1 <!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V3.1//EN"[
2 <!entity % dummy "IGNORE">
3 <!entity supported SYSTEM "supported.sgml">
4 <!entity newfeatures SYSTEM "newfeatures.sgml">
5 <!entity p-intro SYSTEM "privoxy.sgml">
6 <!entity history SYSTEM "history.sgml">
7 <!entity seealso SYSTEM "seealso.sgml">
8 <!entity contacting SYSTEM "contacting.sgml">
9 <!entity copyright SYSTEM "copyright.sgml">
10 <!entity license SYSTEM "license.sgml">
11 <!entity p-version "2.9.15">
12 <!entity p-status "beta">
13 <!entity % p-not-stable "INCLUDE">
14 <!entity % p-stable "IGNORE">
15 <!entity % p-text "IGNORE"> <!-- define we are not a text only doc -->
16 <!entity % p-doc "INCLUDE"> <!-- and we are a formal doc -->
17 <!entity my-copy "©"> <!-- kludge for docbook2man -->
20 File : $Source: /cvsroot/ijbswa/current/doc/source/developer-manual.sgml,v $
22 Purpose : developer manual
23 This file belongs into
24 ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/home/groups/i/ij/ijbswa/htdocs/
26 $Id: developer-manual.sgml,v 1.44 2002/05/15 03:55:17 hal9 Exp $
28 Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 Privoxy Developers <developers@privoxy.org>
31 ========================================================================
32 NOTE: Please read developer-manual/documentation.html before touching
33 anything in this, or other Privoxy documentation. You have been warned!
34 Failure to abide by this rule will result in the revocation of your license
35 to live a peaceful existence!
36 ========================================================================
42 <title>Privoxy Developer Manual</title>
45 <!-- Completely the wrong markup, but very little is allowed -->
46 <!-- in this part of an article. FIXME -->
47 <link linkend="copyright">Copyright</link> &my-copy; 2001, 2002 by
48 <ulink url="http://www.privoxy.org">Privoxy Developers</ulink>
53 <pubdate>$Id: developer-manual.sgml,v 1.44 2002/05/15 03:55:17 hal9 Exp $</pubdate>
57 Note: this should generate a separate page, and a live link to it.
58 But it doesn't for some mysterious reason. Please leave commented
59 unless it can be fixed proper. For the time being, the copyright
60 statement will be in copyright.smgl.
64 <legalnotice id="legalnotice">
66 text goes here ........
77 This is here to keep vim syntax file from breaking :/
78 If I knew enough to fix it, I would.
79 PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE! HB: hal@foobox.net
84 The developer manual gives the users information on how to help the developer
85 team. It provides guidance on coding, testing, documentation and other
89 <!-- Include privoxy.sgml boilerplate text: -->
91 <!-- &p-intro; Someone interested enough in the project to contribute
92 will already know at this point what Privoxy is. -->
94 <!-- end boilerplate -->
97 You can find the latest version of the this manual at <ulink
98 url="http://www.privoxy.org/developer-manual/">http://www.privoxy.org/developer-manual/</ulink>.
99 Please see <link linkend="contact">the Contact section</link>
100 on how to contact the developers.
103 <!-- Feel free to send a note to the developers at <email>ijbswa-developers@lists.sourceforge.net</email>. -->
110 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
111 <sect1 id="introduction"><title>Introduction</title>
114 I don't like seeing blank space :) So added *something* here.
118 <application>Privoxy</application>, as an heir to
119 <application>Junkbuster</application>, is an Open Source project
120 and licensed under the GPL. As such, <application>Privoxy</application>
121 development is potentially open to anyone who has the time, knowledge,
122 and desire to contribute in any capacity. Our goals are simply to
123 continue the mission, to improve <application>Privoxy</application>, and
124 to make it available to as wide an audience as possible.
127 One does not have to be a programmer to contribute. Packaging, testing,
128 and porting, are all important jobs as well.
131 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
132 <sect2 id="quickstart"><title>Quickstart to Privoxy Development</title>
134 You'll need an account on <ulink
135 url="http://sourceforge.net/">Sourceforge</ulink> to support our
136 development. Mail your ID to <ulink
137 url="mailto:developers@privoxy.org">the list</ulink> and wait until a
138 project manager has added you.
141 For the time being (read, this section is under construction), please
142 refer to the extensive comments in the source code.
147 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
148 <sect1 id="cvs"><title>The CVS Repository</title>
150 If you intend to help us with programming, documentation or packaging
151 you will need write access to our holy grail, the CVS repository.
152 Please read this chapter completely before accessing via CVS.
155 <sect2 id="cvsaccess"><title>Access to CVS</title>
157 The project's CVS repository is hosted on
158 <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/">SourceForge.</ulink>
159 Please refer to the chapters 6 and 7 in
160 <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/docman/?group_id=1">SF's site
161 documentation</ulink> for the technical access details for your
162 operating system. For historical reasons, the CVS server is
163 called <literal>cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net</literal>, the repository is
164 called <literal>ijbswa</literal>, and the source tree module is called
165 <literal>current</literal>.
169 <sect2 id="cvscommit"><title>CVS Commit Guideline</title>
171 The source tree is the heart of every software project. Every effort must
172 be made to ensure that it is readable, compilable and consistent at all
173 times. We therefore ask anyone with CVS access to strictly adhere to the
174 following guidelines:
177 Never (read: <emphasis>never, ever</emphasis>) be tempted to commit
178 that small change without testing it thoroughly first. When we're
179 close to a public release, ask a fellow developer to review your
183 Your commit message should give a concise overview of <emphasis>what you
184 changed</emphasis> (no big details) and <emphasis>why you changed it</emphasis>
185 Just check previous messages for good examples.
188 Don't use the same message on multiple files, unless it equally applies to
192 If your changes span multiple files, and the code won't recompile unless
193 all changes are commited (e.g. when changing the signature of a function),
194 then commit all files one after another, without long delays in beween.
195 If necessary, prepare the commit messages in advance.
198 Before changing things on CVS, make sure that your changes are in line
199 with the team's general consensus on what should be done (see below).
205 <sect2 id="cvswhenask"><title>Discussing Changes First</title>
207 We don't have a too formal policy on this, just use common sense. Hints: If it is..
208 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
210 ..a bugfix / clean-up / cosmetic thing: shoot
213 ..a new feature that can be turned off: shoot
216 ..a clear improvement w/o side effects on other parts of the code: shoot
219 ..a matter of taste: <ulink url="mailto:developers@privoxy.org">ask the list</ulink>
222 ..a major redesign of some part of the code: <ulink url="mailto:developers@privoxy.org">ask
228 Note that near a major public release, we get a bit more cautious - if
229 unsure, it doesn't hurt to ask first. There is always the possibility
230 to submit a patch to the <ulink
231 url="http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?atid=311118&group_id=11118&func=browse">patches
232 tracker</ulink> instead.
237 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
238 <sect1 id="documentation"><title>Documentation Guidelines</title>
240 All formal documents are maintained in Docbook SGML and located in the
241 <computeroutput>doc/source/*</computeroutput> directory. You will need
242 <ulink url="http://www.docbook.org">Docbook</ulink>, the Docbook
243 DTD's and the Docbook modular stylesheets (or comparable alternatives),
244 and either <application>jade</application> or
245 <application>openjade</application> (recommended) installed in order to
246 build docs from source. Currently there is <ulink
247 url="../user-manual/index.html"><citetitle>user-manual</citetitle></ulink>,
248 <ulink url="../faq/index.html"><citetitle>FAQ</citetitle></ulink>, and, of
249 course this, the <citetitle>developer-manual</citetitle> in this format.
250 The <citetitle>README</citetitle>, <citetitle>AUTHORS</citetitle>
251 <citetitle>privoxy.1</citetitle> (man page) files are also now maintained
252 as Docbook SGML. The finished files are all in the top-level source
253 directory are generated files! Also, <filename>index.html</filename>, the
254 <application>Privoxy</application> home page, is maintained as SGML.
255 <emphasis>DO NOT edit these directly</emphasis>. Edit the SGML source, or
256 contact someone involved in the documentation (at present Stefan and
260 Other, less formal documents (e.g. <filename>LICENSE</filename>,
261 <filename>INSTALL</filename>) are maintained as plain text files in the
262 top-level source directory. At least for the time being.
265 Packagers are encouraged to include this documentation. For those without
266 the ability to build the docs locally, text versions of each are kept in
267 CVS. HTML versions are also now being kept in CVS under
268 <filename>doc/webserver/*</filename>.
271 Formal documents are built with the Makefile targets of
272 <computeroutput>make dok</computeroutput>, or alternately
273 <computeroutput>make redhat-dok</computeroutput>. If you have problems,
274 try both. The build process uses the document SGML sources in
275 <computeroutput>doc/source/*/*</computeroutput> to update all text files in
276 <computeroutput>doc/text/</computeroutput> and to update all HTML
277 documents in <computeroutput>doc/webserver/</computeroutput>.
280 Documentation writers should please make sure documents build
281 successfully before committing to CVS, if possible.
284 How do you update the webserver (i.e. the pages on privoxy.org)?
286 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
288 First, build the docs by running <computeroutput>make
289 dok</computeroutput> (or alternately <computeroutput>make
290 redhat-dok</computeroutput>).
293 Run <computeroutput>make webserver</computeroutput> which copies all
294 files from <computeroutput>doc/webserver</computeroutput> to the
295 sourceforge webserver via scp.
301 Finished docs should be occasionally submitted to CVS
302 (<filename>doc/webserver/*/*.html</filename>) so that those without
303 the ability to build them locally, have access to them if needed.
304 This is especially important just prior to a new release! Please
305 do this <emphasis>after</emphasis> the <literal>$VERSION</literal> and
306 other release specific data in <filename>configure.in</filename> has been
307 updated (this is done just prior to a new release).
310 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
312 <title>Quickstart to Docbook and SGML</title>
314 If you are not familiar with SGML, it is a markup language similar to HTML.
315 Actually, not a mark up language per se, but a language used to define
316 markup languages. In fact, HTML is an SGML application. Both will use
317 <quote>tags</quote> to format text and other content. SGML tags can be much
318 more varied, and flexible, but do much of the same kinds of things. The tags,
319 or <quote>elements</quote>, are definable in SGML. There is no set
320 <quote>standards</quote>. Since we are using
321 <application>Docbook</application>, our tags are those that are defined by
322 <application>Docbook</application>. Much of how the finish document is
323 rendered is determined by the <quote>stylesheets</quote>.
324 The stylesheets determine how each tag gets translated to HTML, or other
329 Tags in Docbook SGML need to be always <quote>closed</quote>. If not, you
330 will likely generate errors. Example: <literal><title>My
331 Title</title></literal>. They are also case-insensitive, but we
332 strongly suggest using all lower case. This keeps compatibility with
333 [Docbook] <application>XML</application>.
337 Our documents use <quote>sections</quote> for the most part. Sections
338 will be processed into HTML headers (e.g. <literal>h1</literal> for
339 <literal>sect1</literal>). The <application>Docbook</application> stylesheets
340 will use these to also generate the Table of Contents for each doc. Our
341 TOC's are set to a depth of three. Meaning <literal>sect1</literal>,
342 <literal>sect2</literal>, and <literal>sect3</literal> will have TOC
343 entries, but <literal>sect4</literal> will not. Each section requires
344 a <literal><title></literal> element, and at least one
345 <literal><para></literal>. There is a limit of five section
346 levels in Docbook, but generally three should be sufficient for our
351 Some common elements that you likely will use:
357 <emphasis><para></para></emphasis>, paragraph delimiter. Most
358 text needs to be within paragraph elements (there are some exceptions).
361 <emphasis><emphasis></emphasis></emphasis>, the stylesheets
365 <emphasis><filename></filename></emphasis>, files and directories.
368 <emphasis><command></command></emphasis>, command examples.
371 <emphasis><literallayout></literallayout></emphasis>, like
372 <literal><pre></literal>, more or less.
375 <emphasis><itemizedlist></itemizedlist></emphasis>, list with bullets.
378 <emphasis><listitem></listitem></emphasis>, member of the above.
381 <emphasis><screen></screen></emphasis>, screen output, implies
382 <literal><literallayout></literal>.
385 <emphasis><ulink url="example.com"></ulink></emphasis>, like
386 HTML <literal><a></literal> tag.
389 <emphasis><quote></quote></emphasis>, for, doh, quoting text.
395 Look at any of the existing docs for examples of all these and more.
399 You might also find <quote><ulink
400 url="http://www.bureau-cornavin.com/opensource/crash-course/">Writing Documentation
401 Using DocBook - A Crash Course</ulink></quote> useful.
405 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
406 <sect2 id="docstyle">
407 <title><application>Privoxy</application> Documentation Style</title>
409 It will be easier if everyone follows a similar writing style. This
410 just makes it easier to read what someone else has written if it
411 is all done in a similar fashion.
420 All tags should be lower case.
425 Tags delimiting a <emphasis>block</emphasis> of text (even small
426 blocks) should be on their own line. Like:
432 Tags marking individual words, or few words, should be in-line:
434 Just to <emphasis>emphasize</emphasis>, some text goes here.
440 Tags should be nested and step indented for block text like: (except
447 Some text goes here in our list example.
450 </itemizedlist>
453 This makes it easier to find the text amongst the tags ;-)
458 Use white space to separate logical divisions within a document,
459 like between sections. Running everything together consistently
460 makes it harder to read and work on.
465 Do not hesitate to make comments. Comments can either use the
466 <comment> element, or the <!-- --> style comment
467 familiar from HTML. (Note in Docbook v4.x <comment> is
468 replaced by <remark>.)
473 We have an international audience. Refrain from slang, or English
474 idiosyncrasies (too many to list :). Humor also does not translate
480 Try to keep overall line lengths in source files to 80 characters or less
481 for obvious reasons. This is not always possible, with lengthy URLs for
487 Our documents are available in differing formats. Right now, they
488 are just plain text, and HTML, but PDF, and others is always a
489 future possibility. Be careful with URLs (<ulink>), and avoid
493 My favorite site is <ulink url="http://example.com">here</ulink>.
496 This will render as <quote>My favorite site is here</quote>, which is
497 not real helpful in a text doc. Better like this:
500 My favorite site is <ulink url="http://example.com">example.com</ulink>.
505 All documents should be spell checked occasionally.
506 <application>aspell</application> can check SGML with the
507 <literal>-H</literal> option. (<application>ispell</application> I think
518 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
520 <sect2><title>Privoxy Custom Entities</title>
522 <application>Privoxy</application> documentation is using
523 a number of customized <quote>entities</quote> to facilitate
524 documentation maintenance.
527 We are using a set of <quote>boilerplate</quote> files with generic text,
528 that is used by multiple docs. This way we can write something once, and use
529 it repeatedly without having to re-write the same content over and over again.
530 If editing such a file, keep in mind that it should be
531 <emphasis>generic</emphasis>. That is the purpose; so it can be used in varying
532 contexts without additional modifications.
535 We are also using what <application>Docbook</application> calls
536 <quote>internal entities</quote>. These are like variables in
537 programming. Well, sort of. For instance, we have the
538 <literal>p-version</literal> entity that contains the current
539 <application>Privoxy</application> version string. You are strongly
540 encouraged to use these where possible. Some of these obviously
541 require re-setting with each release (done by the Makefile). A sampling of
542 custom entities are listed below. See any of the main docs for examples.
549 Re- <quote>boilerplate</quote> text entities are defined like:
552 <literal><!entity supported SYSTEM "supported.sgml"></literal>
555 In this example, the contents of the file,
556 <filename>supported.sgml</filename> is available for inclusion anywhere
557 in the doc. To make this happen, just reference the now defined
558 entity: <literal>&supported;</literal> (starts with an ampersand
559 and ends with a semi-colon), and the contents will be dumped into
560 the finished doc at that point.
565 Commonly used <quote>internal entities</quote>:
569 <emphasis>p-version</emphasis>: the <application>Privoxy</application>
570 version string, e.g. <quote>&p-version;</quote>.
573 <emphasis>p-status</emphasis>: the project status, either
574 <quote>alpha</quote>, <quote>beta</quote>, or <quote>stable</quote>.
577 <emphasis>p-not-stable</emphasis>: use to conditionally include
578 text in <quote>not stable</quote> releases (e.g. <quote>beta</quote>).
581 <emphasis>p-stable</emphasis>: just the opposite.
584 <emphasis>p-text</emphasis>: this doc is only generated as text.
591 There are others in various places that are defined for a specific
592 purpose. Read the source!
599 <!-- <listitem><para>be consistent with the redirect script (i.e. the <application>Privoxy</application> program -->
600 <!-- points via the redirect URL at sf to valid end-points in the document)</para></listitem> -->
602 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
603 <sect1 id="coding"><title>Coding Guidelines</title>
605 <sect2 id="s1"><title>Introduction</title>
607 <para>This set of standards is designed to make our lives easier. It is
608 developed with the simple goal of helping us keep the "new and improved
609 <application>Privoxy</application>" consistent and reliable. Thus making
610 maintenance easier and increasing chances of success of the
613 <para>And that of course comes back to us as individuals. If we can
614 increase our development and product efficiencies then we can solve more
615 of the request for changes/improvements and in general feel good about
616 ourselves. ;-></para>
620 <sect2 id="s2"><title>Using Comments</title>
623 <sect3 id="s3"><title>Comment, Comment, Comment</title>
625 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
627 <para>Comment as much as possible without commenting the obvious.
628 For example do not comment "aVariable is equal to bVariable".
629 Instead explain why aVariable should be equal to the bVariable.
630 Just because a person can read code does not mean they will
631 understand why or what is being done. A reader may spend a lot
632 more time figuring out what is going on when a simple comment
633 or explanation would have prevented the extra research. Please
634 help your brother IJB'ers out!</para>
636 <para>The comments will also help justify the intent of the code.
637 If the comment describes something different than what the code
638 is doing then maybe a programming error is occurring.</para>
640 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
642 /* if page size greater than 1k ... */
643 if ( PageLength() > 1024 )
645 ... "block" the page up ...
648 /* if page size is small, send it in blocks */
649 if ( PageLength() > 1024 )
651 ... "block" the page up ...
654 This demonstrates 2 cases of "what not to do". The first is a
655 "syntax comment". The second is a comment that does not fit what
656 is actually being done.
662 <sect3 id="s4"><title>Use blocks for comments</title>
664 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
666 <para>Comments can help or they can clutter. They help when they
667 are differentiated from the code they describe. One line
668 comments do not offer effective separation between the comment
669 and the code. Block identifiers do, by surrounding the code
670 with a clear, definable pattern.</para>
672 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
674 /*********************************************************************
675 * This will stand out clearly in your code!
676 *********************************************************************/
677 if ( thisVariable == thatVariable )
679 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
683 /* unfortunately, this may not */
684 if ( thisVariable == thatVariable )
686 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
690 if ( thisVariable == thatVariable ) /* this may not either */
692 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
695 <para><emphasis>Exception:</emphasis></para>
697 <para>If you are trying to add a small logic comment and do not
698 wish to "disrupt" the flow of the code, feel free to use a 1
699 line comment which is NOT on the same line as the code.</para>
705 <sect3 id="s5"><title>Keep Comments on their own line</title>
707 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
709 <para>It goes back to the question of readability. If the comment
710 is on the same line as the code it will be harder to read than
711 the comment that is on its own line.</para>
713 <para>There are three exceptions to this rule, which should be
714 violated freely and often: during the definition of variables,
715 at the end of closing braces, when used to comment
718 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
720 /*********************************************************************
721 * This will stand out clearly in your code,
722 * But the second example won't.
723 *********************************************************************/
724 if ( thisVariable == thatVariable )
726 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
729 if ( thisVariable == thatVariable ) /*can you see me?*/
731 DoSomethingVeryImportant(); /*not easily*/
735 /*********************************************************************
736 * But, the encouraged exceptions:
737 *********************************************************************/
738 int urls_read = 0; /* # of urls read + rejected */
739 int urls_rejected = 0; /* # of urls rejected */
743 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
747 short DoSomethingVeryImportant(
748 short firstparam, /* represents something */
749 short nextparam /* represents something else */ )
753 } /* -END- DoSomethingVeryImportant */
758 <sect3 id="s6"><title>Comment each logical step</title>
760 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
762 <para>Logical steps should be commented to help others follow the
763 intent of the written code and comments will make the code more
766 <para>If you have 25 lines of code without a comment, you should
767 probably go back into it to see where you forgot to put
770 <para>Most "for", "while", "do", etc... loops _probably_ need a
771 comment. After all, these are usually major logic
778 <sect3 id="s7"><title>Comment All Functions Thoroughly</title>
780 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
782 <para>A reader of the code should be able to look at the comments
783 just prior to the beginning of a function and discern the
784 reason for its existence and the consequences of using it. The
785 reader should not have to read through the code to determine if
786 a given function is safe for a desired use. The proper
787 information thoroughly presented at the introduction of a
788 function not only saves time for subsequent maintenance or
789 debugging, it more importantly aids in code reuse by allowing a
790 user to determine the safety and applicability of any function
791 for the problem at hand. As a result of such benefits, all
792 functions should contain the information presented in the
793 addendum section of this document.</para>
799 <sect3 id="s8"><title>Comment at the end of braces if the
800 content is more than one screen length</title>
802 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
804 <para>Each closing brace should be followed on the same line by a
805 comment that describes the origination of the brace if the
806 original brace is off of the screen, or otherwise far away from
807 the closing brace. This will simplify the debugging,
808 maintenance, and readability of the code.</para>
810 <para>As a suggestion , use the following flags to make the
811 comment and its brace more readable:</para>
813 <para>use following a closing brace: } /* -END- if() or while ()
816 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
820 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
821 ...some long list of commands...
822 } /* -END- if x is 1 */
828 DoSomethingVeryImportant();
829 ...some long list of commands...
830 } /* -END- if ( 1 == X ) */
836 <sect2 id="s9"><title>Naming Conventions</title>
840 <sect3 id="s10"><title>Variable Names</title>
842 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
844 <para>Use all lowercase, and separate words via an underscore
845 ('_'). Do not start an identifier with an underscore. (ANSI C
846 reserves these for use by the compiler and system headers.) Do
847 not use identifiers which are reserved in ANSI C++. (E.g.
848 template, class, true, false, ...). This is in case we ever
849 decide to port Privoxy to C++.</para>
851 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
853 int ms_iis5_hack = 0;</programlisting>
855 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
859 int msiis5hack = 0; int msIis5Hack = 0;
867 <sect3 id="s11"><title>Function Names</title>
869 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
871 <para>Use all lowercase, and separate words via an underscore
872 ('_'). Do not start an identifier with an underscore. (ANSI C
873 reserves these for use by the compiler and system headers.) Do
874 not use identifiers which are reserved in ANSI C++. (E.g.
875 template, class, true, false, ...). This is in case we ever
876 decide to port Privoxy to C++.</para>
878 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
880 int load_some_file( struct client_state *csp )</programlisting>
882 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
886 int loadsomefile( struct client_state *csp )
887 int loadSomeFile( struct client_state *csp )
895 <sect3 id="s12"><title>Header file prototypes</title>
897 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
899 <para>Use a descriptive parameter name in the function prototype
900 in header files. Use the same parameter name in the header file
901 that you use in the c file.</para>
903 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
905 (.h) extern int load_aclfile( struct client_state *csp );
906 (.c) int load_aclfile( struct client_state *csp )</programlisting>
908 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis>
910 (.h) extern int load_aclfile( struct client_state * ); or
911 (.h) extern int load_aclfile();
912 (.c) int load_aclfile( struct client_state *csp )
920 <sect3 id="s13"><title>Enumerations, and #defines</title>
922 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
924 <para>Use all capital letters, with underscores between words. Do
925 not start an identifier with an underscore. (ANSI C reserves
926 these for use by the compiler and system headers.)</para>
928 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
930 (enumeration) : enum Boolean { FALSE, TRUE };
931 (#define) : #define DEFAULT_SIZE 100;</programlisting>
933 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> We have a standard naming scheme for #defines
934 that toggle a feature in the preprocessor: FEATURE_>, where
935 > is a short (preferably 1 or 2 word) description.</para>
937 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
939 #define FEATURE_FORCE 1
942 #define FORCE_PREFIX blah
943 #endif /* def FEATURE_FORCE */
948 <sect3 id="s14"><title>Constants</title>
950 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
952 <para>Spell common words out entirely (do not remove vowels).</para>
954 <para>Use only widely-known domain acronyms and abbreviations.
955 Capitalize all letters of an acronym.</para>
957 <para>Use underscore (_) to separate adjacent acronyms and
958 abbreviations. Never terminate a name with an underscore.</para>
960 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
962 #define USE_IMAGE_LIST 1</programlisting>
964 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
968 #define USE_IMG_LST 1 or
969 #define _USE_IMAGE_LIST 1 or
970 #define USE_IMAGE_LIST_ 1 or
971 #define use_image_list 1 or
972 #define UseImageList 1
982 <sect2 id="s15"><title>Using Space</title>
986 <sect3 id="s16"><title>Put braces on a line by themselves.</title>
988 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
990 <para>The brace needs to be on a line all by itself, not at the
991 end of the statement. Curly braces should line up with the
992 construct that they're associated with. This practice makes it
993 easier to identify the opening and closing braces for a
996 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1003 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
1005 <para>if ( this == that ) { ... }</para>
1009 <para>if ( this == that ) { ... }</para>
1011 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> In the special case that the if-statement is
1012 inside a loop, and it is trivial, i.e. it tests for a
1013 condition that is obvious from the purpose of the block,
1014 one-liners as above may optically preserve the loop structure
1015 and make it easier to read.</para>
1017 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion.</para>
1019 <para><emphasis>Example exception:</emphasis></para>
1021 while ( more lines are read )
1023 /* Please document what is/is not a comment line here */
1024 if ( it's a comment ) continue;
1026 do_something( line );
1032 <sect3 id="s17"><title>ALL control statements should have a
1035 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1037 <para>Using braces to make a block will make your code more
1038 readable and less prone to error. All control statements should
1039 have a block defined.</para>
1041 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1049 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
1051 <para>if ( this == that ) DoSomething(); DoSomethingElse();</para>
1055 <para>if ( this == that ) DoSomething();</para>
1057 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The first example in "Instead of" will execute
1058 in a manner other than that which the developer desired (per
1059 indentation). Using code braces would have prevented this
1060 "feature". The "explanation" and "exception" from the point
1061 above also applies.</para>
1067 <sect3 id="s18"><title>Do not belabor/blow-up boolean
1070 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1072 structure->flag = ( condition );</programlisting>
1074 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
1076 <para>if ( condition ) { structure->flag = 1; } else {
1077 structure->flag = 0; }</para>
1079 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The former is readable and concise. The later
1080 is wordy and inefficient. Please assume that any developer new
1081 to the project has at least a "good" knowledge of C/C++. (Hope
1082 I do not offend by that last comment ... 8-)</para>
1088 <sect3 id="s19"><title>Use white space freely because it is
1091 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1093 <para>Make it readable. The notable exception to using white space
1094 freely is listed in the next guideline.</para>
1096 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1100 int anotherValue = 0;
1101 int thisVariable = 0;
1103 if ( thisVariable == thatVariable )
1105 firstValue = oldValue + ( ( someValue - anotherValue ) - whatever )
1110 <sect3 id="s20"><title>Don't use white space around structure
1113 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1115 <para>- structure pointer operator ( "->" ) - member operator (
1116 "." ) - functions and parentheses</para>
1118 <para>It is a general coding practice to put pointers, references,
1119 and function parentheses next to names. With spaces, the
1120 connection between the object and variable/function name is not
1123 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1127 FunctionName();</programlisting>
1129 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis> aStruct -> aMember; aStruct . aMember;
1130 FunctionName ();</para>
1136 <sect3 id="s21"><title>Make the last brace of a function stand
1139 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1141 int function1( ... )
1146 } /* -END- function1 */
1149 int function2( ... )
1151 } /* -END- function2 */
1154 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
1156 <para>int function1( ... ) { ...code... return( retCode ); } int
1157 function2( ... ) { }</para>
1159 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> Use 1 blank line before the closing brace and 2
1160 lines afterward. This makes the end of function standout to
1161 the most casual viewer. Although function comments help
1162 separate functions, this is still a good coding practice. In
1163 fact, I follow these rules when using blocks in "for", "while",
1164 "do" loops, and long if {} statements too. After all whitespace
1167 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion on the number of blank
1168 lines. Enforced is the end of function comments.</para>
1174 <sect3 id="s22"><title>Use 3 character indentions</title>
1176 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1178 <para>If some use 8 character TABs and some use 3 character TABs,
1179 the code can look *very* ragged. So use 3 character indentions
1180 only. If you like to use TABs, pass your code through a filter
1181 such as "expand -t3" before checking in your code.</para>
1183 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1185 static const char * const url_code_map[256] =
1191 int function1( ... )
1195 return( ALWAYS_TRUE );
1199 return( HOW_DID_YOU_GET_HERE );
1202 return( NEVER_GETS_HERE );
1211 <sect2 id="s23"><title>Initializing</title>
1215 <sect3 id="s24"><title>Initialize all variables</title>
1217 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1219 <para>Do not assume that the variables declared will not be used
1220 until after they have been assigned a value somewhere else in
1221 the code. Remove the chance of accidentally using an unassigned
1224 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1228 struct *ptr = NULL;</programlisting>
1230 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> It is much easier to debug a SIGSEGV if the
1231 message says you are trying to access memory address 00000000
1232 and not 129FA012; or arrayPtr[20] causes a SIGSEV vs.
1235 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion if and only if the
1236 variable is assigned a value "shortly after" declaration.</para>
1242 <sect2 id="s25"><title>Functions</title>
1246 <sect3 id="s26"><title>Name functions that return a boolean as a
1249 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1251 <para>Value should be phrased as a question that would logically
1252 be answered as a true or false statement</para>
1254 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1256 ShouldWeBlockThis();
1263 <sect3 id="s27"><title>Always specify a return type for a
1266 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1268 <para>The default return for a function is an int. To avoid
1269 ambiguity, create a return for a function when the return has a
1270 purpose, and create a void return type if the function does not
1271 need to return anything.</para>
1277 <sect3 id="s28"><title>Minimize function calls when iterating by
1278 using variables</title>
1280 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1282 <para>It is easy to write the following code, and a clear argument
1283 can be made that the code is easy to understand:</para>
1285 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1287 for ( size_t cnt = 0; cnt < blockListLength(); cnt ++ )
1292 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> Unfortunately, this makes a function call for
1293 each and every iteration. This increases the overhead in the
1294 program, because the compiler has to look up the function each
1295 time, call it, and return a value. Depending on what occurs in
1296 the blockListLength() call, it might even be creating and
1297 destroying structures with each iteration, even though in each
1298 case it is comparing "cnt" to the same value, over and over.
1299 Remember too - even a call to blockListLength() is a function
1300 call, with the same overhead.</para>
1302 <para>Instead of using a function call during the iterations,
1303 assign the value to a variable, and evaluate using the
1306 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1308 size_t len = blockListLength();
1310 for ( size_t cnt = 0; cnt < len; cnt ++ )
1315 <para><emphasis>Exceptions:</emphasis> if the value of blockListLength() *may*
1316 change or could *potentially* change, then you must code the
1317 function call in the for/while loop.</para>
1323 <sect3 id="s29"><title>Pass and Return by Const Reference</title>
1325 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1327 <para>This allows a developer to define a const pointer and call
1328 your function. If your function does not have the const
1329 keyword, we may not be able to use your function. Consider
1330 strcmp, if it were defined as: extern int strcmp( char *s1,
1333 <para>I could then not use it to compare argv's in main: int main(
1334 int argc, const char *argv[] ) { strcmp( argv[0], "privoxy"
1337 <para>Both these pointers are *const*! If the c runtime library
1338 maintainers do it, we should too.</para>
1344 <sect3 id="s30"><title>Pass and Return by Value</title>
1346 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1348 <para>Most structures cannot fit onto a normal stack entry (i.e.
1349 they are not 4 bytes or less). Aka, a function declaration
1350 like: int load_aclfile( struct client_state csp )</para>
1352 <para>would not work. So, to be consistent, we should declare all
1353 prototypes with "pass by value": int load_aclfile( struct
1354 client_state *csp )</para>
1360 <sect3 id="s31"><title>Names of include files</title>
1362 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1364 <para>Your include statements should contain the file name without
1365 a path. The path should be listed in the Makefile, using -I as
1366 processor directive to search the indicated paths. An exception
1367 to this would be for some proprietary software that utilizes a
1368 partial path to distinguish their header files from system or
1369 other header files.</para>
1371 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1373 #include <iostream.h> /* This is not a local include */
1374 #include "config.h" /* This IS a local include */
1377 <para><emphasis>Exception:</emphasis></para>
1381 /* This is not a local include, but requires a path element. */
1382 #include <sys/fileName.h>
1386 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> Please! do not add "-I." to the Makefile
1387 without a _very_ good reason. This duplicates the #include
1388 "file.h" behavior.</para>
1394 <sect3 id="s32"><title>Provide multiple inclusion
1397 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1399 <para>Prevents compiler and linker errors resulting from
1400 redefinition of items.</para>
1402 <para>Wrap each header file with the following syntax to prevent
1403 multiple inclusions of the file. Of course, replace PROJECT_H
1404 with your file name, with "." Changed to "_", and make it
1407 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1409 #ifndef PROJECT_H_INCLUDED
1410 #define PROJECT_H_INCLUDED
1412 #endif /* ndef PROJECT_H_INCLUDED */
1417 <sect3 id="s33"><title>Use `extern "C"` when appropriate</title>
1419 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1421 <para>If our headers are included from C++, they must declare our
1422 functions as `extern "C"`. This has no cost in C, but increases
1423 the potential re-usability of our code.</para>
1425 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1430 #endif /* def __cplusplus */
1432 ... function definitions here ...
1436 #endif /* def __cplusplus */
1441 <sect3 id="s34"><title>Where Possible, Use Forward Struct
1442 Declaration Instead of Includes</title>
1444 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1446 <para>Useful in headers that include pointers to other struct's.
1447 Modifications to excess header files may cause needless
1450 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1452 /*********************************************************************
1453 * We're avoiding an include statement here!
1454 *********************************************************************/
1456 extern file_list *xyz;</programlisting>
1458 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If you declare "file_list xyz;" (without the
1459 pointer), then including the proper header file is necessary.
1460 If you only want to prototype a pointer, however, the header
1461 file is unnecessary.</para>
1463 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> Use with discretion.</para>
1469 <sect2 id="s35"><title>General Coding Practices</title>
1473 <sect3 id="s36"><title>Turn on warnings</title>
1475 <para><emphasis>Explanation</emphasis></para>
1477 <para>Compiler warnings are meant to help you find bugs. You
1478 should turn on as many as possible. With GCC, the switch is
1479 "-Wall". Try and fix as many warnings as possible.</para>
1485 <sect3 id="s37"><title>Provide a default case for all switch
1488 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1490 <para>What you think is guaranteed is never really guaranteed. The
1491 value that you don't think you need to check is the one that
1492 someday will be passed. So, to protect yourself from the
1493 unknown, always have a default step in a switch statement.</para>
1495 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1497 switch( hash_string( cmd ) )
1499 case hash_actions_file :
1509 ... anomaly code goes here ...
1510 continue; / break; / exit( 1 ); / etc ...
1512 } /* end switch( hash_string( cmd ) ) */</programlisting>
1514 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If you already have a default condition, you
1515 are obviously exempt from this point. Of note, most of the
1516 WIN32 code calls `DefWindowProc' after the switch statement.
1517 This API call *should* be included in a default statement.</para>
1519 <para><emphasis>Another Note:</emphasis> This is not so much a readability issue
1520 as a robust programming issue. The "anomaly code goes here" may
1521 be no more than a print to the STDERR stream (as in
1522 load_config). Or it may really be an ABEND condition.</para>
1524 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> Programmer discretion is advised.</para>
1530 <sect3 id="s38"><title>Try to avoid falling through cases in a
1531 switch statement.</title>
1533 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1535 <para>In general, you will want to have a 'break' statement within
1536 each 'case' of a switch statement. This allows for the code to
1537 be more readable and understandable, and furthermore can
1538 prevent unwanted surprises if someone else later gets creative
1539 and moves the code around.</para>
1541 <para>The language allows you to plan the fall through from one
1542 case statement to another simply by omitting the break
1543 statement within the case statement. This feature does have
1544 benefits, but should only be used in rare cases. In general,
1545 use a break statement for each case statement.</para>
1547 <para>If you choose to allow fall through, you should comment both
1548 the fact of the fall through and reason why you felt it was
1555 <sect3 id="s39"><title>Use 'long' or 'short' Instead of
1558 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1560 <para>On 32-bit platforms, int usually has the range of long. On
1561 16-bit platforms, int has the range of short.</para>
1563 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> open-to-debate. In the case of most FSF
1564 projects (including X/GNU-Emacs), there are typedefs to int4,
1565 int8, int16, (or equivalence ... I forget the exact typedefs
1566 now). Should we add these to IJB now that we have a "configure"
1573 <sect3 id="s40"><title>Don't mix size_t and other types</title>
1575 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1577 <para>The type of size_t varies across platforms. Do not make
1578 assumptions about whether it is signed or unsigned, or about
1579 how long it is. Do not compare a size_t against another
1580 variable of a different type (or even against a constant)
1581 without casting one of the values. Try to avoid using size_t if
1588 <sect3 id="s41"><title>Declare each variable and struct on its
1591 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1593 <para>It can be tempting to declare a series of variables all on
1594 one line. Don't.</para>
1596 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1600 long c = 0;</programlisting>
1602 <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
1604 <para>long a, b, c;</para>
1606 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis> - there is more room for comments on the
1607 individual variables - easier to add new variables without
1608 messing up the original ones - when searching on a variable to
1609 find its type, there is less clutter to "visually"
1612 <para><emphasis>Exceptions:</emphasis> when you want to declare a bunch of loop
1613 variables or other trivial variables; feel free to declare them
1614 on 1 line. You should, although, provide a good comment on
1615 their functions.</para>
1617 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion.</para>
1623 <sect3 id="s42"><title>Use malloc/zalloc sparingly</title>
1625 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1627 <para>Create a local struct (on the stack) if the variable will
1628 live and die within the context of one function call.</para>
1630 <para>Only "malloc" a struct (on the heap) if the variable's life
1631 will extend beyond the context of one function call.</para>
1633 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1635 If a function creates a struct and stores a pointer to it in a
1636 list, then it should definitely be allocated via `malloc'.
1641 <sect3 id="s43"><title>The Programmer Who Uses 'malloc' is
1642 Responsible for Ensuring 'free'</title>
1644 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1646 <para>If you have to "malloc" an instance, you are responsible for
1647 insuring that the instance is `free'd, even if the deallocation
1648 event falls within some other programmer's code. You are also
1649 responsible for ensuring that deletion is timely (i.e. not too
1650 soon, not too late). This is known as "low-coupling" and is a
1651 "good thing (tm)". You may need to offer a
1652 free/unload/destuctor type function to accommodate this.</para>
1654 <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
1656 int load_re_filterfile( struct client_state *csp ) { ... }
1657 static void unload_re_filterfile( void *f ) { ... }</programlisting>
1659 <para><emphasis>Exceptions:</emphasis></para>
1661 <para>The developer cannot be expected to provide `free'ing
1662 functions for C run-time library functions ... such as
1665 <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion. The "main" use of this
1666 standard is for allocating and freeing data structures (complex
1673 <sect3 id="s44"><title>Add loaders to the `file_list' structure
1674 and in order</title>
1676 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1678 <para>I have ordered all of the "blocker" file code to be in alpha
1679 order. It is easier to add/read new blockers when you expect a
1680 certain order.</para>
1682 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> It may appear that the alpha order is broken in
1683 places by POPUP tests coming before PCRS tests. But since
1684 POPUPs can also be referred to as KILLPOPUPs, it is clear that
1685 it should come first.</para>
1691 <sect3 id="s45"><title>"Uncertain" new code and/or changes to
1692 existing code, use FIXME</title>
1694 <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
1696 <para>If you have enough confidence in new code or confidence in
1697 your changes, but are not *quite* sure of the repercussions,
1700 <para>/* FIXME: this code has a logic error on platform XYZ, *
1701 attempting to fix */ #ifdef PLATFORM ...changed code here...
1706 <para>/* FIXME: I think the original author really meant this...
1707 */ ...changed code here...</para>
1711 <para>/* FIXME: new code that *may* break something else... */
1712 ...new code here...</para>
1714 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If you make it clear that this may or may not
1715 be a "good thing (tm)", it will be easier to identify and
1716 include in the project (or conversely exclude from the
1724 <sect2 id="s46"><title>Addendum: Template for files and function
1725 comment blocks:</title>
1727 <para><emphasis>Example for file comments:</emphasis></para>
1729 const char FILENAME_rcs[] = "$Id: developer-manual.sgml,v 1.44 2002/05/15 03:55:17 hal9 Exp $";
1730 /*********************************************************************
1732 * File : $S<!-- Break CVS Substitution -->ource$
1734 * Purpose : (Fill me in with a good description!)
1736 * Copyright : Written by and Copyright (C) 2001 the SourceForge
1737 * Privoxy team. http://www.privoxy.org/
1739 * Based on the Internet Junkbuster originally written
1740 * by and Copyright (C) 1997 Anonymous Coders and
1741 * Junkbusters Corporation. http://www.junkbusters.com
1743 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it
1744 * and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
1745 * Public License as published by the Free Software
1746 * Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
1747 * your option) any later version.
1749 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will
1750 * be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
1751 * implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
1752 * PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
1753 * License for more details.
1755 * The GNU General Public License should be included with
1756 * this file. If not, you can view it at
1757 * http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
1758 * or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
1759 * Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
1762 * $L<!-- Break CVS Substitution -->og$
1764 *********************************************************************/
1769 ...necessary include files for us to do our work...
1771 const char FILENAME_h_rcs[] = FILENAME_H_VERSION;
1774 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> This declares the rcs variables that should be
1775 added to the "show-proxy-args" page. If this is a brand new
1776 creation by you, you are free to change the "Copyright" section
1777 to represent the rights you wish to maintain.</para>
1779 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The formfeed character that is present right
1780 after the comment flower box is handy for (X|GNU)Emacs users to
1781 skip the verbiage and get to the heart of the code (via
1782 `forward-page' and `backward-page'). Please include it if you
1785 <para><emphasis>Example for file header comments:</emphasis></para>
1789 #define FILENAME_H_VERSION "$Id: developer-manual.sgml,v 1.44 2002/05/15 03:55:17 hal9 Exp $"
1790 /*********************************************************************
1792 * File : $S<!-- Break CVS Substitution -->ource$
1794 * Purpose : (Fill me in with a good description!)
1796 * Copyright : Written by and Copyright (C) 2001 the SourceForge
1797 * Privoxy team. http://www.privoxy.org/
1799 * Based on the Internet Junkbuster originally written
1800 * by and Copyright (C) 1997 Anonymous Coders and
1801 * Junkbusters Corporation. http://www.junkbusters.com
1803 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it
1804 * and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
1805 * Public License as published by the Free Software
1806 * Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
1807 * your option) any later version.
1809 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will
1810 * be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
1811 * implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
1812 * PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
1813 * License for more details.
1815 * The GNU General Public License should be included with
1816 * this file. If not, you can view it at
1817 * http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
1818 * or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
1819 * Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
1822 * $L<!-- Break CVS Substitution -->og$
1824 *********************************************************************/
1827 #include "project.h"
1833 ... function headers here ...
1836 /* Revision control strings from this header and associated .c file */
1837 extern const char FILENAME_rcs[];
1838 extern const char FILENAME_h_rcs[];
1845 #endif /* ndef _FILENAME_H */
1854 <para><emphasis>Example for function comments:</emphasis></para>
1856 /*********************************************************************
1858 * Function : FUNCTION_NAME
1860 * Description : (Fill me in with a good description!)
1863 * 1 : param1 = pointer to an important thing
1864 * 2 : x = pointer to something else
1866 * Returns : 0 => Ok, everything else is an error.
1868 *********************************************************************/
1869 int FUNCTION_NAME( void *param1, const char *x )
1877 <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If we all follow this practice, we should be
1878 able to parse our code to create a "self-documenting" web
1885 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1886 <sect1 id="testing"><title>Testing Guidelines</title>
1890 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1891 <sect2 id="testing-plan"><title>Testplan for releases</title>
1893 Explain release numbers. major, minor. developer releases. etc.
1895 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
1897 Remove any existing rpm with rpm -e
1900 Remove any file that was left over. This includes (but is not limited to)
1902 <listitem><para>/var/log/privoxy</para></listitem>
1903 <listitem><para>/etc/privoxy</para></listitem>
1904 <listitem><para>/usr/sbin/privoxy</para></listitem>
1905 <listitem><para>/etc/init.d/privoxy</para></listitem>
1906 <listitem><para>/usr/doc/privoxy*</para></listitem>
1910 Install the rpm. Any error messages?
1912 <listitem><para>start,stop,status <application>Privoxy</application> with the specific script
1913 (e.g. /etc/rc.d/init/privoxy stop). Reboot your machine. Does
1914 autostart work?</para></listitem>
1915 <listitem><para>Start browsing. Does <application>Privoxy</application> work? Logfile written?</para></listitem>
1916 <listitem><para>Remove the rpm. Any error messages? All files removed?</para></listitem>
1921 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1922 <sect2 id="testing-report"><title>Test reports</title>
1924 Please submit test reports only with the <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=add&group_id=11118&atid=395005">test form</ulink>
1925 at sourceforge. Three simple steps:
1928 <listitem><para>Select category: the distribution you test on.</para></listitem>
1929 <listitem><para>Select group: the version of <application>Privoxy</application> that we are about to release.</para></listitem>
1930 <listitem><para>Fill the Summary and Detailed Description with something
1931 intelligent (keep it short and precise).</para>
1934 Do not mail to the mailinglist (we cannot keep track on issues there).
1940 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1941 <sect1 id="newrelease"><title>Releasing a New Version</title>
1943 When we release versions of <application>Privoxy</application>,
1944 our work leaves our cozy secret lab and has to work in the cold
1945 RealWorld[tm]. Once it is released, there is no way to call it
1946 back, so it is very important that great care is taken to ensure
1947 that everything runs fine, and not to introduce problems in the
1951 So when releasing a new version, please adhere exactly to the
1952 procedure outlined in this chapter.
1956 The following programs are required to follow this process:
1957 <filename>ncftpput</filename> (ncftp), <filename>scp, ssh</filename> (ssh),
1958 <filename>gmake</filename> (GNU's version of make), autoconf, cvs.
1961 <sect2 id="versionnumbers">
1962 <title>Version numbers</title>
1965 First you need to determine which version number the release will have.
1966 <application>Privoxy</application> version numbers consist of three numbers,
1967 separated by dots, like in X.Y.Z, where:
1971 X, the version major, is rarely ever changed. It is increased by one if
1972 turning a development branch into stable substantially changes the functionality,
1973 user interface or configuration syntax. Majors 1 and 2 were
1974 <application>Junkbuster</application>, and 3 will be the first stable
1975 <application>Privoxy</application> release.
1980 Y, the version minor, represents the branch within the major version.
1981 At any point in time, there are two branches being maintained:
1982 The stable branch, with an even minor, say, 2N, in which no functionality is
1983 being added and only bugfixes are made, and 2N+1, the development branch, in
1984 which the further development of <application>Privoxy</application> takes
1986 This enables us to turn the code upside down and inside out, while at the same time
1987 providing and maintaining a stable version.
1988 The minor is reset to zero (and one) when the major is inrcemented. When a development
1989 branch has matured to the point where it can be turned into stable, the old stable branch
1990 2N is given up (i.e. no longer maintained), the former development branch 2N+1 becomes the
1991 new stable branch 2N+2, and a new development branch 2N+3 is opened.
1996 Z, the point or sub version, represents a release of the software within a branch.
1997 It is therefore incremented immediately before each code freeze.
1998 In development branches, only the even point versions correspond to actual releases,
1999 while the odd ones denote the evolving state of the sources on CVS in between.
2000 It follows that Z is odd on CVS in development branches most of the time. There, it gets
2001 increased to an even number immediately before a code freeze, and is increased to an odd
2002 number again immediately thereafter.
2003 This ensures that builds from CVS snapshots are easily distinguished from released versions.
2004 The point version is reset to zero when the minor changes.
2012 <sect2 id="beforerelease">
2013 <title>Before the Release: Freeze</title>
2015 The following <emphasis>must be done by one of the
2016 developers</emphasis> prior to each new release.
2022 Make sure that everybody who has worked on the code in the last
2023 couple of days has had a chance to yell <quote>no!</quote> in case
2024 they have pending changes/fixes in their pipelines. Announce the
2025 freeze so that nobody will interfere with last minute changes.
2030 Increment the version number (point from odd to even in development
2031 branches!) in <filename>configure.in</filename>.
2036 If <filename>default.action</filename> has changed since last
2037 release (i.e. software release or standalone actions file release),
2038 bump up its version info to A.B in this line:
2042 {+add-header{X-Actions-File-Version: A.B} -filter -no-popups}
2046 Then change the version info in doc/webserver/actions/index.php,
2047 line: '$required_actions_file_version = "A.B";'
2052 If the HTML documentation is not in sync with the SGML sources
2053 you need to regenerate and upload it to the webserver. (If in
2054 doubt, just do it.) See the Section "Updating the webserver" in
2055 this manual for details.
2060 <emphasis>Commit all files that were changed in the above steps!</emphasis>
2065 Tag all files in CVS with the version number with
2066 <quote><command>cvs tag v_X_Y_Z</command></quote>.
2067 Don't use vX_Y_Z, ver_X_Y_Z, v_X.Y.Z (won't work) etc.
2072 If the release was in a development branch, increase the point version
2073 from even to odd (X.Y.(Z+1)) again in <filename>configure.in</filename> and
2079 On the webserver, copy the user manual to a new top-level directory
2080 called <filename>X.Y.Z</filename>. This ensures that help links from the CGI
2081 pages, which have the version as a prefix, will go into the right version of the manual.
2082 If this is a development branch release, also symlink <filename>X.Y.(Z-1)</filename>
2083 to <filename>X.Y.Z</filename> and <filename>X.Y.(Z+1)</filename> to
2084 <filename>.</filename> (i.e. dot).
2091 <sect2 id="therelease">
2092 <title>Building and Releasing the Packages</title>
2094 Now the individual packages can be built and released. Note that for
2095 GPL reasons the first package to be released is always the source tarball.
2099 For <emphasis>all</emphasis> types of packages, including the source tarball,
2100 <emphasis>you must make sure that you build from clean sources by exporting
2101 the right version from CVS into an empty directory:</emphasis>.
2106 mkdir dist # delete or choose different name if it already exists
2108 cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa login
2109 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa export -r v_X_Y_Z current
2114 <emphasis>Do NOT change</emphasis> a single bit, including, but not limited to
2115 version information after export from CVS. This is to make sure that
2116 all release packages, and with them, all future bug reports, are based
2117 on exactly the same code.
2121 Please find additional instructions for the source tarball and the
2122 individual platform dependent binary packages below. And details
2123 on the Sourceforge release process below that.
2126 <sect3 id="pack-guidelines">
2127 <title>Note on Privoxy Packaging</title>
2129 Please keep these general guidelines in mind when putting together
2130 your package. These apply to <emphasis>all</emphasis> platforms!
2136 <application>Privoxy</application> <emphasis>requires</emphasis>
2137 write access to: all <filename>*.action</filename> files, all
2138 logfiles, and the <filename>trust</filename> file. You will
2139 need to determine the best way to do this for your platform.
2144 Please include up to date documentation. At a bare minimum:
2148 <filename>LICENSE</filename> (toplevel directory)
2153 <filename>README</filename> (toplevel directory)
2158 <filename>AUTHORS</filename> (toplevel directory)
2163 <filename>man page</filename> (toplevel directory, Unix-like
2169 <filename>The User Manual</filename> (doc/webserver/user-manual/)
2174 <filename>FAQ</filename> (doc/webserver/faq/)
2178 Also suggested: <filename>Developer Manual</filename>
2179 (doc/webserver/devel-manual) and <filename>ChangeLog</filename>
2180 (toplevel directory). <filename>FAQ</filename> and the manuals are
2181 HTML docs. There are also text versions in
2182 <filename>doc/text/</filename> which could conceivably also be
2186 The documentation has been designed such that the manuals are linked
2187 to each other from parallel directories, and should be packaged
2188 that way. <filename>index.html</filename> can also be included and
2189 can serve as a focal point for docs and other links of interest.
2190 This should be one level up from the manuals. There are two
2191 css stylesheets that can be included for better presentation:
2192 <filename>p_doc.css</filename> and <filename>p_web.css</filename>.
2193 These should be in the same directory with
2194 <filename>index.html</filename>, (i.e. one level up from the manual
2200 <filename>user.action</filename> is designed for local preferences.
2201 Make sure this does not get overwritten!
2206 Other configuration files should be installed as the new defaults,
2207 but all previously installed configuration files should be preserved
2208 as backups. This is just good manners :-)
2213 Please check platform specific notes in this doc, if you haven't
2214 done <quote>Privoxy</quote> packaging before for other platform
2215 specific issues. Conversely, please add any notes that you know
2216 are important for your platform (or contact one of the doc
2217 maintainers to do this if you can't).
2226 <sect3 id="newrelease-tarball"><title>Source Tarball</title>
2228 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2229 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2230 packages" above). Then run:
2235 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2247 To upload the package to Sourceforge, simply issue
2255 Go to the displayed URL and release the file publicly on Sourceforge.
2256 For the change log field, use the relevant section of the
2257 <filename>ChangeLog</filename> file.
2261 <sect3 id="newrelease-rpm"><title>SuSE, Conectiva or Red Hat RPM</title>
2263 In following text, replace <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable>
2264 with either <quote>rh</quote> for Red Hat or <quote>suse</quote> for SuSE.
2267 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2268 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2272 As the only exception to not changing anything after export from CVS,
2273 now examine the file <filename>privoxy-</filename><replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable><filename>.spec</filename>
2274 and make sure that the version information and the RPM release number are
2275 correct. The RPM release numbers for each version start at one. Hence it must
2276 be reset to one if this is the first RPM for
2277 <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable> which is built from version
2279 <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=11118">file
2280 list</ulink> if unsure. Else, it must be set to the highest already available RPM
2281 release number for that version plus one.
2289 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2297 make <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable>-dist
2301 To upload the package to Sourceforge, simply issue
2305 make <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable>-upload <replaceable class="parameter">rpm_packagerev</replaceable>
2309 where <replaceable class="parameter">rpm_packagerev</replaceable> is the
2310 RPM release number as determined above.
2311 Go to the displayed URL and release the file publicly on Sourceforge.
2312 Use the release notes and change log from the source tarball package.
2316 <sect3 id="newrelease-os2"><title>OS/2</title>
2318 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2319 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2320 packages" above). Then get the OS/2 Setup module:
2324 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co os2setup
2328 You will need a mix of development tools.
2329 The main compilation takes place with IBM Visual Age C++.
2330 Some ancillary work takes place with GNU tools, available from
2331 various sources like hobbes.nmsu.edu.
2332 Specificially, you will need <filename>autoheader</filename>,
2333 <filename>autoconf</filename> and <filename>sh</filename> tools.
2334 The packaging takes place with WarpIN, available from various sources, including
2335 its home page: <ulink url="http://www.xworkplace.org/">xworkplace</ulink>.
2338 Change directory to the <filename>os2setup</filename> directory.
2339 Edit the os2build.cmd file to set the final executable filename.
2344 installExeName='privoxyos2_setup_X.Y.Z.exe'
2348 Next, edit the <filename>IJB.wis</filename> file so the release number matches
2349 in the <filename>PACKAGEID</filename> section:
2353 PACKAGEID="Privoxy Team\Privoxy\Privoxy Package\X\Y\Z"
2357 You're now ready to build. Run:
2365 You will find the WarpIN-installable executable in the
2366 <filename>./files</filename> directory. Upload this anonymously to
2367 <filename>uploads.sourceforge.net/incoming</filename>, create a release
2368 for it, and you're done. Use the release notes and Change Log from the
2369 source tarball package.
2373 <sect3 id="newrelease-solaris"><title>Solaris</title>
2375 Login to Sourceforge's compilefarm via ssh:
2379 ssh cf.sourceforge.net
2383 Choose the right operating system (not the Debian one).
2384 When logged in, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2385 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2386 packages" above). Then run:
2391 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2403 which creates a gzip'ed tar archive. Sadly, you cannot use <command>make
2404 solaris-upload</command> on the Sourceforge machine (no ncftpput). You now have
2405 to manually upload the archive to Sourceforge's ftp server and release
2406 the file publicly. Use the release notes and Change Log from the
2407 source tarball package.
2411 <sect3 id="newrelease-windows"><title>Windows</title>
2413 You should ensure you have the latest version of Cygwin (from
2414 <ulink url="http://www.cygwin.com/">http://www.cygwin.com/</ulink>).
2415 Run the following commands from within a Cygwin bash shell.
2418 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2419 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2420 packages" above). Then get the Windows setup module:
2424 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co winsetup
2428 Then you can build the package. This is fully automated, and is
2429 controlled by <filename>winsetup/GNUmakefile</filename>.
2430 All you need to do is:
2439 Now you can manually rename <filename>privoxy_setup.exe</filename> to
2440 <filename>privoxy_setup_X_Y_Z.exe</filename>, and upload it to
2441 SourceForge. When releasing the package on SourceForge, use the release notes
2442 and Change Log from the source tarball package.
2446 <sect3 id="newrelease-debian"><title>Debian</title>
2448 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2449 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2450 packages" above). Then, run:
2455 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2463 <sect3 id="newrelease-macosx"><title>Mac OSX</title>
2465 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2466 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2467 packages" above). Then get the Mac OSX setup module:
2471 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co osxsetup
2484 This will run <filename>autoheader</filename>, <filename>autoconf</filename> and
2485 <filename>configure</filename> as well as <filename>make</filename>.
2486 Finally, it will copy over the necessary files to the ./osxsetup/files directory
2487 for further processing by <filename>PackageMaker</filename>.
2490 Bring up PackageMaker with the PrivoxyPackage.pmsp definition file, modify the package
2491 name to match the release, and hit the "Create package" button.
2492 If you specify ./Privoxy.pkg as the output package name, you can then create
2493 the distributable zip file with the command:
2497 zip -r privoxyosx_setup_x.y.z.zip Privoxy.pkg
2501 You can then upload <filename>privoxyosx_setup_x.y.z.zip</filename> anonymously to
2502 <filename>uploads.sourceforge.net/incoming</filename>,
2503 create a release for it, and you're done. Use the release notes
2504 and Change Log from the source tarball package.
2508 <sect3 id="newrelease-freebsd"><title>FreeBSD</title>
2510 Login to Sourceforge's compilefarm via ssh:
2514 ssh cf.sourceforge.net
2518 Choose the right operating system.
2519 When logged in, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2520 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2521 packages" above). Then run:
2526 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2538 which creates a gzip'ed tar archive. Sadly, you cannot use <command>make
2539 freebsd-upload</command> on the Sourceforge machine (no ncftpput). You now have
2540 to manually upload the archive to Sourceforge's ftp server and release
2541 the file publicly. Use the release notes and Change Log from the
2542 source tarball package.
2546 <sect3 id="newrelease-hpux"><title>HP-UX 11</title>
2548 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2549 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2550 packages" above). Then run:
2555 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2563 <sect3 id="newrelease-amiga"><title>Amiga OS</title>
2565 First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2566 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2567 packages" above). Then run:
2572 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2580 <sect3 id="newrelease-aix"><title>AIX</title>
2582 Login to Sourceforge's compilefarm via ssh:
2586 ssh cf.sourceforge.net
2590 Choose the right operating system.
2591 When logged in, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
2592 version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
2593 packages" above). Then run:
2598 autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
2610 which creates a gzip'ed tar archive. Sadly, you cannot use <command>make
2611 aix-upload</command> on the Sourceforge machine (no ncftpput). You now have
2612 to manually upload the archive to Sourceforge's ftp server and release
2613 the file publicly. Use the release notes and Change Log from the
2614 source tarball package.
2619 <sect2 id="releasing">
2620 <title>Uploading and Releasing Your Package</title>
2622 After the package is ready, it is time to upload it
2623 to SourceForge, and go through the release steps. The upload
2630 Upload to: <ulink url="ftp://upload.sourceforge.net/incoming">ftp://upload.sourceforge.net/incoming</ulink>
2635 user: <literal>anonymous</literal>
2640 password: <literal>ijbswa-developers@lists.sourceforge.net</literal>
2646 Or use the <command>make</command> targets as described above.
2649 Once this done go to <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/project/admin/editpackages.php?group_id=11118">http://sourceforge.net/project/admin/editpackages.php?group_id=11118</ulink>,
2650 making sure you are logged in. Find your target platform in the
2651 second column, and click <literal>Add Release</literal>. You will
2652 then need to create a new release for your package, using the format
2653 of <literal>$VERSION ($CODE_STATUS)</literal>, e.g. <emphasis>&p-version;
2657 Now just follow the prompts. Be sure to add any appropriate Release
2658 notes. You should see your freshly uploaded packages in
2659 <quote>Step 2. Add Files To This Release</quote>. Check the
2660 appropriate box(es). Remember at each step to hit the
2661 <quote>Refresh/Submit</quote> buttons! You should now see your
2662 file(s) listed in Step 3. Fill out the forms with the appropriate
2663 information for your platform, being sure to hit <quote>Update</quote>
2664 for each file. If anyone is monitoring your platform, check the
2665 <quote>email</quote> box at the very bottom to notify them of
2666 the new package. This should do it!
2669 If you have made errors, or need to make changes, you can go through
2670 essentially the same steps, but select <literal>Edit Release</literal>,
2671 instead of <literal>Add Release</literal>.
2675 <sect2 id="afterrelease">
2676 <title>After the Release</title>
2678 When all (or: most of the) packages have been uploaded and made available,
2679 send an email to the <ulink url="mailto:ijbswa-announce@lists.sourceforge.net">announce
2680 mailing list</ulink>, Subject: "Version X.Y.Z available for download". Be sure to
2682 <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=11118">download
2683 location</ulink>, the release notes and the change log.
2689 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2690 <sect1 id="webserver-update"><title>Update the Webserver</title>
2692 When updating the webserver, please follow these steps to make
2693 sure that no broken links, incosistent contents or permission
2694 problems will occur:
2697 If you have changed anything in the documentation source SGML files,
2702 make dok # (or make redkat-dok if make dok doesn't work for you)
2706 That will generate <filename>doc/webserver/user-manual</filename>,
2707 <filename>doc/webserver/developer-manual</filename>,
2708 <filename>doc/webserver/faq</filename> and
2709 <filename>doc/webserver/index.html</filename> automatically.
2712 If you changed the manual page source, generate
2713 <filename>doc/webserver/man-page/privoxy-man-page.html</filename>
2714 by running <quote><command>make man</command></quote>. (This is
2715 a separate target due to dependencies on some obscure perl scripts.
2716 See comments in <filename>GNUmakefile</filename>.)
2719 If you want to add new files to the webserver, create them locally in
2720 the <filename>doc/webserver/*</filename> directory (or
2721 create new directories under <filename>doc/webserver</filename>).
2724 Next, commit any changes from the above steps to CVS. All set? Then do
2732 This will do the upload to <ulink url="http://www.privoxy.org/">the
2733 webserver</ulink> (www.privoxy.org) and ensure all files and directories
2734 there are group writable.
2737 Please do <emphasis>NOT</emphasis> use any other means of transferring
2738 files to the webserver to avoid permission problems.
2742 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2743 <sect1 id="contact"><title>Contacting the developers, Bug Reporting and Feature Requests</title>
2744 <!-- Include contacting.sgml -->
2746 <!-- end contacting -->
2750 <!-- ~~~~~~~~ New section Header ~~~~~~~~~ -->
2751 <sect1 id="copyright"><title>Privoxy Copyright, License and History</title>
2753 <!-- Include copyright.sgml -->
2757 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2758 <sect2><title>License</title>
2759 <!-- Include copyright.sgml: -->
2761 <!-- end copyright -->
2763 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
2765 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2766 <sect2><title>History</title>
2767 <!-- Include history.sgml -->
2774 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2775 <sect1 id="seealso"><title>See also</title>
2776 <!-- Include seealso.sgml -->
2784 This program is free software; you can redistribute it
2785 and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
2786 Public License as published by the Free Software
2787 Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
2788 your option) any later version.
2790 This program is distributed in the hope that it will
2791 be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
2792 implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
2793 PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
2794 License for more details.
2796 The GNU General Public License should be included with
2797 this file. If not, you can view it at
2798 http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
2799 or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
2800 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
2802 $Log: developer-manual.sgml,v $
2803 Revision 1.44 2002/05/15 03:55:17 hal9
2804 Fix ulink -> link, and minor modification to release process section for
2807 Revision 1.43 2002/05/10 01:48:19 hal9
2808 This is mostly proposed copyright/licensing additions and changes. Docs
2809 are still GPL, but licensing and copyright are more visible. Also, copyright
2810 changed in doc header comments (eliminate references to JB except FAQ).
2812 Revision 1.42 2002/05/05 20:26:02 hal9
2813 Sorting out license vs copyright in these docs.
2815 Revision 1.41 2002/05/04 08:44:44 swa
2818 Revision 1.40 2002/05/04 00:43:43 hal9
2819 -Remove TOC/first page kludge with proper stylesheet fix.
2820 -Combined the two very brief sections: Intro and Quickstart.
2822 Revision 1.39 2002/05/02 15:08:25 oes
2823 Added explanation about version numbers and RPM package revisions
2825 Revision 1.38 2002/04/29 02:20:31 hal9
2826 Add info on steps for uploading and the release process on SF.
2828 Revision 1.37 2002/04/26 17:23:29 swa
2829 bookmarks cleaned, changed structure of user manual, screen and programlisting cleanups, and numerous other changes that I forgot
2831 Revision 1.36 2002/04/26 05:25:23 hal9
2832 Mass commit to catch a few scattered fixes.
2834 Revision 1.35 2002/04/17 15:16:15 oes
2835 Added link to docbook crash course
2837 Revision 1.34 2002/04/15 23:39:32 oes
2838 - Extended & fixed the release section
2839 - Added CVS guideline sections
2840 - Separated webserver section from release section
2841 - Commented out boilerplate inclusion (If you don't know yet what it is,
2842 you shouldn't mess with its code ;-)
2845 Revision 1.33 2002/04/12 03:49:53 hal9
2846 Spell checked. Clarification on where docs are kept.
2848 Revision 1.32 2002/04/11 21:29:58 jongfoster
2849 Documenting Win32 release procedure
2851 Revision 1.31 2002/04/11 09:32:52 oes
2854 Revision 1.30 2002/04/11 09:24:53 oes
2857 Revision 1.29 2002/04/10 18:45:14 swa
2860 Revision 1.28 2002/04/08 22:59:26 hal9
2861 Version update. Spell chkconfig correctly :)
2863 Revision 1.27 2002/04/08 15:31:18 hal9
2864 Touch ups to documentation section.
2866 Revision 1.26 2002/04/07 23:50:08 hal9
2867 Documentation changes to reflect HTML docs now in CVS, and new generated files
2870 Revision 1.25 2002/04/06 05:07:28 hal9
2871 -Add privoxy-man-page.sgml, for man page.
2872 -Add authors.sgml for AUTHORS (and p-authors.sgml)
2873 -Reworked various aspects of various docs.
2874 -Added additional comments to sub-docs.
2876 Revision 1.24 2002/04/04 21:33:37 hal9
2877 More on documenting the documents.
2879 Revision 1.23 2002/04/04 18:46:47 swa
2880 consistent look. reuse of copyright, history et. al.
2882 Revision 1.22 2002/04/04 17:27:56 swa
2883 more single file to be included at multiple points. make maintaining easier
2885 Revision 1.21 2002/04/04 06:48:37 hal9
2886 Structural changes to allow for conditional inclusion/exclusion of content
2887 based on entity toggles, e.g. 'entity % p-not-stable "INCLUDE"'. And
2888 definition of internal entities, e.g. 'entity p-version "2.9.13"' that will
2889 eventually be set by Makefile.
2890 More boilerplate text for use across multiple docs.
2892 Revision 1.20 2002/04/04 03:28:27 david__schmidt
2895 Revision 1.19 2002/04/03 15:09:42 david__schmidt
2896 Add OS/2 build section
2898 Revision 1.18 2002/04/03 03:51:48 hal9
2901 Revision 1.17 2002/04/03 01:21:17 hal9
2902 Implementing Andreas's suggestions for Release sections.
2904 Revision 1.16 2002/03/31 23:04:40 hal9
2905 Fleshed out the doc section, and added something for an intro so it was not
2908 Revision 1.15 2002/03/30 22:29:47 swa
2911 Revision 1.14 2002/03/30 19:04:08 swa
2912 people release differently. no good.
2913 I want to make parts of the docs only.
2915 Revision 1.13 2002/03/27 01:16:41 hal9
2918 Revision 1.12 2002/03/27 01:02:51 hal9
2919 Touch up on name change...
2921 Revision 1.11 2002/03/26 22:29:55 swa
2922 we have a new homepage!
2924 Revision 1.10 2002/03/24 12:33:01 swa
2927 Revision 1.9 2002/03/24 11:01:05 swa
2930 Revision 1.8 2002/03/23 15:13:11 swa
2931 renamed every reference to the old name with foobar.
2932 fixed "application foobar application" tag, fixed
2933 "the foobar" with "foobar". left junkbustser in cvs
2934 comments and remarks to history untouched.
2936 Revision 1.7 2002/03/11 13:13:27 swa
2937 correct feedback channels
2939 Revision 1.6 2002/02/24 14:25:06 jongfoster
2940 Formatting changes. Now changing the doctype to DocBook XML 4.1
2941 will work - no other changes are needed.
2943 Revision 1.5 2001/10/31 18:16:51 swa
2944 documentation added: howto generate docs in text and html
2945 format, howto move stuff to the webserver.
2947 Revision 1.4 2001/09/23 10:13:48 swa
2948 upload process established. run make webserver and
2949 the documentation is moved to the webserver. documents
2950 are now linked correctly.
2952 Revision 1.3 2001/09/13 15:27:40 swa
2955 Revision 1.2 2001/09/13 15:20:17 swa
2956 merged standards into developer manual
2958 Revision 1.1 2001/09/12 15:36:41 swa
2959 source files for junkbuster documentation
2961 Revision 1.3 2001/09/10 17:43:59 swa
2962 first proposal of a structure.
2964 Revision 1.2 2001/06/13 14:28:31 swa
2965 docs should have an author.
2967 Revision 1.1 2001/06/13 14:20:37 swa
2968 first import of project's documentation for the webserver.