Some older parts of the code violate the style guide in various ways.
- If making small changes to such code, follow the style guide when it’s reasonable to do so, but in matters of formatting etc., it is often better to be consistent with the surrounding code.
- If making large changes to such code, consider first cleaning it up in a separate CL.
WebRTC follows the Chromium and Google C++ style guides. In cases where they conflict, the Chromium style guide trumps the Google style guide, and the rules in this file trump them both.
WebRTC is written in C++11, but with some restrictions:
- We only allow the subset of C++11 (language and library) in the “allowed” section of this Chromium page.
- We only allow the subset of C++11 that is also valid C++14; otherwise, users would not be able to compile WebRTC in C++14 mode.
You may use a subset of the utilities provided by the Abseil library when writing WebRTC C++ code. Details.
.h
and .cc
files should come in pairs, with the same name (except
for the file type suffix), in the same directory, in the same build
target.
- If a declaration in
path/to/foo.h
has a definition in some.cc
file, it should be inpath/to/foo.cc
. - If a definition in
path/to/foo.cc
file has a declaration in some.h
file, it should be inpath/to/foo.h
. - Omit the
.cc
file if it would have been empty, but still list the.h
file in a build target. - Omit the
.h
file if it would have been empty. (This can happen with unit test.cc
files, and with.cc
files that definemain
.)
This makes the source code easier to navigate and organize, and precludes some questionable build system practices such as having build targets that don’t pull in definitions for everything they declare.
When passing an array of values to a function, use rtc::ArrayView
whenever possible—that is, whenever you’re not passing ownership of
the array, and don’t allow the callee to change the array size.
For example,
instead of | use |
---|---|
const std::vector<T>& |
ArrayView<const T> |
const T* ptr, size_t num_elements |
ArrayView<const T> |
T* ptr, size_t num_elements |
ArrayView<T> |
See the source for more detailed docs.
sigslot is a lightweight library that adds a signal/slot language construct to C++, making it easy to implement the observer pattern with minimal boilerplate code.
When adding a signal to a pure interface, prefer to add a pure virtual method that returns a reference to a signal:
sigslot::signal<int>& SignalFoo() = 0;
As opposed to making it a public member variable, as a lot of legacy code does:
sigslot::signal<int> SignalFoo;
The virtual method approach has the advantage that it keeps the interface stateless, and gives the subclass more flexibility in how it implements the signal. It may:
-
Have its own signal as a member variable.
-
Use a
sigslot::repeater
, to repeat a signal of another object:sigslot::repeater<int> foo_; /* ... */ foo_.repeat(bar_.SignalFoo());
-
Just return another object's signal directly, if the other object's lifetime is the same as its own.
sigslot::signal<int>& SignalFoo() { return bar_.SignalFoo(); }
Don’t use std::bind
—there are pitfalls, and lambdas are almost as
succinct and already familiar to modern C++ programmers.
std::function
is allowed, but remember that it’s not the right tool
for every occasion. Prefer to use interfaces when that makes sense,
and consider rtc::FunctionView
for cases where the callee will not
save the function object.
WebRTC follows the Google C++ style guide
with respect to forward declarations. In summary: avoid using forward
declarations where possible; just #include
the headers you need.
There’s a substantial chunk of legacy C code in WebRTC, and a lot of it is old enough that it violates the parts of the C++ style guide that also applies to C (naming etc.) for the simple reason that it pre-dates the use of the current C++ style guide for this code base.
- If making small changes to C code, mimic the style of the surrounding code.
- If making large changes to C code, consider converting the whole thing to C++ first.
WebRTC follows the Google Java style guide.
WebRTC follows the Chromium Objective-C and Objective-C++ style guide.
WebRTC follows Chromium’s Python style.
The WebRTC build files are written in GN, and we follow the Chromium GN style guide. Additionally, there are some WebRTC-specific rules below; in case of conflict, they trump the Chromium style guide.
Use the following GN templates to ensure that all our targets are built with the same configuration:
instead of | use |
---|---|
executable |
rtc_executable |
shared_library |
rtc_shared_library |
source_set |
rtc_source_set |
static_library |
rtc_static_library |
test |
rtc_test |
The WebRTC-specific GN templates declare build
targets whose default visibility
allows all other targets in the
WebRTC tree (and no targets outside the tree) to depend on them.
Prefer to restrict the visibility if possible:
- If a target is used by only one or a tiny number of other targets,
prefer to list them explicitly:
visibility = [ ":foo", ":bar" ]
- If a target is used only by targets in the same
BUILD.gn
file:visibility = [ ":*" ]
.
Setting visibility = [ "*" ]
means that targets outside the WebRTC
tree can depend on this target; use this only for build targets whose
headers are part of the native API.
Avoid using the C preprocessor to conditionally enable or disable pieces of code. But if you can’t avoid it, introduce a GN variable, and then set a preprocessor constant to either 0 or 1 in the build targets that need it:
if (apm_debug_dump) {
defines = [ "WEBRTC_APM_DEBUG_DUMP=1" ]
} else {
defines = [ "WEBRTC_APM_DEBUG_DUMP=0" ]
}
In the C, C++, or Objective-C files, use #if
when testing the flag,
not #ifdef
or #if defined()
:
#if WEBRTC_APM_DEBUG_DUMP
// One way.
#else
// Or another.
#endif
When combined with the -Wundef
compiler option, this produces
compile time warnings if preprocessor symbols are misspelled, or used
without corresponding build rules to set them.