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FRR is a large project developed by many different groups. This section documents standards for code style & quality, commit messages, pull requests and best practices that all contributors are asked to follow.
This section is "descriptive/post-factual" in that it documents pratices that are in use; it is not "definitive/pre-factual" in prescribing practices. This means that when a procedure changes, it is agreed upon, then put into practice, and then documented here. If this document doesn't match reality, it's the document that needs to be updated, not reality.
The master Git for FRR resides on Github.
There is one main branch for development, master
. For each major release
(2.0, 3.0 etc) a new release branch is created based on the master. Subsequent
point releases based on a major branch are marked by tagging.
The core of FRR is written in C (gcc or clang supported) and makes use of GNU compiler extensions. A few non-essential scripts are implemented in Perl and Python. FRR requires the following tools to build distribution packages: automake, autoconf, texinfo, libtool and gawk and various libraries (i.e. libpam and libjson-c).
If your contribution requires a new library or other tool, then please highlight this in your description of the change. Also make sure it’s supported by all FRR platform OSes or provide a way to build without the library (potentially without the new feature) on the other platforms.
Documentation should be written in reStructuredText. Sphinx extensions may be utilized but pure ReST is preferred where possible. See Documentation.
The FRR development group maintains multiple mailing lists for use by the community. Italicized lists are private.
Topic | List |
---|---|
Development | [email protected] |
Users & Operators | [email protected] |
Announcements | [email protected] |
Security | [email protected] |
Technical Steering Committee | [email protected] |
The Development list is used to discuss and document general issues related to project development and governance. The public Slack instance, frrouting.slack.com, and weekly technical meetings provide a higher bandwidth channel for discussions. The results of such discussions must be reflected in updates, as appropriate, to code (i.e., merges), `Github <#https://github.com/FRRouting/frr/issues`__ tracked issues, and for governance or process changes, updates to the Development list and either this file or information posted at https://frrouting.org/.
The changelog will be the base for the release notes. A changelog entry for your changes is usually not required and will be added based on your commit messages by the maintainers. However, you are free to include an update to the changelog with some better description.
FRR accepts patches from two sources:
- Email (git format-patch)
- Github pull request
Contributors are highly encouraged to use Github's fork-and-pr workflow. It is easier for us to review it, test it, try it and discuss it on Github than it is via email, thus your patch will get more attention more quickly on Github.
The base branch for new contributions and non-critical bug fixes should be
master
. Please ensure your pull request is based on this branch when you
submit it.
- Format code (see Code Formatting)
- Verify and acknowledge license (see License for contributions)
- Ensure you have properly signed off (see Signing Off)
- Test building with various configurations:
buildtest.sh
- Verify building source distribution:
-
make dist
(and try rebuilding from the resulting tar file)
-
- Run unit tests:
make test
- Document Regression Runs and plans for continued maintenance of the feature
FRR is under a “GPLv2 or later” license. Any code submitted must be released under the same license (preferred) or any license which allows redistribution under this GPLv2 license (eg MIT License).
Code submitted to FRR must be signed off. We have the same requirements for using the signed-off-by process as the Linux kernel. In short, you must include a signed-off-by tag in every patch.
Signed-off-by:
this is a developer's certification that he or she
has the right to submit the patch for inclusion into the project. It is
an agreement to the Developer's Certificate of Origin (below). Code
without a proper signoff can not and will not be merged.
If you are unfamiliar with this process, you should read the official policy at kernel.org and you might find this article about participating in the Linux community on the Linux Foundation website to be a helpful resource.
In short, when you sign off on a commit, you assert your agreement to all of the following:
Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 By making a contribution to this project, I certify that: (a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I have the right to submit it under the open source license indicated in the file; or (b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source license and I have the right under that license to submit that work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part by me, under the same open source license (unless I am permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated in the file; or (c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified it. (d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution are public and that a record of the contribution (including all personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with this project or the open source license(s) involved.
We've documented where we would like to have the different fixes applied at https://github.com/FRRouting/frr/wiki/Where-Do-I-create-a-Pull-Request-against%3F If you are unsure where your submission goes, look at that document or ask a project maintainer.
The preferred method of submitting changes is a Github pull request. Code submitted by pull request will be automatically tested by one or more CI systems. Once the automated tests succeed, other developers will review your code for quality and correctness. After any concerns are resolved, your code will be merged into the branch it was submitted against.
As an alternative submission method, a patch can be mailed to the development mailing list. Patches received on the mailing list will be picked up by Patchwork and tested against the latest development branch.
The recommended way to send the patch (or series of NN patches) to the
list is by using git send-email
as follows (assuming they are the N
most recent commit(s) in your git history:
git send-email -NN --annotate [email protected]
If your commits do not already contain a Signed-off-by
line, then
use the following command to add it (after making sure you agree to the
Developer Certificate of Origin as outlined above):
git send-email -NN --annotate --signoff [email protected]
Submitting multi-commit patches as a Github pull request is strongly encouraged and increases the probability of your patch getting reviewed and merged in a timely manner.
- Watch for Continuous Integration (CI) Test results
- You should automatically receive an email with the test results within less than 2 hrs of the submission. If you don’t get the email, then check status on the Github pull request.
- Please notify the development mailing list if you think something doesn't work.
- If the tests failed:
- In general, expect the community to ignore the submission until the tests pass.
- It is up to you to fix and resubmit.
- This includes fixing existing unit (“make test”) tests if your changes broke or changed them.
- It also includes fixing distribution packages for the failing platforms (ie if new libraries are required).
- Feel free to ask for help on the development list.
- Go back to the submission process and repeat until the tests pass.
- If the tests pass:
- Wait for reviewers. Someone will review your code or be assigned to review your code.
- Respond to any comments or concerns the reviewer has.
- After all comments and concerns are addressed, expect your patch to be merged.
- Watch out for questions on the mailing list. At this time there will be a manual code review and further (longer) tests by various community members.
- Your submission is done once it is merged to the master branch.
Commit messages should be formatted in the same way as Linux kernel commit messages. The format is roughly
dir: short summary extended summary
dir
should be the top level source directory under which the change
was made. For example, a change in bgpd/rfapi would be formatted as:
bgpd: short summary
The first line should be no longer than 50 characters. Subsequent lines should be wrapped to 72 characters.
New files need to have a Copyright header (see License for contributions above) added to the file. Preferred form of the header is as follows:
/* * Title/Function of file * Copyright (C) YEAR Author’s Name * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free * Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) * any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for * more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along * with this program; see the file COPYING; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA */ #include <zebra.h>
When adding copyright claims for modifications to an existing file, please preface the claim with "Portions: " on a line before it and indent the "Copyright ..." string. If such a case already exists, add your indented claim immediately after. E.g.:
Portions: Copyright (C) 2010 Entity A .... Copyright (C) 2016 Your name [optional brief change description]
FRR uses Linux kernel style except where noted below. Code which does not comply with these style guidelines will not be accepted.
To assist with compliance, in the project root there is a .clang-format
configuration file which can be used with the clang-format
tool from
the LLVM project. In the tools/
directory there is a Python script
named indent.py
that wraps clang-format and handles some edge cases
specific to FRR. If you are submitting a new file, it is recommended to
run that script over the new file after ensuring that the latest stable
release of clang-format
is in your PATH.
Whitespace changes in untouched parts of the code are not acceptable in patches that change actual code. To change/fix formatting issues, please create a separate patch that only does formatting changes and nothing else.
Kernel and BSD styles are documented externally:
For GNU coding style, use indent
with the following invocation:
indent -nut -nfc1 file_for_submission.c
FRR project code comes from a variety of sources, so there are some stylistic exceptions in place. They are organized here by branch.
For ``master``:
BSD coding style applies to:
ldpd/
babeld
uses, approximately, the following style:
- K&R style braces
- Indents are 4 spaces
- Function return types are on their own line
For ``stable/3.0`` and ``stable/2.0``:
GNU coding style apply to the following parts:
lib/
zebra/
bgpd/
ospfd/
ospf6d/
isisd/
ripd/
ripngd/
vtysh/
BSD coding style applies to:
ldpd/
FRR is a large and complex software project developed by many different people over a long period of time. Without adequate documentation, it can be exceedingly difficult to understand code segments, APIs and other interfaces. In the interest of keeping the project healthy and maintainable, you should make every effort to document your code so that other people can understand what it does without needing to closely read the code itself.
Some specific guidelines that contributors should follow are:
- Functions exposed in header files should have descriptive comments above their signatures in the header file. At a minimum, a function comment should contain information about the return value, parameters, and a general summary of the function's purpose. Documentation on parameter values can be omitted if it is (very) obvious what they are used for.
Function comments must follow the style for multiline comments laid out in the kernel style guide.
Example:
/* * Determines whether or not a string is cool. * * @param text - the string to check for coolness * @param is_clccfc - whether capslock is cruise control for cool * @return 7 if the text is cool, 0 otherwise */ int check_coolness(const char *text, bool is_clccfc);
The Javadoc-style annotations are not required, but you should still strive to make it equally clear what parameters and return values are used for.
- Static functions should have descriptive comments in the same form as above if what they do is not immediately obvious. Use good engineering judgement when deciding whether a comment is necessary. If you are unsure, document your code.
- Global variables, static or not, should have a comment describing their use.
- For new code in ``lib/``, these guidelines are hard requirements.
If you are contributing code that adds significant user-visible
functionality please document it in doc/
. If you make significant changes
to portions of the codebase covered in the Developer's Manual, please
update the relevant sections. If you add a major feature or introduce a new
API, please document the architecture and API to the best of your abilities in
the Developer's Manual.
Documentation should be in reStructuredText.
Finally, if you come across some code that is undocumented and feel like going above and beyond, document it! We absolutely appreciate and accept patches that document previously undocumented code.
Many users access FRR via binary packages from 3rd party sources;
compile-time code puts inclusion/exclusion in the hands of the package
maintainer. Please think very carefully before making code conditional
at compile time, as it increases regression testing, maintenance
burdens, and user confusion. In particular, please avoid gratuitous
--enable-…
switches to the configure script - in general, code
should be of high quality and in working condition, or it shouldn’t be
in FRR at all.
When code must be compile-time conditional, try have the compiler make it conditional rather than the C pre-processor so that it will still be checked by the compiler, even if disabled. For example,
if (SOME_SYMBOL) frobnicate();
is preferred to
#ifdef SOME_SYMBOL frobnicate (); #endif /* SOME_SYMBOL */
Note that the former approach requires ensuring that SOME_SYMBOL
will be defined (watch your AC_DEFINE
s).
Debugging statements are an important methodology to allow developers to fix issues found in the code after it has been released. The caveat here is that the developer must remember that people will be using the code at scale and in ways that can be unexpected for the original implementor. As such debugs MUST be guarded in such a way that they can be turned off. FRR has the ability to turn on/off debugs from the CLI and it is expected that the developer will use this convention to allow control of their debugs.
CLI's are a complicated ugly beast. Additions or changes to the CLI should use a DEFUN to encapsulate one setting as much as is possible. Additionally as new DEFUN's are added to the system, documentation should be provided for the new commands.
As a general principle, changes to CLI and code in the lib/ directory should be made in a backwards compatible fashion. This means that changes that are purely stylistic in nature should be avoided, e.g., renaming an existing macro or library function name without any functional change. When adding new parameters to common functions, it is also good to consider if this too should be done in a backward compatible fashion, e.g., by preserving the old form in addition to adding the new form.
This is not to say that minor or even major functional changes to CLI and common code should be avoided, but rather that the benefit gained from a change should be weighed against the added cost/complexity to existing code. Also, that when making such changes, it is good to preserve compatibility when possible to do so without introducing maintenance overhead/cost. It is also important to keep in mind, existing code includes code that may reside in private repositories (and is yet to be submitted) or code that has yet to be migrated from Quagga to FRR.
That said, compatibility measures can (and should) be removed when either:
- they become a significant burden, e.g. when data structures change and the compatibility measure would need a complex adaptation layer or becomes flat-out impossible
- some measure of time (dependent on the specific case) has passed, so that the compatibility grace period is considered expired.
In all cases, compatibility pieces should be marked with
compiler/preprocessor annotations to print warnings at compile time,
pointing to the appropriate update path. A -Werror
build should fail
if compatibility bits are used.
When in doubt, follow the guidelines in the Linux kernel style guide, or ask on the development mailing list / public Slack instance.