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-# BoringSSL Style Guide
-
-BoringSSL usually follows the
-[Google C++ style guide](https://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.html).
-The rest of this document describes differences and clarifications on
-top of the base guide.
-
-
-## Legacy code
-
-As a derivative of OpenSSL, BoringSSL contains a lot of legacy code that
-does not follow this style guide. Particularly where public API is
-concerned, balance consistency within a module with the benefits of a
-given rule. Module-wide deviations on naming should be respected while
-integer and return value conventions take precedence over consistency.
-
-Some modules have seen few changes, so they still retain the original
-indentation style for now. When editing these, try to retain the
-original style. For Emacs, `doc/c-indentation.el` from OpenSSL may be
-helpful in this.
-
-
-## Language
-
-The majority of the project is in C, so C++-specific rules in the
-Google style guide do not apply. Support for C99 features depends on
-our target platforms. Typically, Chromium's target MSVC is the most
-restrictive.
-
-Variable declarations in the middle of a function are allowed.
-
-Comments should be `/* C-style */` for consistency.
-
-When declaration pointer types, `*` should be placed next to the variable
-name, not the type. So
-
- uint8_t *ptr;
-
-not
-
- uint8_t* ptr;
-
-Rather than `malloc()` and `free()`, use the wrappers `OPENSSL_malloc()`
-and `OPENSSL_free()`. Use the standard C `assert()` function freely.
-
-For new constants, prefer enums when the values are sequential and typed
-constants for flags. If adding values to an existing set of `#define`s,
-continue with `#define`.
-
-
-## Formatting
-
-Single-statement blocks are not allowed. All conditions and loops must
-use braces:
-
- if (foo) {
- do_something();
- }
-
-not
-
- if (foo)
- do_something();
-
-
-## Integers
-
-Prefer using explicitly-sized integers where appropriate rather than
-generic C ones. For instance, to represent a byte, use `uint8_t`, not
-`unsigned char`. Likewise, represent a two-byte field as `uint16_t`, not
-`unsigned short`.
-
-Sizes are represented as `size_t`.
-
-Within a struct that is retained across the lifetime of an SSL
-connection, if bounds of a size are known and it's easy, use a smaller
-integer type like `uint8_t`. This is a "free" connection footprint
-optimization for servers. Don't make code significantly more complex for
-it, and do still check the bounds when passing in and out of the
-struct. This narrowing should not propagate to local variables and
-function parameters.
-
-When doing arithmetic, account for overflow conditions.
-
-Except with platform APIs, do not use `ssize_t`. MSVC lacks it, and
-prefer out-of-band error signaling for `size_t` (see Return values).
-
-
-## Naming
-
-Follow Google naming conventions in C++ files. In C files, use the
-following naming conventions for consistency with existing OpenSSL and C
-styles:
-
-Define structs with typedef named `TYPE_NAME`. The corresponding struct
-should be named `struct type_name_st`.
-
-Name public functions as `MODULE_function_name`, unless the module
-already uses a different naming scheme for legacy reasons. The module
-name should be a type name if the function is a method of a particular
-type.
-
-Some types are allocated within the library while others are initialized
-into a struct allocated by the caller, often on the stack. Name these
-functions `TYPE_NAME_new`/`TYPE_NAME_free` and
-`TYPE_NAME_init`/`TYPE_NAME_cleanup`, respectively. All `TYPE_NAME_free`
-functions must do nothing on `NULL` input.
-
-If a variable is the length of a pointer value, it has the suffix
-`_len`. An output parameter is named `out` or has an `out_` prefix. For
-instance, For instance:
-
- uint8_t *out,
- size_t *out_len,
- const uint8_t *in,
- size_t in_len,
-
-Name public headers like `include/openssl/evp.h` with header guards like
-`OPENSSL_HEADER_EVP_H`. Name internal headers like
-`crypto/ec/internal.h` with header guards like
-`OPENSSL_HEADER_EC_INTERNAL_H`.
-
-Name enums like `enum unix_hacker_t`. For instance:
-
- enum should_free_handshake_buffer_t {
- free_handshake_buffer,
- dont_free_handshake_buffer,
- };
-
-
-## Return values
-
-As even `malloc` may fail in BoringSSL, the vast majority of functions
-will have a failure case. Functions should return `int` with one on
-success and zero on error. Do not overload the return value to both
-signal success/failure and output an integer. For example:
-
- OPENSSL_EXPORT int CBS_get_u16(CBS *cbs, uint16_t *out);
-
-If a function needs more than a true/false result code, define an enum
-rather than arbitrarily assigning meaning to int values.
-
-If a function outputs a pointer to an object on success and there are no
-other outputs, return the pointer directly and `NULL` on error.
-
-
-## Parameters
-
-Where not constrained by legacy code, parameter order should be:
-
-1. context parameters
-2. output parameters
-3. input parameters
-
-For example,
-
- /* CBB_add_asn sets |*out_contents| to a |CBB| into which the contents of an
- * ASN.1 object can be written. The |tag| argument will be used as the tag for
- * the object. It returns one on success or zero on error. */
- OPENSSL_EXPORT int CBB_add_asn1(CBB *cbb, CBB *out_contents, uint8_t tag);
-
-
-## Documentation
-
-All public symbols must have a documentation comment in their header
-file. The style is based on that of Go. The first sentence begins with
-the symbol name, optionally prefixed with "A" or "An". Apart from the
-initial mention of symbol, references to other symbols or parameter
-names should be surrounded by |pipes|.
-
-Documentation should be concise but completely describe the exposed
-behavior of the function. Pay special note to success/failure behaviors
-and caller obligations on object lifetimes. If this sacrifices
-conciseness, consider simplifying the function's behavior.
-
- /* EVP_DigestVerifyUpdate appends |len| bytes from |data| to the data which
- * will be verified by |EVP_DigestVerifyFinal|. It returns one on success and
- * zero otherwise. */
- OPENSSL_EXPORT int EVP_DigestVerifyUpdate(EVP_MD_CTX *ctx, const void *data,
- size_t len);
-
-Explicitly mention any surprising edge cases or deviations from common
-return value patterns in legacy functions.
-
- /* RSA_private_encrypt encrypts |flen| bytes from |from| with the private key in
- * |rsa| and writes the encrypted data to |to|. The |to| buffer must have at
- * least |RSA_size| bytes of space. It returns the number of bytes written, or
- * -1 on error. The |padding| argument must be one of the |RSA_*_PADDING|
- * values. If in doubt, |RSA_PKCS1_PADDING| is the most common.
- *
- * WARNING: this function is dangerous because it breaks the usual return value
- * convention. Use |RSA_sign_raw| instead. */
- OPENSSL_EXPORT int RSA_private_encrypt(int flen, const uint8_t *from,
- uint8_t *to, RSA *rsa, int padding);
-
-Document private functions in their `internal.h` header or, if static,
-where defined.