xref: /dpdk/doc/guides/contributing/coding_style.rst (revision f399b0171e6e64c8bbce42599afa35591a9d28f1)
1..  SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
2    Copyright 2018 The DPDK contributors
3
4.. _coding_style:
5
6DPDK Coding Style
7=================
8
9Description
10-----------
11
12This document specifies the preferred style for source files in the DPDK source tree.
13It is based on the Linux Kernel coding guidelines and the FreeBSD 7.2 Kernel Developer's Manual (see man style(9)), but was heavily modified for the needs of the DPDK.
14
15General Guidelines
16------------------
17
18The rules and guidelines given in this document cannot cover every situation, so the following general guidelines should be used as a fallback:
19
20* The code style should be consistent within each individual file.
21* In the case of creating new files, the style should be consistent within each file in a given directory or module.
22* The primary reason for coding standards is to increase code readability and comprehensibility, therefore always use whatever option will make the code easiest to read.
23
24Line length is recommended to be not more than 80 characters, including comments.
25[Tab stop size should be assumed to be 8-characters wide].
26
27.. note::
28
29	The above is recommendation, and not a hard limit.
30	However, it is expected that the recommendations should be followed in all but the rarest situations.
31
32C Comment Style
33---------------
34
35Usual Comments
36~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
37
38These comments should be used in normal cases.
39To document a public API, a doxygen-like format must be used: refer to :ref:`doxygen_guidelines`.
40
41.. code-block:: c
42
43 /*
44  * VERY important single-line comments look like this.
45  */
46
47 /* Most single-line comments look like this. */
48
49 /*
50  * Multi-line comments look like this.  Make them real sentences. Fill
51  * them so they look like real paragraphs.
52  */
53
54License Header
55~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
56
57Each file must begin with a special comment containing the
58`Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) License Identfier <https://spdx.org/using-spdx-license-identifier>`_.
59
60Generally this is the BSD License, except for code granted special exceptions.
61The SPDX licences identifier is sufficient, a file should not contain
62an additional text version of the license (boilerplate).
63
64After any copyright header, a blank line should be left before any other contents, e.g. include statements in a C file.
65
66C Preprocessor Directives
67-------------------------
68
69Header Includes
70~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
71
72In DPDK sources, the include files should be ordered as following:
73
74#. libc includes (system includes first)
75#. DPDK EAL includes
76#. DPDK misc libraries includes
77#. application-specific includes
78
79Include files from the local application directory are included using quotes, while includes from other paths are included using angle brackets: "<>".
80
81Example:
82
83.. code-block:: c
84
85 #include <stdio.h>
86 #include <stdlib.h>
87
88 #include <rte_eal.h>
89
90 #include <rte_ring.h>
91 #include <rte_mempool.h>
92
93 #include "application.h"
94
95Header File Guards
96~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
97
98Headers should be protected against multiple inclusion with the usual:
99
100.. code-block:: c
101
102   #ifndef _FILE_H_
103   #define _FILE_H_
104
105   /* Code */
106
107   #endif /* _FILE_H_ */
108
109
110Macros
111~~~~~~
112
113Do not ``#define`` or declare names except with the standard DPDK prefix: ``RTE_``.
114This is to ensure there are no collisions with definitions in the application itself.
115
116The names of "unsafe" macros (ones that have side effects), and the names of macros for manifest constants, are all in uppercase.
117
118The expansions of expression-like macros are either a single token or have outer parentheses.
119If a macro is an inline expansion of a function, the function name is all in lowercase and the macro has the same name all in uppercase.
120If the macro encapsulates a compound statement, enclose it in a do-while loop, so that it can be used safely in if statements.
121Any final statement-terminating semicolon should be supplied by the macro invocation rather than the macro, to make parsing easier for pretty-printers and editors.
122
123For example:
124
125.. code-block:: c
126
127 #define MACRO(x, y) do {                                        \
128         variable = (x) + (y);                                   \
129         (y) += 2;                                               \
130 } while(0)
131
132.. note::
133
134 Wherever possible, enums and inline functions should be preferred to macros, since they provide additional degrees of type-safety and can allow compilers to emit extra warnings about unsafe code.
135
136Conditional Compilation
137~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
138
139* When code is conditionally compiled using ``#ifdef`` or ``#if``, a comment may be added following the matching
140  ``#endif`` or ``#else`` to permit the reader to easily discern where conditionally compiled code regions end.
141* This comment should be used only for (subjectively) long regions, regions greater than 20 lines, or where a series of nested ``#ifdef``'s may be confusing to the reader.
142  Exceptions may be made for cases where code is conditionally not compiled for the purposes of lint(1), or other tools, even though the uncompiled region may be small.
143* The comment should be separated from the ``#endif`` or ``#else`` by a single space.
144* For short conditionally compiled regions, a closing comment should not be used.
145* The comment for ``#endif`` should match the expression used in the corresponding ``#if`` or ``#ifdef``.
146* The comment for ``#else`` and ``#elif`` should match the inverse of the expression(s) used in the preceding ``#if`` and/or ``#elif`` statements.
147* In the comments, the subexpression ``defined(FOO)`` is abbreviated as "FOO".
148  For the purposes of comments, ``#ifndef FOO`` is treated as ``#if !defined(FOO)``.
149
150.. code-block:: c
151
152 #ifdef KTRACE
153 #include <sys/ktrace.h>
154 #endif
155
156 #ifdef COMPAT_43
157 /* A large region here, or other conditional code. */
158 #else /* !COMPAT_43 */
159 /* Or here. */
160 #endif /* COMPAT_43 */
161
162 #ifndef COMPAT_43
163 /* Yet another large region here, or other conditional code. */
164 #else /* COMPAT_43 */
165 /* Or here. */
166 #endif /* !COMPAT_43 */
167
168.. note::
169
170 Conditional compilation should be used only when absolutely necessary, as it increases the number of target binaries that need to be built and tested.
171
172C Types
173-------
174
175Integers
176~~~~~~~~
177
178For fixed/minimum-size integer values, the project uses the form uintXX_t (from stdint.h) instead of older BSD-style integer identifiers of the form u_intXX_t.
179
180Enumerations
181~~~~~~~~~~~~
182
183* Enumeration values are all uppercase.
184
185.. code-block:: c
186
187 enum enumtype { ONE, TWO } et;
188
189* Enum types should be used in preference to macros #defining a set of (sequential) values.
190* Enum types should be prefixed with ``rte_`` and the elements by a suitable prefix [generally starting ``RTE_<enum>_`` - where <enum> is a shortname for the enum type] to avoid namespace collisions.
191
192Bitfields
193~~~~~~~~~
194
195The developer should group bitfields that are included in the same integer, as follows:
196
197.. code-block:: c
198
199 struct grehdr {
200   uint16_t rec:3,
201       srr:1,
202       seq:1,
203       key:1,
204       routing:1,
205       csum:1,
206       version:3,
207       reserved:4,
208       ack:1;
209 /* ... */
210 }
211
212Variable Declarations
213~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
214
215In declarations, do not put any whitespace between asterisks and adjacent tokens, except for tokens that are identifiers related to types.
216(These identifiers are the names of basic types, type qualifiers, and typedef-names other than the one being declared.)
217Separate these identifiers from asterisks using a single space.
218
219For example:
220
221.. code-block:: c
222
223   int *x;         /* no space after asterisk */
224   int * const x;  /* space after asterisk when using a type qualifier */
225
226* All externally-visible variables should have an ``rte_`` prefix in the name to avoid namespace collisions.
227* Do not use uppercase letters - either in the form of ALL_UPPERCASE, or CamelCase - in variable names.
228  Lower-case letters and underscores only.
229
230Structure Declarations
231~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
232
233* In general, when declaring variables in new structures, declare them sorted by use, then by size (largest to smallest), and then in alphabetical order.
234  Sorting by use means that commonly used variables are used together and that the structure layout makes logical sense.
235  Ordering by size then ensures that as little padding is added to the structure as possible.
236* For existing structures, additions to structures should be added to the end so for backward compatibility reasons.
237* Each structure element gets its own line.
238* Try to make the structure readable by aligning the member names using spaces as shown below.
239* Names following extremely long types, which therefore cannot be easily aligned with the rest, should be separated by a single space.
240
241.. code-block:: c
242
243 struct foo {
244         struct foo      *next;          /* List of active foo. */
245         struct mumble   amumble;        /* Comment for mumble. */
246         int             bar;            /* Try to align the comments. */
247         struct verylongtypename *baz;   /* Won't fit with other members */
248 };
249
250
251* Major structures should be declared at the top of the file in which they are used, or in separate header files if they are used in multiple source files.
252* Use of the structures should be by separate variable declarations and those declarations must be extern if they are declared in a header file.
253* Externally visible structure definitions should have the structure name prefixed by ``rte_`` to avoid namespace collisions.
254
255.. note::
256
257    Uses of ``bool`` in structures are not preferred as is wastes space and
258    it's also not clear as to what type size the bool is. A preferred use of
259    ``bool`` is mainly as a return type from functions that return true/false,
260    and maybe local variable functions.
261
262    Ref: `LKML <https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/11/21/384>`_
263
264Queues
265~~~~~~
266
267Use queue(3) macros rather than rolling your own lists, whenever possible.
268Thus, the previous example would be better written:
269
270.. code-block:: c
271
272 #include <sys/queue.h>
273
274 struct foo {
275         LIST_ENTRY(foo) link;      /* Use queue macros for foo lists. */
276         struct mumble   amumble;   /* Comment for mumble. */
277         int             bar;       /* Try to align the comments. */
278         struct verylongtypename *baz;   /* Won't fit with other members */
279 };
280 LIST_HEAD(, foo) foohead;          /* Head of global foo list. */
281
282
283DPDK also provides an optimized way to store elements in lockless rings.
284This should be used in all data-path code, when there are several consumer and/or producers to avoid locking for concurrent access.
285
286Typedefs
287~~~~~~~~
288
289Avoid using typedefs for structure types.
290
291For example, use:
292
293.. code-block:: c
294
295 struct my_struct_type {
296 /* ... */
297 };
298
299 struct my_struct_type my_var;
300
301
302rather than:
303
304.. code-block:: c
305
306 typedef struct my_struct_type {
307 /* ... */
308 } my_struct_type;
309
310 my_struct_type my_var
311
312
313Typedefs are problematic because they do not properly hide their underlying type;
314for example, you need to know if the typedef is the structure itself, as shown above, or a pointer to the structure.
315In addition, they must be declared exactly once, whereas an incomplete structure type can be mentioned as many times as necessary.
316Typedefs are difficult to use in stand-alone header files.
317The header that defines the typedef must be included before the header that uses it, or by the header that uses it (which causes namespace pollution),
318or there must be a back-door mechanism for obtaining the typedef.
319
320Note that #defines used instead of typedefs also are problematic (since they do not propagate the pointer type correctly due to direct text replacement).
321For example, ``#define pint int *`` does not work as expected, while ``typedef int *pint`` does work.
322As stated when discussing macros, typedefs should be preferred to macros in cases like this.
323
324When convention requires a typedef; make its name match the struct tag.
325Avoid typedefs ending in ``_t``, except as specified in Standard C or by POSIX.
326
327.. note::
328
329	It is recommended to use typedefs to define function pointer types, for reasons of code readability.
330	This is especially true when the function type is used as a parameter to another function.
331
332For example:
333
334.. code-block:: c
335
336	/**
337	 * Definition of a remote launch function.
338	 */
339	typedef int (lcore_function_t)(void *);
340
341	/* launch a function of lcore_function_t type */
342	int rte_eal_remote_launch(lcore_function_t *f, void *arg, unsigned slave_id);
343
344
345C Indentation
346-------------
347
348General
349~~~~~~~
350
351* Indentation is a hard tab, that is, a tab character, not a sequence of spaces,
352
353.. note::
354
355	Global whitespace rule in DPDK, use tabs for indentation, spaces for alignment.
356
357* Do not put any spaces before a tab for indentation.
358* If you have to wrap a long statement, put the operator at the end of the line, and indent again.
359* For control statements (if, while, etc.), continuation it is recommended that the next line be indented by two tabs, rather than one,
360  to prevent confusion as to whether the second line of the control statement forms part of the statement body or not.
361  Alternatively, the line continuation may use additional spaces to line up to an appropriately point on the preceding line, for example, to align to an opening brace.
362
363.. note::
364
365	As with all style guidelines, code should match style already in use in an existing file.
366
367.. code-block:: c
368
369 while (really_long_variable_name_1 == really_long_variable_name_2 &&
370     var3 == var4){  /* confusing to read as */
371     x = y + z;      /* control stmt body lines up with second line of */
372     a = b + c;      /* control statement itself if single indent used */
373 }
374
375 if (really_long_variable_name_1 == really_long_variable_name_2 &&
376         var3 == var4){  /* two tabs used */
377     x = y + z;          /* statement body no longer lines up */
378     a = b + c;
379 }
380
381 z = a + really + long + statement + that + needs +
382         two + lines + gets + indented + on + the +
383         second + and + subsequent + lines;
384
385
386* Do not add whitespace at the end of a line.
387
388* Do not add whitespace or a blank line at the end of a file.
389
390
391Control Statements and Loops
392~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
393
394* Include a space after keywords (if, while, for, return, switch).
395* Do not use braces (``{`` and ``}``) for control statements with zero or just a single statement, unless that statement is more than a single line in which case the braces are permitted.
396
397.. code-block:: c
398
399 for (p = buf; *p != '\0'; ++p)
400         ;       /* nothing */
401 for (;;)
402         stmt;
403 for (;;) {
404         z = a + really + long + statement + that + needs +
405                 two + lines + gets + indented + on + the +
406                 second + and + subsequent + lines;
407 }
408 for (;;) {
409         if (cond)
410                 stmt;
411 }
412 if (val != NULL)
413         val = realloc(val, newsize);
414
415
416* Parts of a for loop may be left empty.
417
418.. code-block:: c
419
420 for (; cnt < 15; cnt++) {
421         stmt1;
422         stmt2;
423 }
424
425* Closing and opening braces go on the same line as the else keyword.
426* Braces that are not necessary should be left out.
427
428.. code-block:: c
429
430 if (test)
431         stmt;
432 else if (bar) {
433         stmt;
434         stmt;
435 } else
436         stmt;
437
438
439Function Calls
440~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
441
442* Do not use spaces after function names.
443* Commas should have a space after them.
444* No spaces after ``(`` or ``[`` or preceding the ``]`` or ``)`` characters.
445
446.. code-block:: c
447
448	error = function(a1, a2);
449	if (error != 0)
450		exit(error);
451
452
453Operators
454~~~~~~~~~
455
456* Unary operators do not require spaces, binary operators do.
457* Do not use parentheses unless they are required for precedence or unless the statement is confusing without them.
458  However, remember that other people may be more easily confused than you.
459
460Exit
461~~~~
462
463Exits should be 0 on success, or 1 on failure.
464
465.. code-block:: c
466
467         exit(0);        /*
468                          * Avoid obvious comments such as
469                          * "Exit 0 on success."
470                          */
471 }
472
473Local Variables
474~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
475
476* Variables should be declared at the start of a block of code rather than in the middle.
477  The exception to this is when the variable is ``const`` in which case the declaration must be at the point of first use/assignment.
478* When declaring variables in functions, multiple variables per line are OK.
479  However, if multiple declarations would cause the line to exceed a reasonable line length, begin a new set of declarations on the next line rather than using a line continuation.
480* Be careful to not obfuscate the code by initializing variables in the declarations, only the last variable on a line should be initialized.
481  If multiple variables are to be initialized when defined, put one per line.
482* Do not use function calls in initializers, except for ``const`` variables.
483
484.. code-block:: c
485
486 int i = 0, j = 0, k = 0;  /* bad, too many initializer */
487
488 char a = 0;        /* OK, one variable per line with initializer */
489 char b = 0;
490
491 float x, y = 0.0;  /* OK, only last variable has initializer */
492
493
494Casts and sizeof
495~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
496
497* Casts and sizeof statements are not followed by a space.
498* Always write sizeof statements with parenthesis.
499  The redundant parenthesis rules do not apply to sizeof(var) instances.
500
501C Function Definition, Declaration and Use
502-------------------------------------------
503
504Prototypes
505~~~~~~~~~~
506
507* It is recommended (and generally required by the compiler) that all non-static functions are prototyped somewhere.
508* Functions local to one source module should be declared static, and should not be prototyped unless absolutely necessary.
509* Functions used from other parts of code (external API) must be prototyped in the relevant include file.
510* Function prototypes should be listed in a logical order, preferably alphabetical unless there is a compelling reason to use a different ordering.
511* Functions that are used locally in more than one module go into a separate header file, for example, "extern.h".
512* Do not use the ``__P`` macro.
513* Functions that are part of an external API should be documented using Doxygen-like comments above declarations. See :ref:`doxygen_guidelines` for details.
514* Functions that are part of the external API must have an ``rte_`` prefix on the function name.
515* Do not use uppercase letters - either in the form of ALL_UPPERCASE, or CamelCase - in function names. Lower-case letters and underscores only.
516* When prototyping functions, associate names with parameter types, for example:
517
518.. code-block:: c
519
520 void function1(int fd); /* good */
521 void function2(int);    /* bad */
522
523* Short function prototypes should be contained on a single line.
524  Longer prototypes, e.g. those with many parameters, can be split across multiple lines.
525  The second and subsequent lines should be further indented as for line statement continuations as described in the previous section.
526
527.. code-block:: c
528
529 static char *function1(int _arg, const char *_arg2,
530        struct foo *_arg3,
531        struct bar *_arg4,
532        struct baz *_arg5);
533 static void usage(void);
534
535.. note::
536
537	Unlike function definitions, the function prototypes do not need to place the function return type on a separate line.
538
539Definitions
540~~~~~~~~~~~
541
542* The function type should be on a line by itself preceding the function.
543* The opening brace of the function body should be on a line by itself.
544
545.. code-block:: c
546
547 static char *
548 function(int a1, int a2, float fl, int a4)
549 {
550
551
552* Do not declare functions inside other functions.
553  ANSI C states that such declarations have file scope regardless of the nesting of the declaration.
554  Hiding file declarations in what appears to be a local scope is undesirable and will elicit complaints from a good compiler.
555* Old-style (K&R) function declaration should not be used, use ANSI function declarations instead as shown below.
556* Long argument lists should be wrapped as described above in the function prototypes section.
557
558.. code-block:: c
559
560 /*
561  * All major routines should have a comment briefly describing what
562  * they do. The comment before the "main" routine should describe
563  * what the program does.
564  */
565 int
566 main(int argc, char *argv[])
567 {
568         char *ep;
569         long num;
570         int ch;
571
572C Statement Style and Conventions
573---------------------------------
574
575NULL Pointers
576~~~~~~~~~~~~~
577
578* NULL is the preferred null pointer constant.
579  Use NULL instead of ``(type *)0`` or ``(type *)NULL``, except where the compiler does not know the destination type e.g. for variadic args to a function.
580* Test pointers against NULL, for example, use:
581
582.. code-block:: c
583
584 if (p == NULL) /* Good, compare pointer to NULL */
585
586 if (!p) /* Bad, using ! on pointer */
587
588
589* Do not use ! for tests unless it is a boolean, for example, use:
590
591.. code-block:: c
592
593	if (*p == '\0') /* check character against (char)0 */
594
595Return Value
596~~~~~~~~~~~~
597
598* Functions which create objects, or allocate memory, should return pointer types, and NULL on error.
599  The error type should be indicated may setting the variable ``rte_errno`` appropriately.
600* Functions which work on bursts of packets, such as RX-like or TX-like functions, should return the number of packets handled.
601* Other functions returning int should generally behave like system calls:
602  returning 0 on success and -1 on error, setting ``rte_errno`` to indicate the specific type of error.
603* Where already standard in a given library, the alternative error approach may be used where the negative value is not -1 but is instead ``-errno`` if relevant, for example, ``-EINVAL``.
604  Note, however, to allow consistency across functions returning integer or pointer types, the previous approach is preferred for any new libraries.
605* For functions where no error is possible, the function type should be ``void`` not ``int``.
606* Routines returning ``void *`` should not have their return values cast to any pointer type.
607  (Typecasting can prevent the compiler from warning about missing prototypes as any implicit definition of a function returns int,
608  which, unlike ``void *``, needs a typecast to assign to a pointer variable.)
609
610.. note::
611
612	The above rule about not typecasting ``void *`` applies to malloc, as well as to DPDK functions.
613
614* Values in return statements should not be enclosed in parentheses.
615
616Logging and Errors
617~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
618
619In the DPDK environment, use the logging interface provided:
620
621.. code-block:: c
622
623 /* register log types for this application */
624 int my_logtype1 = rte_log_register("myapp.log1");
625 int my_logtype2 = rte_log_register("myapp.log2");
626
627 /* set global log level to INFO */
628 rte_log_set_global_level(RTE_LOG_INFO);
629
630 /* only display messages higher than NOTICE for log2 (default
631  * is DEBUG) */
632 rte_log_set_level(my_logtype2, RTE_LOG_NOTICE);
633
634 /* enable all PMD logs (whose identifier string starts with "pmd.") */
635 rte_log_set_level_pattern("pmd.*", RTE_LOG_DEBUG);
636
637 /* log in debug level */
638 rte_log_set_global_level(RTE_LOG_DEBUG);
639 RTE_LOG(DEBUG, my_logtype1, "this is a debug level message\n");
640 RTE_LOG(INFO, my_logtype1, "this is a info level message\n");
641 RTE_LOG(WARNING, my_logtype1, "this is a warning level message\n");
642 RTE_LOG(WARNING, my_logtype2, "this is a debug level message (not displayed)\n");
643
644 /* log in info level */
645 rte_log_set_global_level(RTE_LOG_INFO);
646 RTE_LOG(DEBUG, my_logtype1, "debug level message (not displayed)\n");
647
648Branch Prediction
649~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
650
651* When a test is done in a critical zone (called often or in a data path) the code can use the ``likely()`` and ``unlikely()`` macros to indicate the expected, or preferred fast path.
652  They are expanded as a compiler builtin and allow the developer to indicate if the branch is likely to be taken or not. Example:
653
654.. code-block:: c
655
656 #include <rte_branch_prediction.h>
657 if (likely(x > 1))
658   do_stuff();
659
660.. note::
661
662	The use of ``likely()`` and ``unlikely()`` should only be done in performance critical paths,
663	and only when there is a clearly preferred path, or a measured performance increase gained from doing so.
664	These macros should be avoided in non-performance-critical code.
665
666Static Variables and Functions
667~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
668
669* All functions and variables that are local to a file must be declared as ``static`` because it can often help the compiler to do some optimizations (such as, inlining the code).
670* Functions that should be inlined should to be declared as ``static inline`` and can be defined in a .c or a .h file.
671
672.. note::
673	Static functions defined in a header file must be declared as ``static inline`` in order to prevent compiler warnings about the function being unused.
674
675Const Attribute
676~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
677
678The ``const`` attribute should be used as often as possible when a variable is read-only.
679
680Inline ASM in C code
681~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
682
683The ``asm`` and ``volatile`` keywords do not have underscores. The AT&T syntax should be used.
684Input and output operands should be named to avoid confusion, as shown in the following example:
685
686.. code-block:: c
687
688	asm volatile("outb %[val], %[port]"
689		: :
690		[port] "dN" (port),
691		[val] "a" (val));
692
693Control Statements
694~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
695
696* Forever loops are done with for statements, not while statements.
697* Elements in a switch statement that cascade should have a FALLTHROUGH comment. For example:
698
699.. code-block:: c
700
701         switch (ch) {         /* Indent the switch. */
702         case 'a':             /* Don't indent the case. */
703                 aflag = 1;    /* Indent case body one tab. */
704                 /* FALLTHROUGH */
705         case 'b':
706                 bflag = 1;
707                 break;
708         case '?':
709         default:
710                 usage();
711                 /* NOTREACHED */
712         }
713
714Dynamic Logging
715---------------
716
717DPDK provides infrastructure to perform logging during runtime. This is very
718useful for enabling debug output without recompilation. To enable or disable
719logging of a particular topic, the ``--log-level`` parameter can be provided
720to EAL, which will change the log level. DPDK code can register topics,
721which allows the user to adjust the log verbosity for that specific topic.
722
723In general, the naming scheme is as follows: ``type.section.name``
724
725 * Type is the type of component, where ``lib``, ``pmd``, ``bus`` and ``user``
726   are the common options.
727 * Section refers to a specific area, for example a poll-mode-driver for an
728   ethernet device would use ``pmd.net``, while an eventdev PMD uses
729   ``pmd.event``.
730 * The name identifies the individual item that the log applies to.
731   The name section must align with
732   the directory that the PMD code resides. See examples below for clarity.
733
734Examples:
735
736 * The virtio network PMD in ``drivers/net/virtio`` uses ``pmd.net.virtio``
737 * The eventdev software poll mode driver in ``drivers/event/sw`` uses ``pmd.event.sw``
738 * The octeontx mempool driver in ``drivers/mempool/octeontx`` uses ``pmd.mempool.octeontx``
739 * The DPDK hash library in ``lib/librte_hash`` uses ``lib.hash``
740
741Specializations
742~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
743
744In addition to the above logging topic, any PMD or library can further split
745logging output by using "specializations". A specialization could be the
746difference between initialization code, and logs of events that occur at runtime.
747
748An example could be the initialization log messages getting one
749specialization, while another specialization handles mailbox command logging.
750Each PMD, library or component can create as many specializations as required.
751
752A specialization looks like this:
753
754 * Initialization output: ``type.section.name.init``
755 * PF/VF mailbox output: ``type.section.name.mbox``
756
757A real world example is the i40e poll mode driver which exposes two
758specializations, one for initialization ``pmd.net.i40e.init`` and the other for
759the remaining driver logs ``pmd.net.i40e.driver``.
760
761Note that specializations have no formatting rules, but please follow
762a precedent if one exists. In order to see all current log topics and
763specializations, run the ``app/test`` binary, and use the ``dump_log_types``
764
765Python Code
766-----------
767
768All Python code should work with Python 2.7+ and 3.2+ and be compliant with
769`PEP8 (Style Guide for Python Code) <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/>`_.
770
771The ``pep8`` tool can be used for testing compliance with the guidelines.
772
773Integrating with the Build System
774---------------------------------
775
776DPDK supports being built in two different ways:
777
778* using ``make`` - or more specifically "GNU make", i.e. ``gmake`` on FreeBSD
779* using the tools ``meson`` and ``ninja``
780
781Any new library or driver to be integrated into DPDK should support being
782built with both systems. While building using ``make`` is a legacy approach, and
783most build-system enhancements are being done using ``meson`` and ``ninja``
784there are no plans at this time to deprecate the legacy ``make`` build system.
785
786Therefore all new component additions should include both a ``Makefile`` and a
787``meson.build`` file, and should be added to the component lists in both the
788``Makefile`` and ``meson.build`` files in the relevant top-level directory:
789either ``lib`` directory or a ``driver`` subdirectory.
790
791Makefile Contents
792~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
793
794The ``Makefile`` for the component should be of the following format, where
795``<name>`` corresponds to the name of the library in question, e.g. hash,
796lpm, etc. For drivers, the same format of Makefile is used.
797
798.. code-block:: none
799
800	# pull in basic DPDK definitions, including whether library is to be
801	# built or not
802	include $(RTE_SDK)/mk/rte.vars.mk
803
804	# library name
805	LIB = librte_<name>.a
806
807	# any library cflags needed. Generally add "-O3 $(WERROR_FLAGS)"
808	CFLAGS += -O3
809	CFLAGS += $(WERROR_FLAGS)
810
811	# the symbol version information for the library
812	EXPORT_MAP := rte_<name>_version.map
813
814	# all source filenames are stored in SRCS-y
815	SRCS-$(CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_<NAME>) += rte_<name>.c
816
817	# install includes
818	SYMLINK-$(CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_<NAME>)-include += rte_<name>.h
819
820	# pull in rules to build the library
821	include $(RTE_SDK)/mk/rte.lib.mk
822
823Meson Build File Contents - Libraries
824~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
825
826The ``meson.build`` file for a new DPDK library should be of the following basic
827format.
828
829.. code-block:: python
830
831	sources = files('file1.c', ...)
832	headers = files('file1.h', ...)
833
834
835This will build based on a number of conventions and assumptions within the DPDK
836itself, for example, that the library name is the same as the directory name in
837which the files are stored.
838
839For a library ``meson.build`` file, there are number of variables which can be
840set, some mandatory, others optional. The mandatory fields are:
841
842sources
843	**Default Value = []**.
844	This variable should list out the files to be compiled up to create the
845	library. Files must be specified using the meson ``files()`` function.
846
847
848The optional fields are:
849
850build
851	**Default Value = true**
852	Used to optionally compile a library, based on its dependencies or
853	environment. When set to "false" the ``reason`` value, explained below, should
854	also be set to explain to the user why the component is not being built.
855	A simple example of use would be:
856
857.. code-block:: python
858
859	if not is_linux
860	        build = false
861	        reason = 'only supported on Linux'
862	endif
863
864
865cflags
866	**Default Value = [<-march/-mcpu flags>]**.
867	Used to specify any additional cflags that need to be passed to compile
868	the sources in the library.
869
870deps
871	**Default Value = ['eal']**.
872	Used to list the internal library dependencies of the library. It should
873	be assigned to using ``+=`` rather than overwriting using ``=``.  The
874	dependencies should be specified as strings, each one giving the name of
875	a DPDK library, without the ``librte_`` prefix. Dependencies are handled
876	recursively, so specifying e.g. ``mempool``, will automatically also
877	make the library depend upon the mempool library's dependencies too -
878	``ring`` and ``eal``. For libraries that only depend upon EAL, this
879	variable may be omitted from the ``meson.build`` file.  For example:
880
881.. code-block:: python
882
883	deps += ['ethdev']
884
885
886ext_deps
887	**Default Value = []**.
888	Used to specify external dependencies of this library. They should be
889	returned as dependency objects, as returned from the meson
890	``dependency()`` or ``find_library()`` functions. Before returning
891	these, they should be checked to ensure the dependencies have been
892	found, and, if not, the ``build`` variable should be set to ``false``.
893	For example:
894
895.. code-block:: python
896
897	my_dep = dependency('libX', required: 'false')
898	if my_dep.found()
899		ext_deps += my_dep
900	else
901		build = false
902	endif
903
904
905headers
906	**Default Value = []**.
907	Used to return the list of header files for the library that should be
908	installed to $PREFIX/include when ``ninja install`` is run. As with
909	source files, these should be specified using the meson ``files()``
910	function.
911
912includes:
913	**Default Value = []**.
914	Used to indicate any additional header file paths which should be
915	added to the header search path for other libs depending on this
916	library. EAL uses this so that other libraries building against it
917	can find the headers in subdirectories of the main EAL directory. The
918	base directory of each library is always given in the include path,
919	it does not need to be specified here.
920
921name
922	**Default Value = library name derived from the directory name**.
923	If a library's .so or .a file differs from that given in the directory
924	name, the name should be specified using this variable. In practice,
925	since the convention is that for a library called ``librte_xyz.so``, the
926	sources are stored in a directory ``lib/librte_xyz``, this value should
927	never be needed for new libraries.
928
929.. note::
930
931	The name value also provides the name used to find the function version
932	map file, as part of the build process, so if the directory name and
933	library names differ, the ``version.map`` file should be named
934	consistently with the library, not the directory
935
936objs
937	**Default Value = []**.
938	This variable can be used to pass to the library build some pre-built
939	objects that were compiled up as part of another target given in the
940	included library ``meson.build`` file.
941
942reason
943	**Default Value = '<unknown reason>'**.
944	This variable should be used when a library is not to be built i.e. when
945	``build`` is set to "false", to specify the reason why a library will not be
946	built. For missing dependencies this should be of the form
947	``'missing dependency, "libname"'``.
948
949use_function_versioning
950	**Default Value = false**.
951	Specifies if the library in question has ABI versioned functions. If it
952	has, this value should be set to ensure that the C files are compiled
953	twice with suitable parameters for each of shared or static library
954	builds.
955
956Meson Build File Contents - Drivers
957~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
958
959For drivers, the values are largely the same as for libraries. The variables
960supported are:
961
962build
963	As above.
964
965cflags
966	As above.
967
968deps
969	As above.
970
971ext_deps
972	As above.
973
974includes
975	**Default Value = <driver directory>** Some drivers include a base
976	directory for additional source files and headers, so we have this
977	variable to allow the headers from that base directory to be found when
978	compiling driver sources. Should be appended to using ``+=`` rather than
979	overwritten using ``=``.  The values appended should be meson include
980	objects got using the ``include_directories()`` function. For example:
981
982.. code-block:: python
983
984	includes += include_directories('base')
985
986name
987	As above, though note that each driver class can define it's own naming
988	scheme for the resulting ``.so`` files.
989
990objs
991	As above, generally used for the contents of the ``base`` directory.
992
993pkgconfig_extra_libs
994	**Default Value = []**
995	This variable is used to pass additional library link flags through to
996	the DPDK pkgconfig file generated, for example, to track any additional
997	libraries that may need to be linked into the build - especially when
998	using static libraries. Anything added here will be appended to the end
999	of the ``pkgconfig --libs`` output.
1000
1001reason
1002	As above.
1003
1004sources [mandatory]
1005	As above
1006
1007version
1008	As above
1009