Add Go coding style guidelines

Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
This commit is contained in:
Stephen J Day 2015-07-17 17:49:53 -07:00
parent 92aa378df4
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@ -90,3 +90,39 @@ It's mandatory to:
Complying to these simple rules will greatly accelerate the review process, and will ensure you have a pleasant experience in contributing code to the Registry.
Have a look at a great, succesful contribution: the [Ceph driver PR](https://github.com/docker/distribution/pull/443)
## Coding Style
Unless explicitly stated, we follow all coding guidelines from the Go
community. While some of these standards may seem arbitrary, they somehow seem
to result in a solid, consistent codebase.
The rules:
1. All code should be formatted with `gofmt -s`.
2. All code should pass the default levels of
[`golint`](https://github.com/golang/lint).
3. All code should follow the guidelines covered at
https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments.
4. Comment the code. Tell us the why, the history and the context.
5. Document _all_ declarations and methods, even private ones. Declare
expectations, caveats and anything else that may be important. If a type
gets exported, having the comments already there will ensure it's ready.
6. Variable name length should be proportional to it's context and no longer.
noALongVariableNameLikeThisIsNotMoreClearWhenASimpleCommentWouldDo. In
practice, short methods will have short variable names and globals will
have longer names.
7. No underscores in package names. If you need a compound name, step back,
and re-examine why you need a compound name. If you still think you need a
compound name, lose the underscore.
8. No utils or helpers packages. If a function is not general enough to
warrant it's own package, it has not been written generally enough to be a
part of a util package. Just leave it unexported and well-documented.
9. No, we don't need another unit testing framework.
10. Even though we call these "rules" above, they are actually just
guidelines. Since you've read all the rules, you now know that.
If you are having trouble getting into the mood of idiomatic Go, we recommend
reading through [`Effective Go`](http://golang.org/doc/effective_go.html). The
[Go Blog](http://blog.golang.org/) is also a great resource. Drinking the
kool-aid is a lot easier than going thirsty.