VirtualBox

source: vbox/trunk/src/VBox/VMM/VMMCodingGuidelines.cpp@ 1507

Last change on this file since 1507 was 23, checked in by vboxsync, 18 years ago

string.h & stdio.h + header cleanups.

  • Property svn:eol-style set to native
  • Property svn:keywords set to Id
File size: 3.9 KB
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1/* $Id: VMMCodingGuidelines.cpp 23 2007-01-15 14:08:28Z vboxsync $ */
2/** @file
3 * VMM - Coding Guidelines.
4 */
5
6/*
7 * Copyright (C) 2006 InnoTek Systemberatung GmbH
8 *
9 * This file is part of VirtualBox Open Source Edition (OSE), as
10 * available from http://www.virtualbox.org. This file is free software;
11 * you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
12 * General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
13 * in version 2 as it comes in the "COPYING" file of the VirtualBox OSE
14 * distribution. VirtualBox OSE is distributed in the hope that it will
15 * be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY of any kind.
16 *
17 * If you received this file as part of a commercial VirtualBox
18 * distribution, then only the terms of your commercial VirtualBox
19 * license agreement apply instead of the previous paragraph.
20 */
21
22
23/** @page pg_vmm_guideline VMM Coding Guidelines
24 *
25 * The guidelines extends the VBox coding guidelines (@ref pg_vbox_guideline)
26 * and consists of a compulsory part and an optional part. It is very important
27 * that the rules of the compusory part is followed. That will prevent obvious
28 * bugs, and it will ease porting the code to 32/64 and 64/32 bits setups.
29 *
30 *
31 *
32 * @section sec_vmm_guideline_compulsory Compulsory
33 *
34 * It is of vital importance is to distiguish between addresses - both virtual
35 * and physical - applying to Guest Context and Host Context. To assist the
36 * coder in this, a set of types and macros have been created. Another vital
37 * thing is that structures shared between the two contexts ends up with the
38 * same size and member offsets in both places. There are types and macros
39 * for that too.
40 *
41 *
42 * The rules:
43 *
44 * - When declaring pointers in shared structures use the GCPTRTYPE() and
45 * HCPTRTYPE() macros.
46 *
47 * - Use RTGCPTR and RTHCPTR when dealing with the other context in
48 * none shared structures, parameter lists, stack variables and such.
49 *
50 * - Following the above rules, pointers will in a context other than the
51 * one a pointer was defined for, appear as unsigned integers.
52 *
53 * - It is NOT permitted to subject a pointer from the other context to pointer
54 * types of the current context by direct cast or by definition.
55 *
56 * - When doing pointer arithmetic cast using uintptr_t, intptr_t or char *.
57 * Never cast a pointer to anything else for this purpose, that will not
58 * work everywhere! (1)
59 *
60 * - Physical addresses are also specific to their context. Use RTGCPHYS
61 * and RTHCPHYS when dealing when them. Both types are unsigned integers.
62 *
63 * - Integers in shared structures should be using a RT integer type or
64 * any of the [u]int[0-9]+_t types. (2)
65 *
66 * - If code is shared between the contexts, GCTYPE() can be used to declare
67 * things differently. If GCTYPE() usage is extensive, don't share the code.
68 *
69 * - The context is part of all public symbols which are specific to a single
70 * context.
71 *
72 *
73 * (1) Talking about porting between 32-bit and 64-bit architectures and even
74 * between 64-bit platforms. On 64-bit linux int is 32-bit, long is 64-bit.
75 * However on 64-bit windows both int and long are 32-bit - there is no
76 * standard 64 bit type (_int64 is not a standard type, it's an stupid
77 * extension).
78 *
79 * (2) The VBox integer types are RTINT, RTUINT, RTGCINT, RTGCUINT,
80 * RTGCINTPTR, RTGCUINTPTR, RTHCINT, RTHCUINT, RTHCINTPTR and
81 * RTHCUINTPTR.
82 *
83 *
84 *
85 * @section sec_vmm_guideline_optional Optional
86 *
87 * There are the general VBox guidelines, see @ref sec_vbox_guideline_optional.
88 * In addition to these for the following rules applies to the VMM:
89 *
90 * - Prefixes GCPtr and HCPtr are prefered over suffixes HC and GC of
91 * pointers.
92 *
93 * - Prefixes GCPhys and HCPhys are generally used for physical addresses,
94 * types RTGCPHYS and RTHCPHYS respectively.
95 *
96 */
97
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