3.8 KiB
Contributing
Bugs
Please look at https://github.com/awesomeWM/awesome/issues
.
Style
If you intend to patch and contribute to awesome, please respect the following guidelines.
Imitate the existing code style. For concrete rules:
-
Use 4 spaces indentation, do not use tabulator characters;
-
Place braces alone on new lines, and do not place braces for single line statement where it is not needed, i.e. no:
if(bla) { x = 1; }
-
Do not put a space after if, for, while or function call statements;
-
The preferred line length is 80 characters;
-
Use
/* */
for comments; -
Use the API: there's a list of
a_*()
functions you should use instead of the standard libc ones. There is also a common API for linked lists, tabulars, etc.; -
Be clear in what you do;
-
Prefix your function name with the module they are enhancing, i.e. if you add a function to manipulate a tag prefix it with
tag_
; -
Write documentation for any new functions, options, whatever.
A vim modeline is set in each file to respect this.
Documentation of lua files
For documentation purposes LDoc---see here for its documentation---is used. Comments that shall be parsed by LDoc have the following format:
--- summary.
-- Description; this can extend over
-- several lines
-----------------
-- This will also do.
--[[--
Summary. A description
...;
]]
One can use the full power of Markdown with the extensions of Discount for mark-up in the comments.
Every module and class should have a short description at its beginning which
should include @author author
, @copyright year author
,
@release @AWESOME_VERSION@
and @module module-name
or @classmod class-name
.
Parameters of functions should be documented by @param parameter description
,
return values via @return description
or @treturn type description
. For a
more comprehensive description of the available tags see the LDoc
documentation.
In addition to the regular tags provided by LDoc there are also some aliases
for tags defined in docs/config.ld
.
Patches
If you plan to submit patches, you should follow the following guidelines.
Commits
- make commits of logical units;
- do not modify piece of code not related to your commit;
- do not try to fix style of code you are not writing, it's just adding noise for no gain;
- check for unnecessary whitespace with
git diff --check
before committing; - do not check in commented out code or unneeded files;
- provide a meaningful commit message;
- the first line of the commit message should be a short; description and should skip the full stop;
- if you want your work included, add a
Signed-off-by: Your Name <you@example.com>
line to the commit message (or just use the option-s
when committing); - make sure that you have tests for the bug you are fixing;
- if possible, add a unit test to the test suite under spec/.
Patches
Submitting patches via pull requests on the Github project is the preferred method.
Pull request
- create a pull request
git-send-email
- use
git format-patch -M
to create the patch; - do not PGP sign your patch;
- be careful doing cut & paste into your mailer, not to corrupt whitespaces;
- if you change, add or remove the user API, the associated documentation should be updated as well;
- send the patch to the list (
awesome-devel@naquadah.org
) if (and only if) the patch is ready for inclusion. If you use git-send-email(1), please test it first by sending email to yourself.