include-what-you-use <https://include-what-you-use.org/>`__ tool. You
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can find the IWYU project on
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`github <https://github.com/include-what-you-use/include-what-you-use>`__.
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To install the tool on OS X you’ll need to add a
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`formula <https://github.com/jasonmp85/homebrew-iwyu>`__ then install
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it:
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::
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brew tap jasonmp85/iwyu
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brew install iwyu
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On Ubuntu you can install it via ``apt-get``:
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::
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sudo apt-get install iwyu
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