1.. _doc_guidelines: 2 3DPDK Documentation Guidelines 4============================= 5 6This document outlines the guidelines for writing the DPDK Guides and API documentation in RST and Doxygen format. 7 8It also explains the structure of the DPDK documentation and shows how to build the Html and PDF versions of the documents. 9 10 11Structure of the Documentation 12------------------------------ 13 14The DPDK source code repository contains input files to build the API documentation and User Guides. 15 16The main directories that contain files related to documentation are shown below:: 17 18 lib 19 |-- librte_acl 20 |-- librte_cfgfile 21 |-- librte_cmdline 22 |-- librte_compat 23 |-- librte_eal 24 | |-- ... 25 ... 26 doc 27 |-- api 28 +-- guides 29 |-- freebsd_gsg 30 |-- linux_gsg 31 |-- prog_guide 32 |-- sample_app_ug 33 |-- guidelines 34 |-- testpmd_app_ug 35 |-- rel_notes 36 |-- nics 37 |-- xen 38 |-- ... 39 40 41The API documentation is built from `Doxygen <http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen/>`_ comments in the header files. 42These files are mainly in the ``lib/librte_*`` directories although some of the Poll Mode Drivers in ``drivers/net`` 43are also documented with Doxygen. 44 45The configuration files that are used to control the Doxygen output are in the ``doc/api`` directory. 46 47The user guides such as *The Programmers Guide* and the *FreeBSD* and *Linux Getting Started* Guides are generated 48from RST markup text files using the `Sphinx <http://sphinx-doc.org/index.html>`_ Documentation Generator. 49 50These files are included in the ``doc/guides/`` directory. 51The output is controlled by the ``doc/guides/conf.py`` file. 52 53 54Role of the Documentation 55------------------------- 56 57The following items outline the roles of the different parts of the documentation and when they need to be updated or 58added to by the developer. 59 60* **Release Notes** 61 62 The Release Notes document which features have been added in the current and previous releases of DPDK and highlight 63 any known issues. 64 The Releases Notes also contain notifications of features that will change ABI compatibility in the next major release. 65 66 Developers should include updates to the Release Notes with patch sets that relate to any of the following sections: 67 68 * New Features 69 * Resolved Issues (see below) 70 * Known Issues 71 * API Changes 72 * ABI Changes 73 * Shared Library Versions 74 75 Resolved Issues should only include issues from previous releases that have been resolved in the current release. 76 Issues that are introduced and then fixed within a release cycle do not have to be included here. 77 78 Refer to the Release Notes from the previous DPDK release for the correct format of each section. 79 80 81* **API documentation** 82 83 The API documentation explains how to use the public DPDK functions. 84 The `API index page <http://dpdk.org/doc/api/>`_ shows the generated API documentation with related groups of functions. 85 86 The API documentation should be updated via Doxygen comments when new functions are added. 87 88* **Getting Started Guides** 89 90 The Getting Started Guides show how to install and configure DPDK and how to run DPDK based applications on different OSes. 91 92 A Getting Started Guide should be added when DPDK is ported to a new OS. 93 94* **The Programmers Guide** 95 96 The Programmers Guide explains how the API components of DPDK such as the EAL, Memzone, Rings and the Hash Library work. 97 It also explains how some higher level functionality such as Packet Distributor, Packet Framework and KNI work. 98 It also shows the build system and explains how to add applications. 99 100 The Programmers Guide should be expanded when new functionality is added to DPDK. 101 102* **App Guides** 103 104 The app guides document the DPDK applications in the ``app`` directory such as ``testpmd``. 105 106 The app guides should be updated if functionality is changed or added. 107 108* **Sample App Guides** 109 110 The sample app guides document the DPDK example applications in the examples directory. 111 Generally they demonstrate a major feature such as L2 or L3 Forwarding, Multi Process or Power Management. 112 They explain the purpose of the sample application, how to run it and step through some of the code to explain the 113 major functionality. 114 115 A new sample application should be accompanied by a new sample app guide. 116 The guide for the Skeleton Forwarding app is a good starting reference. 117 118* **Network Interface Controller Drivers** 119 120 The NIC Drivers document explains the features of the individual Poll Mode Drivers, such as software requirements, 121 configuration and initialization. 122 123 New documentation should be added for new Poll Mode Drivers. 124 125* **Guidelines** 126 127 The guideline documents record community process, expectations and design directions. 128 129 They can be extended, amended or discussed by submitting a patch and getting community approval. 130 131 132Building the Documentation 133-------------------------- 134 135Dependencies 136~~~~~~~~~~~~ 137 138 139The following dependencies must be installed to build the documentation: 140 141* Doxygen. 142 143* Sphinx (also called python-sphinx). 144 145* TexLive (at least TexLive-core and the extra Latex support). 146 147* Inkscape. 148 149`Doxygen`_ generates documentation from commented source code. 150It can be installed as follows: 151 152.. code-block:: console 153 154 # Ubuntu/Debian. 155 sudo apt-get -y install doxygen 156 157 # Red Hat/Fedora. 158 sudo dnf -y install doxygen 159 160`Sphinx`_ is a Python documentation tool for converting RST files to Html or to PDF (via LaTeX). 161For full support with figure and table captioning the latest version of Sphinx can be installed as follows: 162 163.. code-block:: console 164 165 # Ubuntu/Debian. 166 sudo apt-get -y install python-pip 167 sudo pip install --upgrade sphinx 168 sudo pip install --upgrade sphinx_rtd_theme 169 170 # Red Hat/Fedora. 171 sudo dnf -y install python-pip 172 sudo pip install --upgrade sphinx 173 sudo pip install --upgrade sphinx_rtd_theme 174 175For further information on getting started with Sphinx see the `Sphinx Tutorial <http://sphinx-doc.org/tutorial.html>`_. 176 177.. Note:: 178 179 To get full support for Figure and Table numbering it is best to install Sphinx 1.3.1 or later. 180 181 182`Inkscape`_ is a vector based graphics program which is used to create SVG images and also to convert SVG images to PDF images. 183It can be installed as follows: 184 185.. code-block:: console 186 187 # Ubuntu/Debian. 188 sudo apt-get -y install inkscape 189 190 # Red Hat/Fedora. 191 sudo dnf -y install inkscape 192 193`TexLive <http://www.tug.org/texlive/>`_ is an installation package for Tex/LaTeX. 194It is used to generate the PDF versions of the documentation. 195The main required packages can be installed as follows: 196 197.. code-block:: console 198 199 # Ubuntu/Debian. 200 sudo apt-get -y install texlive-latex-extra 201 202 # Red Hat/Fedora, selective install. 203 sudo dnf -y install texlive-collection-latexextra 204 205 206Build commands 207~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 208 209The documentation is built using the standard DPDK build system. 210Some examples are shown below: 211 212* Generate all the documentation targets:: 213 214 make doc 215 216* Generate the Doxygen API documentation in Html:: 217 218 make doc-api-html 219 220* Generate the guides documentation in Html:: 221 222 make doc-guides-html 223 224* Generate the guides documentation in Pdf:: 225 226 make doc-guides-pdf 227 228The output of these commands is generated in the ``build`` directory:: 229 230 build/doc 231 |-- html 232 | |-- api 233 | +-- guides 234 | 235 +-- pdf 236 +-- guides 237 238 239.. Note:: 240 241 Make sure to fix any Sphinx or Doxygen warnings when adding or updating documentation. 242 243The documentation output files can be removed as follows:: 244 245 make doc-clean 246 247 248Document Guidelines 249------------------- 250 251Here are some guidelines in relation to the style of the documentation: 252 253* Document the obvious as well as the obscure since it won't always be obvious to the reader. 254 For example an instruction like "Set up 64 2MB Hugepages" is better when followed by a sample commandline or a link to 255 the appropriate section of the documentation. 256 257* Use American English spellings throughout. 258 This can be checked using the ``aspell`` utility:: 259 260 aspell --lang=en_US --check doc/guides/sample_app_ug/mydoc.rst 261 262 263RST Guidelines 264-------------- 265 266The RST (reStructuredText) format is a plain text markup format that can be converted to Html, PDF or other formats. 267It is most closely associated with Python but it can be used to document any language. 268It is used in DPDK to document everything apart from the API. 269 270The Sphinx documentation contains a very useful `RST Primer <http://sphinx-doc.org/rest.html#rst-primer>`_ which is a 271good place to learn the minimal set of syntax required to format a document. 272 273The official `reStructuredText <http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html>`_ website contains the specification for the 274RST format and also examples of how to use it. 275However, for most developers the RST Primer is a better resource. 276 277The most common guidelines for writing RST text are detailed in the 278`Documenting Python <https://docs.python.org/devguide/documenting.html>`_ guidelines. 279The additional guidelines below reiterate or expand upon those guidelines. 280 281 282Line Length 283~~~~~~~~~~~ 284 285* Lines in sentences should be less than 80 characters and wrapped at 286 words. Multiple sentences which are not separated by a blank line are joined 287 automatically into paragraphs. 288 289* Lines in literal blocks **must** be less than 80 characters since 290 they are not wrapped by the document formatters and can exceed the page width 291 in PDF documents. 292 293 Long literal command lines can be shown wrapped with backslashes. For 294 example:: 295 296 testpmd -l 2-3 -n 4 \ 297 --vdev=virtio_user0,path=/dev/vhost-net,queues=2,queue_size=1024 \ 298 -- -i --txqflags=0x0 --disable-hw-vlan --enable-lro \ 299 --enable-rx-cksum --txq=2 --rxq=2 --rxd=1024 --txd=1024 300 301 302Whitespace 303~~~~~~~~~~ 304 305* Standard RST indentation is 3 spaces. 306 Code can be indented 4 spaces, especially if it is copied from source files. 307 308* No tabs. 309 Convert tabs in embedded code to 4 or 8 spaces. 310 311* No trailing whitespace. 312 313* Add 2 blank lines before each section header. 314 315* Add 1 blank line after each section header. 316 317* Add 1 blank line between each line of a list. 318 319 320Section Headers 321~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 322 323* Section headers should use the following underline formats:: 324 325 Level 1 Heading 326 =============== 327 328 329 Level 2 Heading 330 --------------- 331 332 333 Level 3 Heading 334 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 335 336 337 Level 4 Heading 338 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 339 340 341* Level 4 headings should be used sparingly. 342 343* The underlines should match the length of the text. 344 345* In general, the heading should be less than 80 characters, for conciseness. 346 347* As noted above: 348 349 * Add 2 blank lines before each section header. 350 351 * Add 1 blank line after each section header. 352 353 354Lists 355~~~~~ 356 357* Bullet lists should be formatted with a leading ``*`` as follows:: 358 359 * Item one. 360 361 * Item two is a long line that is wrapped and then indented to match 362 the start of the previous line. 363 364 * One space character between the bullet and the text is preferred. 365 366* Numbered lists can be formatted with a leading number but the preference is to use ``#.`` which will give automatic numbering. 367 This is more convenient when adding or removing items:: 368 369 #. Item one. 370 371 #. Item two is a long line that is wrapped and then indented to match 372 the start of the previous line. 373 374 #. Item three. 375 376* Definition lists can be written with or without a bullet:: 377 378 * Item one. 379 380 Some text about item one. 381 382 * Item two. 383 384 Some text about item two. 385 386* All lists, and sub-lists, must be separated from the preceding text by a blank line. 387 This is a syntax requirement. 388 389* All list items should be separated by a blank line for readability. 390 391 392Code and Literal block sections 393~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 394 395* Inline text that is required to be rendered with a fixed width font should be enclosed in backquotes like this: 396 \`\`text\`\`, so that it appears like this: ``text``. 397 398* Fixed width, literal blocks of texts should be indented at least 3 spaces and prefixed with ``::`` like this:: 399 400 Here is some fixed width text:: 401 402 0x0001 0x0001 0x00FF 0x00FF 403 404* It is also possible to specify an encoding for a literal block using the ``.. code-block::`` directive so that syntax 405 highlighting can be applied. 406 Examples of supported highlighting are:: 407 408 .. code-block:: console 409 .. code-block:: c 410 .. code-block:: python 411 .. code-block:: diff 412 .. code-block:: none 413 414 That can be applied as follows:: 415 416 .. code-block:: c 417 418 #include<stdio.h> 419 420 int main() { 421 422 printf("Hello World\n"); 423 424 return 0; 425 } 426 427 Which would be rendered as: 428 429 .. code-block:: c 430 431 #include<stdio.h> 432 433 int main() { 434 435 printf("Hello World\n"); 436 437 return 0; 438 } 439 440 441* The default encoding for a literal block using the simplified ``::`` 442 directive is ``none``. 443 444* Lines in literal blocks must be less than 80 characters since they can exceed the page width when converted to PDF documentation. 445 For long literal lines that exceed that limit try to wrap the text at sensible locations. 446 For example a long command line could be documented like this and still work if copied directly from the docs:: 447 448 build/app/testpmd -l 0-2 -n3 --vdev=net_pcap0,iface=eth0 \ 449 --vdev=net_pcap1,iface=eth1 \ 450 -- -i --nb-cores=2 --nb-ports=2 \ 451 --total-num-mbufs=2048 452 453* Long lines that cannot be wrapped, such as application output, should be truncated to be less than 80 characters. 454 455 456Images 457~~~~~~ 458 459* All images should be in SVG scalar graphics format. 460 They should be true SVG XML files and should not include binary formats embedded in a SVG wrapper. 461 462* The DPDK documentation contains some legacy images in PNG format. 463 These will be converted to SVG in time. 464 465* `Inkscape <http://inkscape.org>`_ is the recommended graphics editor for creating the images. 466 Use some of the older images in ``doc/guides/prog_guide/img/`` as a template, for example ``mbuf1.svg`` 467 or ``ring-enqueue1.svg``. 468 469* The SVG images should include a copyright notice, as an XML comment. 470 471* Images in the documentation should be formatted as follows: 472 473 * The image should be preceded by a label in the format ``.. _figure_XXXX:`` with a leading underscore and 474 where ``XXXX`` is a unique descriptive name. 475 476 * Images should be included using the ``.. figure::`` directive and the file type should be set to ``*`` (not ``.svg``). 477 This allows the format of the image to be changed if required, without updating the documentation. 478 479 * Images must have a caption as part of the ``.. figure::`` directive. 480 481* Here is an example of the previous three guidelines:: 482 483 .. _figure_mempool: 484 485 .. figure:: img/mempool.* 486 487 A mempool in memory with its associated ring. 488 489.. _mock_label: 490 491* Images can then be linked to using the ``:numref:`` directive:: 492 493 The mempool layout is shown in :numref:`figure_mempool`. 494 495 This would be rendered as: *The mempool layout is shown in* :ref:`Fig 6.3 <mock_label>`. 496 497 **Note**: The ``:numref:`` directive requires Sphinx 1.3.1 or later. 498 With earlier versions it will still be rendered as a link but won't have an automatically generated number. 499 500* The caption of the image can be generated, with a link, using the ``:ref:`` directive:: 501 502 :ref:`figure_mempool` 503 504 This would be rendered as: *A mempool in memory with its associated ring.* 505 506Tables 507~~~~~~ 508 509* RST tables should be used sparingly. 510 They are hard to format and to edit, they are often rendered incorrectly in PDF format, and the same information 511 can usually be shown just as clearly with a definition or bullet list. 512 513* Tables in the documentation should be formatted as follows: 514 515 * The table should be preceded by a label in the format ``.. _table_XXXX:`` with a leading underscore and where 516 ``XXXX`` is a unique descriptive name. 517 518 * Tables should be included using the ``.. table::`` directive and must have a caption. 519 520* Here is an example of the previous two guidelines:: 521 522 .. _table_qos_pipes: 523 524 .. table:: Sample configuration for QOS pipes. 525 526 +----------+----------+----------+ 527 | Header 1 | Header 2 | Header 3 | 528 | | | | 529 +==========+==========+==========+ 530 | Text | Text | Text | 531 +----------+----------+----------+ 532 | ... | ... | ... | 533 +----------+----------+----------+ 534 535* Tables can be linked to using the ``:numref:`` and ``:ref:`` directives, as shown in the previous section for images. 536 For example:: 537 538 The QOS configuration is shown in :numref:`table_qos_pipes`. 539 540* Tables should not include merged cells since they are not supported by the PDF renderer. 541 542 543.. _links: 544 545Hyperlinks 546~~~~~~~~~~ 547 548* Links to external websites can be plain URLs. 549 The following is rendered as http://dpdk.org:: 550 551 http://dpdk.org 552 553* They can contain alternative text. 554 The following is rendered as `Check out DPDK <http://dpdk.org>`_:: 555 556 `Check out DPDK <http://dpdk.org>`_ 557 558* An internal link can be generated by placing labels in the document with the format ``.. _label_name``. 559 560* The following links to the top of this section: :ref:`links`:: 561 562 .. _links: 563 564 Hyperlinks 565 ~~~~~~~~~~ 566 567 * The following links to the top of this section: :ref:`links`: 568 569.. Note:: 570 571 The label must have a leading underscore but the reference to it must omit it. 572 This is a frequent cause of errors and warnings. 573 574* The use of a label is preferred since it works across files and will still work if the header text changes. 575 576 577.. _doxygen_guidelines: 578 579Doxygen Guidelines 580------------------ 581 582The DPDK API is documented using Doxygen comment annotations in the header files. 583Doxygen is a very powerful tool, it is extremely configurable and with a little effort can be used to create expressive documents. 584See the `Doxygen website <http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen/>`_ for full details on how to use it. 585 586The following are some guidelines for use of Doxygen in the DPDK API documentation: 587 588* New libraries that are documented with Doxygen should be added to the Doxygen configuration file: ``doc/api/doxy-api.conf``. 589 It is only required to add the directory that contains the files. 590 It isn't necessary to explicitly name each file since the configuration matches all ``rte_*.h`` files in the directory. 591 592* Use proper capitalization and punctuation in the Doxygen comments since they will become sentences in the documentation. 593 This in particular applies to single line comments, which is the case the is most often forgotten. 594 595* Use ``@`` style Doxygen commands instead of ``\`` style commands. 596 597* Add a general description of each library at the head of the main header files: 598 599 .. code-block:: c 600 601 /** 602 * @file 603 * RTE Mempool. 604 * 605 * A memory pool is an allocator of fixed-size object. It is 606 * identified by its name, and uses a ring to store free objects. 607 * ... 608 */ 609 610* Document the purpose of a function, the parameters used and the return 611 value: 612 613 .. code-block:: c 614 615 /** 616 * Attach a new Ethernet device specified by arguments. 617 * 618 * @param devargs 619 * A pointer to a strings array describing the new device 620 * to be attached. The strings should be a pci address like 621 * `0000:01:00.0` or **virtual** device name like `net_pcap0`. 622 * @param port_id 623 * A pointer to a port identifier actually attached. 624 * 625 * @return 626 * 0 on success and port_id is filled, negative on error. 627 */ 628 int rte_eth_dev_attach(const char *devargs, uint8_t *port_id); 629 630* Doxygen supports Markdown style syntax such as bold, italics, fixed width text and lists. 631 For example the second line in the ``devargs`` parameter in the previous example will be rendered as: 632 633 The strings should be a pci address like ``0000:01:00.0`` or **virtual** device name like ``net_pcap0``. 634 635* Use ``-`` instead of ``*`` for lists within the Doxygen comment since the latter can get confused with the comment delimiter. 636 637* Add an empty line between the function description, the ``@params`` and ``@return`` for readability. 638 639* Place the ``@params`` description on separate line and indent it by 2 spaces. 640 (It would be better to use no indentation since this is more common and also because checkpatch complains about leading 641 whitespace in comments. 642 However this is the convention used in the existing DPDK code.) 643 644* Documented functions can be linked to simply by adding ``()`` to the function name: 645 646 .. code-block:: c 647 648 /** 649 * The functions exported by the application Ethernet API to setup 650 * a device designated by its port identifier must be invoked in 651 * the following order: 652 * - rte_eth_dev_configure() 653 * - rte_eth_tx_queue_setup() 654 * - rte_eth_rx_queue_setup() 655 * - rte_eth_dev_start() 656 */ 657 658 In the API documentation the functions will be rendered as links, see the 659 `online section of the rte_ethdev.h docs <http://dpdk.org/doc/api/rte__ethdev_8h.html>`_ that contains the above text. 660 661* The ``@see`` keyword can be used to create a *see also* link to another file or library. 662 This directive should be placed on one line at the bottom of the documentation section. 663 664 .. code-block:: c 665 666 /** 667 * ... 668 * 669 * Some text that references mempools. 670 * 671 * @see eal_memzone.c 672 */ 673 674* Doxygen supports two types of comments for documenting variables, constants and members: prefix and postfix: 675 676 .. code-block:: c 677 678 /** This is a prefix comment. */ 679 #define RTE_FOO_ERROR 0x023. 680 681 #define RTE_BAR_ERROR 0x024. /**< This is a postfix comment. */ 682 683* Postfix comments are preferred for struct members and constants if they can be documented in the same way: 684 685 .. code-block:: c 686 687 struct rte_eth_stats { 688 uint64_t ipackets; /**< Total number of received packets. */ 689 uint64_t opackets; /**< Total number of transmitted packets.*/ 690 uint64_t ibytes; /**< Total number of received bytes. */ 691 uint64_t obytes; /**< Total number of transmitted bytes. */ 692 uint64_t imissed; /**< Total of RX missed packets. */ 693 uint64_t ibadcrc; /**< Total of RX packets with CRC error. */ 694 uint64_t ibadlen; /**< Total of RX packets with bad length. */ 695 } 696 697 Note: postfix comments should be aligned with spaces not tabs in accordance 698 with the :ref:`coding_style`. 699 700* If a single comment type can't be used, due to line length limitations then 701 prefix comments should be preferred. 702 For example this section of the code contains prefix comments, postfix comments on the same line and postfix 703 comments on a separate line: 704 705 .. code-block:: c 706 707 /** Number of elements in the elt_pa array. */ 708 uint32_t pg_num __rte_cache_aligned; 709 uint32_t pg_shift; /**< LOG2 of the physical pages. */ 710 uintptr_t pg_mask; /**< Physical page mask value. */ 711 uintptr_t elt_va_start; 712 /**< Virtual address of the first mempool object. */ 713 uintptr_t elt_va_end; 714 /**< Virtual address of the <size + 1> mempool object. */ 715 phys_addr_t elt_pa[MEMPOOL_PG_NUM_DEFAULT]; 716 /**< Array of physical page addresses for the mempool buffer. */ 717 718 This doesn't have an effect on the rendered documentation but it is confusing for the developer reading the code. 719 It this case it would be clearer to use prefix comments throughout: 720 721 .. code-block:: c 722 723 /** Number of elements in the elt_pa array. */ 724 uint32_t pg_num __rte_cache_aligned; 725 /** LOG2 of the physical pages. */ 726 uint32_t pg_shift; 727 /** Physical page mask value. */ 728 uintptr_t pg_mask; 729 /** Virtual address of the first mempool object. */ 730 uintptr_t elt_va_start; 731 /** Virtual address of the <size + 1> mempool object. */ 732 uintptr_t elt_va_end; 733 /** Array of physical page addresses for the mempool buffer. */ 734 phys_addr_t elt_pa[MEMPOOL_PG_NUM_DEFAULT]; 735 736* Check for Doxygen warnings in new code by checking the API documentation build:: 737 738 make doc-api-html >/dev/null 739 740* Read the rendered section of the documentation that you have added for correctness, clarity and consistency 741 with the surrounding text. 742