Privoxy Developer Manual

Copyright © 2001-2009 by Privoxy Developers

$Id: index.html,v 1.42 2009/03/21 12:59:32 fabiankeil Exp $

The developer manual provides guidance on coding, testing, packaging, documentation and other issues of importance to those involved with Privoxy development. It is mandatory (and helpful!) reading for anyone who wants to join the team. Note that it's currently out of date and may not be entirely correct. As always, patches are welcome.

Please note that this document is constantly evolving. This copy represents the state at the release of version 3.0.12. You can find the latest version of the this manual at http://www.privoxy.org/developer-manual/. Please see the Contact section on how to contact the developers.


Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1.1. Quickstart to Privoxy Development
2. The CVS Repository
2.1. Access to CVS
2.2. Branches
2.3. CVS Commit Guidelines
3. Documentation Guidelines
3.1. Quickstart to Docbook and SGML
3.2. Privoxy Documentation Style
3.3. Privoxy Custom Entities
4. Coding Guidelines
4.1. Introduction
4.2. Using Comments
4.2.1. Comment, Comment, Comment
4.2.2. Use blocks for comments
4.2.3. Keep Comments on their own line
4.2.4. Comment each logical step
4.2.5. Comment All Functions Thoroughly
4.2.6. Comment at the end of braces if the content is more than one screen length
4.3. Naming Conventions
4.3.1. Variable Names
4.3.2. Function Names
4.3.3. Header file prototypes
4.3.4. Enumerations, and #defines
4.3.5. Constants
4.4. Using Space
4.4.1. Put braces on a line by themselves.
4.4.2. ALL control statements should have a block
4.4.3. Do not belabor/blow-up boolean expressions
4.4.4. Use white space freely because it is free
4.4.5. Don't use white space around structure operators
4.4.6. Make the last brace of a function stand out
4.4.7. Use 3 character indentions
4.5. Initializing
4.5.1. Initialize all variables
4.6. Functions
4.6.1. Name functions that return a boolean as a question.
4.6.2. Always specify a return type for a function.
4.6.3. Minimize function calls when iterating by using variables
4.6.4. Pass and Return by Const Reference
4.6.5. Pass and Return by Value
4.6.6. Names of include files
4.6.7. Provide multiple inclusion protection
4.6.8. Use `extern "C"` when appropriate
4.6.9. Where Possible, Use Forward Struct Declaration Instead of Includes
4.7. General Coding Practices
4.7.1. Turn on warnings
4.7.2. Provide a default case for all switch statements
4.7.3. Try to avoid falling through cases in a switch statement.
4.7.4. Use 'long' or 'short' Instead of 'int'
4.7.5. Don't mix size_t and other types
4.7.6. Declare each variable and struct on its own line.
4.7.7. Use malloc/zalloc sparingly
4.7.8. The Programmer Who Uses 'malloc' is Responsible for Ensuring 'free'
4.7.9. Add loaders to the `file_list' structure and in order
4.7.10. "Uncertain" new code and/or changes to existing code, use FIXME or XXX
4.8. Addendum: Template for files and function comment blocks:
5. Testing Guidelines
5.1. Testplan for releases
5.2. Test reports
6. Releasing a New Version
6.1. Version numbers
6.2. Before the Release: Freeze
6.3. Building and Releasing the Packages
6.3.1. Note on Privoxy Packaging
6.3.2. Source Tarball
6.3.3. SuSE, Conectiva or Red Hat RPM
6.3.4. OS/2
6.3.5. Solaris
6.3.6. Windows
6.3.7. Debian
6.3.8. Mac OS X
6.3.9. FreeBSD
6.3.10. HP-UX 11
6.3.11. Amiga OS
6.3.12. AIX
6.4. Uploading and Releasing Your Package
6.5. After the Release
7. Update the Webserver
8. Contacting the developers, Bug Reporting and Feature Requests
8.1. Get Support
8.2. Reporting Problems
8.2.1. Reporting Ads or Other Configuration Problems
8.2.2. Reporting Bugs
8.3. Request New Features
8.4. Other
9. Privoxy Copyright, License and History
9.1. License
9.2. History
10. See also