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Style Guidelines | Authelia Development Style Guidelines | This section covers the style guidelines we use for development. | 2022-05-15T13:52:27+10:00 | false |
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This is a general guide to the code style we aim to abide by. This is by no means an exhaustive list and we're constantly changing and improving it. This is also a work in progress document.
For our commit messages please see our Commit Message Guidelines.
Tools
We implement the following tools that help us abide by our style guide and include the configuration for them inside our repository:
Exceptions
This is a style guide not a cudgel, there are always going to be exceptions to these guidelines when it makes sense not to follow them. One notable exception is the README.md for the repository. The line length of the All Contributors individual sections are longer than 120 characters and it doesn't make sense to apply the line length guidelines.
Specific Guidelines
Line Length
We aim to keep all files to a maximum line length of 120 characters. This allows for most modern computer systems to display two files side by side (vertically split). As always, keep in mind you should not restrict your line length when it doesn't make sense to.
This includes but is not limited to the following file types:
- Go (
*.go
) - YAML (
*.yml
,*.yaml
) - Markdown (
*.md
) - JavaScript (
*.js
) - TypeScript (
*.ts
,*.tsx
)
Error Strings
Error messages should follow the standard go format. This format can be found in the golang code review comments however the key points are:
- errors should not start with capital letters (excluding proper nouns, acronyms, or initialism)
- errors should not end with punctuation
- these restrictions do not apply to logging, only the error type itself
Configuration Documentation
The configuration documentation has a consistent format this section describes it as best as possible. It's recommended to check additional sections for examples.
Layout
The first thing in the configuration documentation should be a description of the area. This is promptly followed by the configuration heading (h2 / indent 2) which has an example full configuration.
Under the configuration example each option in the configuration needs to be documented with its own heading (h3 / indent 3). Immediately following the heading is a div with some stylized icons.
The body of the section is to contain paragraphs describing the usage and information specific to that value.
Example Stylized Icons:
{{< print "{{< confkey type=\"string\" default=\"none\" required=\"no\" >}}" >}}
type
This section has the type of the value in a semi human readable format. Some example values are string
, integer
,
boolean
, list(string)
, duration
.
default
This section has the default of the value if one exists, this section can be completely omitted if there is no default.
required
This section has the required status of the value and must be one of yes
, no
, or situational
. Situational means it
depends on other configuration options. If it's situational the situational usage should be documented.
Storage
This section outlines some rules for storage contributions. Including but not limited to migrations, schema rules, etc.
Migrations
All migrations must have an up and down migration, preferably idempotent.
All migrations must be named in the following format:
V<version>.<name>.<engine>.<direction>.sql
version
A 4 digit version number, should be in sequential order.
name
A name containing alphanumeric characters, underscores (treated as spaces), hyphens, and no spaces.
engine
The target engine for the migration, options are all, mysql, postgres, and sqlite.
Primary Key
All tables must have a primary key. This primary key must be an integer with auto increment enabled, or in the case of PostgreSQL a serial type.
Table/Column Names
Table and Column names must be in snake case format. This means they must have only lowercase letters, and have words seperated by underscores. The reasoning for this is that some database engines ignore case by default and this makes it easy to be consistent with the casing.
Context
All database methods should include the context attribute so that database requests that are no longer needed are terminated appropriately.