Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
stijn 1b3e0e10b9 tools/codeformat.py: Include all msvc C code in auto-format. 2020-03-25 00:36:42 +11:00
David Lechner 8a4ce6b79a tools/codeformat.py: Eliminate need for sizeof fixup.
This eliminates the need for the sizeof regex fixup by rearranging things a
bit.  All other bitfields already use the parentheses around expressions
with sizeof, so one case is fixed by following this convention.

VM_MAX_STATE_ON_STACK is the only remaining problem and it can be worked
around by changing the order of the operands.
2020-03-11 14:34:40 +11:00
Damien George 4b23e98fb0 tools/codeformat.py: Add formatter using uncrustify for C, black for Py.
This commit adds a tool, codeformat.py, which will reformat C and Python
code to fit a certain style.  By default the tool will reformat (almost)
all the original (ie not 3rd-party) .c, .h and .py files in this
repository.  Passing filenames on the command-line to codeformat.py will
reformat only those.  Reformatting is done in-place.

uncrustify is used for C reformatting, which is available for many
platforms and can be easily built from source, see
https://github.com/uncrustify/uncrustify.  The configuration for uncrustify
is also added in this commit and values are chosen to best match the
existing code style.  A small post-processing stage on .c and .h files is
done by codeformat.py (after running uncrustify) to fix up some minor
items:
- space inserted after * when used as multiplication with sizeof
- #if/ifdef/ifndef/elif/else/endif are dedented by one level when they are
  configuring if-blocks and case-blocks.

For Python code, the formatter used is black, which can be pip-installed;
see https://github.com/psf/black.  The defaults are used, except for line-
length which is set at 99 characters to match the "about 100" line-length
limit used in C code.

The formatting tools used and their configuration were chosen to strike a
balance between keeping existing style and not changing too many lines of
code, and enforcing a relatively strict style (especially for Python code).
This should help to keep the code consistent across everything, and reduce
cognitive load when writing new code to match the style.
2020-02-28 10:14:28 +11:00