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[gazebo11] Update BitBucket links (#2713)
Signed-off-by: Louise Poubel <louise@openrobotics.org>
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syntax: glob | ||
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test/plugins/rest-web/node_modules | ||
build | ||
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# Introduction | ||
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Interested in developing new features, fixing bugs, or making any other | ||
kind of contribution which touches Gazebo's codebase? Read on to find out how! | ||
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## Development process | ||
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We follow a development process designed to reduce errors, encourage | ||
collaboration, and make high quality code. The process may seem rigid and | ||
tedious, but every step is worth the effort. | ||
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### Steps to follow | ||
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1. Are you sure? | ||
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Run through this mental checklist before getting started. | ||
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1. Has your idea already been done, or maybe someone is already working on it? | ||
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Check [answers.gazebosim.org](http://answers.gazebosim.org) and the [issue tracker](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/issues). | ||
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1. Get feedback from the Gazebo core team. | ||
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Send an email to the | ||
[mailing list](https://groups.google.com/a/osrfoundation.org/forum/#!forum/gazebo), | ||
post a question on [Gazebo Answers](http://answers.gazebosim.org), or use the | ||
[issue tracker](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/issues) to get feedback from | ||
Gazebo developers. | ||
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1. [Fork Gazebo](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/fork) | ||
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This will create your own personal copy of Gazebo. All of your development | ||
should take place in your fork. | ||
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1. Choose a base branch | ||
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If your changes will break API or ABI, then base your new branch off of | ||
`default`. If your changes don't break API/ABI and you would like them | ||
to be released to an existing gazebo release with major version `N`, | ||
then use branch `gazeboN` as the base. | ||
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1. Work out of a branch | ||
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Always work out of a new branch, never off of the base branch. This is a | ||
good habit to get in, and will make your life easier. | ||
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1. Write your code. | ||
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This is the fun part. | ||
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1. Write tests | ||
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In most cases, a pull request will only be accepted if it has tests. See the | ||
"Write tests" section below for more information. | ||
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1. Compiler warnings | ||
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Code must have zero compile warnings, or at least make sure your pull | ||
request is not adding new warnings. | ||
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1. Style | ||
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Static code checking analyzes your code for bugs, such as potential memory | ||
leaks, and style. Gazebo's static code checker uses `cppcheck`, and a | ||
modified `cpplint`. You'll need to install cppcheck on your system. Ubuntu | ||
users can install via: | ||
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sudo apt-get install cppcheck | ||
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To check your code, run the following script from the root of the Gazebo | ||
sources: | ||
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sh tools/code_check.sh | ||
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It takes a few minutes to run. Fix all errors and warnings until the output | ||
looks like: | ||
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Total errors found: 0 | ||
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The tool does not catch all style errors. See the "Style" section below for | ||
more information. | ||
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1. Tests pass | ||
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There must be no failing tests. You can check by running `make test` in | ||
your build directory. | ||
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Running all tests in Gazebo may take a long time. If you expect your changes | ||
to only affect a few different tests, it should be enough to run each one | ||
of them individually from the build directory, for example: | ||
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./test/integration/INTEGRATION_world | ||
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1. Documentation. | ||
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Document all your code. Every class, function, member variable must have | ||
doxygen comments. All code in source files must have documentation that | ||
describes the functionality. This will help reviewers and future developers. | ||
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1. Review your code. | ||
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Before submitting your code through a pull request, take some time to | ||
review everything line-by-line. The review process will go much faster if | ||
you make sure everything is perfect before other people look at your code. | ||
There is a bit of the human-condition involved here. Folks are less likely | ||
to spend time reviewing your code if it's sloppy. | ||
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1. Small pull requests | ||
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A large pull request is hard to review, and will take a long time. It is | ||
worth your time to split a large pull request into multiple smaller pull | ||
requests. For reference, here are a few examples: | ||
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* [Small, very nice](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/pull-request/1732) | ||
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* [Medium, still okay](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/pull-request/1700/) | ||
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* [Too large](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/pull-request/30) | ||
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1. [Make a pull request](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/pull-request/new) | ||
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Submit a pull request when you're ready. | ||
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1. Continuous integration | ||
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The moment you make a pull request, a few jobs in our | ||
[continuous integration](http://build.osrfoundation.org/) | ||
server will be started. These jobs will build your branch on Linux, Mac and | ||
Windows, run all tests and check for warnings. | ||
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Your pull request will be updated with the status of these builds. Take some | ||
time to check these builds and see if you've introduced test failures, | ||
warnings or broke some build. If you did and know how to fix it, do so. If | ||
you don't know, speak up and someone may try to help you. | ||
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1. Review | ||
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At least two other people have to approve your pull request before it can | ||
be merged. Please be responsive to any questions and comments. | ||
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1. Done, phew. | ||
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Once you have met all the requirements, you're code will be merged. Thanks | ||
for improving Gazebo! | ||
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### Internal Developers | ||
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This section is targeted mostly at people who have commit access to the main | ||
repositories. | ||
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In addition to the general development process, please follow these steps | ||
before submitting a pull request. Each step is pass/fail, where the test or | ||
check must pass before continuing to the next step. | ||
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1. Run the style checker on your personal computer | ||
1. Run all, or only relevant, tests on your personal computer | ||
1. Run your branch through a Jenkins Linux no-gpu build | ||
1. Run your branch through a Jenkins Linux Nvidia build | ||
1. Run your branch through a Jenkins Homebrew build | ||
1. Run your branch through a Jenkins Windows build | ||
1. Run your branch through the ABI/API checker if targeting a release branch | ||
1. Submit the pull request, and make sure the following are included | ||
(a set of jenkins jobs will run automatically once the pull request is created, | ||
if not included automatically, you must add them manually): | ||
1. Link to a coverage report | ||
1. Link to a passing Homebrew build | ||
1. Link to a passing Linux no-gpu build | ||
1. Link to a passing Linux Nvidia build | ||
1. Link to a passing Windows build | ||
1. Link to a passing ABI/API report if the pull request is targeted at a release branch | ||
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# Style | ||
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In general, we follow [Google's style guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html). However, we add in some extras. | ||
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1. **This pointer** | ||
> All class attributes and member functions must be accessed using the `this->` pointer. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Base.cc#cl-40). | ||
1. **Underscore function parameters** | ||
> All function parameters must start with an underscore. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Base.cc#cl-77). | ||
1. **Do not cuddle braces** | ||
> All braces must be on their own line. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Base.cc#cl-131). | ||
1. **Multi-line code blocks** | ||
> If a block of code spans multiple lines and is part of a flow control statement, such as an `if`, then it must be wrapped in braces. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Base.cc#cl-249) | ||
1. **++ operator** | ||
> This occurs mostly in `for` loops. Prefix the `++` operator, which is [slightly more efficient than postfix in some cases](http://programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/59880/avoid-postfix-increment-operator). | ||
1. **PIMPL/Opaque pointer** | ||
> If you are writing a new class, it must use a private data pointer. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/World.hh?at=default#cl-479), and you can read more [here](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opaque_pointer). | ||
1. **const functions** | ||
> Any class function that does not change a member variable should be marked as `const`. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Entity.cc?at=default#cl-175). | ||
1. **const parameters** | ||
> All parameters that are not modified by a function should be marked as `const`. This applies to parameters that are passed by reference, pointer, and value. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Entity.cc?at=default#cl-217). | ||
1. **Pointer and reference variables** | ||
> Place the `*` and `&` next to the varaible name, not next to the type. For example: `int &variable` is good, but `int& variable` is not. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Entity.cc?at=default#cl-217). | ||
1. **Camel case** | ||
> In general, everything should use camel case. Exceptions include SDF element names, and protobuf variable names. Here is an [example](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/src/default/gazebo/physics/Entity.cc?at=default#cl-217). | ||
1. **Class function names** | ||
> Class functions must start with a capital letter, and capitalize every word. | ||
> | ||
> `void MyFunction();` : Good | ||
> | ||
> `void myFunction();` : Bad | ||
> | ||
> `void my_function();` : Bad | ||
1. **Variable names** | ||
> Variables must start with a lower case letter, and capitalize every word thereafter. | ||
> | ||
> `int myVariable;` : Good | ||
> | ||
> `int myvariable;` : Bad | ||
> | ||
> `int my_variable;` : Bad | ||
1. **No inline comments** | ||
> `//` style comments may not be placed on the same line as code. | ||
> | ||
> `speed *= 0.44704; // miles per hour to meters per second` : Bad | ||
# Write tests | ||
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Gazebo uses [GTest](http://code.google.com/p/googletest) for general testing | ||
and [QTest](http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtest.html) for GUI tests. There are a few | ||
kinds of tests: | ||
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1. Unit tests: all classes should have corresponding unit tests. These live | ||
in the same directory as the source code and are prefixed by `_TEST`. | ||
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1. Integration tests: tests which verify how many classes are working together | ||
go under the `tests/integration` directory. | ||
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1. Regression tests: tests which fix broken features go under `tests/regression` | ||
and are prefixed by the issue number on Gazebo's | ||
[issue tracker](https://bitbucket.org/osrf/gazebo/issues). | ||
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Before creating a new integration or regression test file, check the current | ||
test files. If one closely matches the topic of your new code, simply add a new | ||
test function to the file. Otherwise, create a new test file, and write your | ||
test. | ||
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## Test coverage | ||
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The goal is to achieve 100% line and branch coverage. However, this is not | ||
always possible due to complexity issues, analysis tools misreporting | ||
coverage, and time constraints. Try to write as complete of a test suite as | ||
possible, and use the coverage analysis tools as guide. If you have trouble | ||
writing a test please ask for help in your pull request. | ||
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Gazebo has a build target called `make coverage` that will produce a code | ||
coverage report. You'll need to have | ||
[lcov](http://ltp.sourceforge.net/coverage/lcov.php) and | ||
[gcov](https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Gcov.html) installed. | ||
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1. In your `build` folder, compile Gazebo with `-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Coverage` | ||
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cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Coverage ..\ | ||
make | ||
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1. Run a single test, or all the tests | ||
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make test | ||
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1. Make the coverage report | ||
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make coverage | ||
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1. View the coverage report | ||
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firefox coverage/index.html | ||
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## Gazebo assertions | ||
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### What is an assertion? | ||
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An assertion is a check, which always produces a boolean result, that | ||
developers place in the code when want to be sure that check is always true. | ||
They are aimed to detect programming errors and should check for impossible | ||
situations in the code. If the assertion check failed, the assertion will | ||
stop the program immediately. | ||
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Object * p = some_crazy_function() | ||
GZ_ASSERT(p != nullptr, "Object from some_crazy_function should never point to NULL") | ||
p->run() | ||
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### Gazebo runtime assertions: GZ_ASSERT | ||
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In Gazebo, the GZ_ASSERT macro id designed to handle all our runtime assertions | ||
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GZ_ASSERT(<condition to check>,<fail msg>) | ||
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* `condition-to-check`: anything returning a boolean value that should always be true. | ||
* `fail msg`: message displayed when assertion is thrown | ||
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### Benefits of the assertions | ||
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Some of the benefits of using the assertions: | ||
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* They are really useful for not having to debug all kind of weird and unexpected errors, especially in runtime. Exact failure point appears when pass by an assertion. | ||
* Developer can be sure that some conditions are met at a given code point. Code turns more reliable. | ||
* Help to detect no so obvious errors happening (affecting performance for example) | ||
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### Difference between Assertion and Exception | ||
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While assertions are aimed at impossible situations generated from | ||
programming errors, exceptions handle all kind of expected errors and unusual | ||
but logically possible code situations. | ||
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Lets review an example: suppose we are writing a math library and created a really fast method to calculate square roots but it only works for positive numbers. Something declared as: | ||
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double sqrt_for_positives(double number) | ||
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So what could be an assertion and what an exception for our revolutionary function? | ||
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* Exception: if the incoming number is negative (our function only accepts positive numbers), then we will thrown an exception. It was an error by the user but we should consider it a possible scenario since we are offering a public interface. | ||
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* Assertion: our square root should never return a negative number. This is not a logical error, it's a completely unexpected error. | ||
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## Debugging Gazebo | ||
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### Meaningful backtraces | ||
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In order to provide meaningful backtraces when using a debugger, such as GDB, Gazebo should be compiled with debugging support enabled. When using the ubuntu packages, specially the ''-dbg'' package, this support is limited but could be enough in most of the situations. This are the three level of traces which can be obtained: | ||
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**Maximum level of debugging support** | ||
:This only can be obtained compiling Gazebo from source and setting the `CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE` to `DEBUG`. This will set up no optimizations and debugging symbols. It can be required by developers in situations specially difficult to reproduce. | ||
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**Medium level of debugging support** | ||
:This can be obtained installing the ''gazebo-dbg'' package (since 1.4 version) or compiling Gazebo from source using the `RELWITHDEBINFO` `CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE` mode (which is the default if no mode is provided). This will set up ''-O2'' optimization level but provide debugging symbols. This should be the default when firing up gdb to explore errors and submit traces. | ||
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**Minimum level of debugging support** | ||
:This one is present in package versions previous to 1.4 (no ''-dbg'' package present) or compiling Gazebo from source using the `RELEASE` `CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE` option. This will set up the maximum level of optimizations and does not provide any debugging symbol information. This traces are particularly difficult to follow. | ||
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See [Gazebo's contribution guide](http://gazebosim.org/tutorials?tut=contrib_code&cat=development). |
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