* Guidelines for patch submissions. =================================== ** Where to send the patches. ----------------------------- Patches intended to be applied to Wget should be mailed to . Each patch will be reviewed by the developers, and will be acked and added to the distribution, or rejected with an explanation. If you want to discuss your patch with the community of Wget users and developers, it is OK to send it to the general list at . If the patch is really huge (more than 100K or so), you may want to put it on the web and post the URL. EVERY patch should be accompanied by an explanation of what the patch changes, and why the change is necessary. The explanation need not be long, but please don't just send a patch without any text. Normally, a patch can be just inserted into the message, after the explanation and the ChangeLog entry. However, if your mail composer or gateway is inclined to munge patches, e.g. by line-wrapping them, please send them out as a MIME attachment. It is important that the patch survives the travel so that we can feed it to the `patch' utility after reviewing it. ** How to create patches. ------------------------- First, make sure you get the latest version of the source. This is normally the latest release. If you're adding a new feature, or changing the code in some major way, you might want to download the latest sources from the CVS server. This procedure is described at . Patches are created using the `diff' utility. When making patches, please use the `-u' option, or if your diff doesn't support it, `-c'. Using ordinary (context-free) diffs are notoriously prone to error, since line numbers tend to change when others make changes to the same source file. An example of the `diff' usage: diff -u OLDFILE NEWFILE -or- diff -c OLDFILE NEWFILE Also, it is helpful if you create the patch in the top level of the Wget source directory: $ cp src/http.c src/http.c.orig ...hack, hack, hack.... $ diff -u src/http.c.orig src/http.c If your patch changes more than one file, the output of all the diff invocations should be concatenated to form a single patch. Alternatively, you can use the `-r' option to compare entire directories. If you do that, be careful not to include the differences to automatically generated files, such as `.info*'. If you run on Windows and don't have `diff' handy, please get one. It's extremely hard to review changes to files unless they're in the form of a patch. If you really cannot use a variant of `diff', then mail us the whole new file and specify which version of Wget you changed; that way we will be able to generate the diff ourselves. Finally, if your changes introduce new files, or if they change the old files past all recognition (e.g. by completely reimplementing the old stuff), sending a patch obviously doesn't make sense. In that case, just attach the files along with an explanation of what is being changed. ** Standards and coding style. ------------------------------ Wget abides by the GNU coding standards, available at: http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards.html To me the most important single point in that entire document is "no arbitrary limits". Even when Wget's coding is less than exemplary, it respects that rule. There should be no exceptions. Here is a short recap of the GNU formatting and naming conventions, borrowed from XEmacs: * Put a space after every comma. * Put a space before the parenthesis that begins a function call, macro call, function declaration or definition, or control statement (if, while, switch, for). (DO NOT do this for macro definitions; this is invalid preprocessor syntax.) * The brace that begins a control statement (if, while, for, switch, do) or a function definition should go on a line by itself. * In function definitions, put the return type and all other qualifiers on a line before the function name. Thus, the function name is always at the beginning of a line. * Indentation level is two spaces. (However, the first and following statements of a while/for/if/etc. block are indented four spaces from the while/for/if keyword. The opening and closing braces are indented two spaces.) * Variable and function names should be all lowercase, with underscores separating words, except for a prefixing tag, which may be in uppercase. Do not use the mixed-case convention (e.g. SetVariableToValue ()) and *especially* do not use Microsoft Hungarian notation (char **rgszRedundantTag). * Preprocessor constants and enumerations should be all uppercase, and should be prefixed with a tag that groups related constants together. ** ChangeLog policy. -------------------- Each patch should be accompanied by an update to the appropriate ChangeLog file. Please don't mail patches to ChangeLog because they have an extremely high rate of failure; just mail us the new part of the ChangeLog you added. Patches without a ChangeLog entry will be accepted, but this creates additional work for the maintainers, so please do write the ChangeLog entries. Guidelines for writing ChangeLog entries are also governed by the GNU coding standards, under the "Change Logs" section.