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STYLE.md 7.3 KiB

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  1. # BoringSSL Style Guide
  2. BoringSSL usually follows the
  3. [Google C++ style guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html),
  4. The rest of this document describes differences and clarifications on
  5. top of the base guide.
  6. ## Legacy code
  7. As a derivative of OpenSSL, BoringSSL contains a lot of legacy code that
  8. does not follow this style guide. Particularly where public API is
  9. concerned, balance consistency within a module with the benefits of a
  10. given rule. Module-wide deviations on naming should be respected while
  11. integer and return value conventions take precedence over consistency.
  12. Modules from OpenSSL's legacy ASN.1 and X.509 stack are retained for
  13. compatibility and left largely unmodified. To ease importing patches from
  14. upstream, they match OpenSSL's new indentation style. For Emacs,
  15. `doc/openssl-c-indent.el` from OpenSSL may be helpful in this.
  16. ## Language
  17. The majority of the project is in C, so C++-specific rules in the
  18. Google style guide do not apply. Support for C99 features depends on
  19. our target platforms. Typically, Chromium's target MSVC is the most
  20. restrictive.
  21. Variable declarations in the middle of a function or inside a `for` loop are
  22. allowed and preferred where possible. Note that the common `goto err` cleanup
  23. pattern requires lifting some variable declarations.
  24. Comments should be `/* C-style */` for consistency.
  25. When declaration pointer types, `*` should be placed next to the variable
  26. name, not the type. So
  27. uint8_t *ptr;
  28. not
  29. uint8_t* ptr;
  30. Rather than `malloc()` and `free()`, use the wrappers `OPENSSL_malloc()`
  31. and `OPENSSL_free()`. Use the standard C `assert()` function freely.
  32. Use the following wrappers, found in `crypto/internal.h` instead of the
  33. corresponding C standard library functions. They behave the same but avoid
  34. confusing undefined behavior.
  35. * `OPENSSL_memchr`
  36. * `OPENSSL_memcmp`
  37. * `OPENSSL_memcpy`
  38. * `OPENSSL_memmove`
  39. * `OPENSSL_memset`
  40. For new constants, prefer enums when the values are sequential and typed
  41. constants for flags. If adding values to an existing set of `#define`s,
  42. continue with `#define`.
  43. ## Formatting
  44. Single-statement blocks are not allowed. All conditions and loops must
  45. use braces:
  46. if (foo) {
  47. do_something();
  48. }
  49. not
  50. if (foo)
  51. do_something();
  52. ## Integers
  53. Prefer using explicitly-sized integers where appropriate rather than
  54. generic C ones. For instance, to represent a byte, use `uint8_t`, not
  55. `unsigned char`. Likewise, represent a two-byte field as `uint16_t`, not
  56. `unsigned short`.
  57. Sizes are represented as `size_t`.
  58. Within a struct that is retained across the lifetime of an SSL
  59. connection, if bounds of a size are known and it's easy, use a smaller
  60. integer type like `uint8_t`. This is a "free" connection footprint
  61. optimization for servers. Don't make code significantly more complex for
  62. it, and do still check the bounds when passing in and out of the
  63. struct. This narrowing should not propagate to local variables and
  64. function parameters.
  65. When doing arithmetic, account for overflow conditions.
  66. Except with platform APIs, do not use `ssize_t`. MSVC lacks it, and
  67. prefer out-of-band error signaling for `size_t` (see Return values).
  68. ## Naming
  69. Follow Google naming conventions in C++ files. In C files, use the
  70. following naming conventions for consistency with existing OpenSSL and C
  71. styles:
  72. Define structs with typedef named `TYPE_NAME`. The corresponding struct
  73. should be named `struct type_name_st`.
  74. Name public functions as `MODULE_function_name`, unless the module
  75. already uses a different naming scheme for legacy reasons. The module
  76. name should be a type name if the function is a method of a particular
  77. type.
  78. Some types are allocated within the library while others are initialized
  79. into a struct allocated by the caller, often on the stack. Name these
  80. functions `TYPE_NAME_new`/`TYPE_NAME_free` and
  81. `TYPE_NAME_init`/`TYPE_NAME_cleanup`, respectively. All `TYPE_NAME_free`
  82. functions must do nothing on `NULL` input.
  83. If a variable is the length of a pointer value, it has the suffix
  84. `_len`. An output parameter is named `out` or has an `out_` prefix. For
  85. instance, For instance:
  86. uint8_t *out,
  87. size_t *out_len,
  88. const uint8_t *in,
  89. size_t in_len,
  90. Name public headers like `include/openssl/evp.h` with header guards like
  91. `OPENSSL_HEADER_EVP_H`. Name internal headers like
  92. `crypto/ec/internal.h` with header guards like
  93. `OPENSSL_HEADER_EC_INTERNAL_H`.
  94. Name enums like `enum unix_hacker_t`. For instance:
  95. enum should_free_handshake_buffer_t {
  96. free_handshake_buffer,
  97. dont_free_handshake_buffer,
  98. };
  99. ## Return values
  100. As even `malloc` may fail in BoringSSL, the vast majority of functions
  101. will have a failure case. Functions should return `int` with one on
  102. success and zero on error. Do not overload the return value to both
  103. signal success/failure and output an integer. For example:
  104. OPENSSL_EXPORT int CBS_get_u16(CBS *cbs, uint16_t *out);
  105. If a function needs more than a true/false result code, define an enum
  106. rather than arbitrarily assigning meaning to int values.
  107. If a function outputs a pointer to an object on success and there are no
  108. other outputs, return the pointer directly and `NULL` on error.
  109. ## Parameters
  110. Where not constrained by legacy code, parameter order should be:
  111. 1. context parameters
  112. 2. output parameters
  113. 3. input parameters
  114. For example,
  115. /* CBB_add_asn sets |*out_contents| to a |CBB| into which the contents of an
  116. * ASN.1 object can be written. The |tag| argument will be used as the tag for
  117. * the object. It returns one on success or zero on error. */
  118. OPENSSL_EXPORT int CBB_add_asn1(CBB *cbb, CBB *out_contents, unsigned tag);
  119. ## Documentation
  120. All public symbols must have a documentation comment in their header
  121. file. The style is based on that of Go. The first sentence begins with
  122. the symbol name, optionally prefixed with "A" or "An". Apart from the
  123. initial mention of symbol, references to other symbols or parameter
  124. names should be surrounded by |pipes|.
  125. Documentation should be concise but completely describe the exposed
  126. behavior of the function. Pay special note to success/failure behaviors
  127. and caller obligations on object lifetimes. If this sacrifices
  128. conciseness, consider simplifying the function's behavior.
  129. /* EVP_DigestVerifyUpdate appends |len| bytes from |data| to the data which
  130. * will be verified by |EVP_DigestVerifyFinal|. It returns one on success and
  131. * zero otherwise. */
  132. OPENSSL_EXPORT int EVP_DigestVerifyUpdate(EVP_MD_CTX *ctx, const void *data,
  133. size_t len);
  134. Explicitly mention any surprising edge cases or deviations from common
  135. return value patterns in legacy functions.
  136. /* RSA_private_encrypt encrypts |flen| bytes from |from| with the private key in
  137. * |rsa| and writes the encrypted data to |to|. The |to| buffer must have at
  138. * least |RSA_size| bytes of space. It returns the number of bytes written, or
  139. * -1 on error. The |padding| argument must be one of the |RSA_*_PADDING|
  140. * values. If in doubt, |RSA_PKCS1_PADDING| is the most common.
  141. *
  142. * WARNING: this function is dangerous because it breaks the usual return value
  143. * convention. Use |RSA_sign_raw| instead. */
  144. OPENSSL_EXPORT int RSA_private_encrypt(int flen, const uint8_t *from,
  145. uint8_t *to, RSA *rsa, int padding);
  146. Document private functions in their `internal.h` header or, if static,
  147. where defined.