-<!DOCTYPE Article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V3.1//EN">
+<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V3.1//EN"[
+<!entity % dummy "IGNORE">
+<!entity supported SYSTEM "supported.sgml">
+<!entity newfeatures SYSTEM "newfeatures.sgml">
+<!entity p-intro SYSTEM "privoxy.sgml">
+<!entity history SYSTEM "history.sgml">
+<!entity seealso SYSTEM "seealso.sgml">
+<!entity p-version "3.0.29">
+<!entity p-status "UNRELEASED">
+<!entity % p-not-stable "INCLUDE">
+<!entity % p-stable "IGNORE">
+<!entity % p-text "IGNORE"> <!-- define we are not a text only doc -->
+<!entity % p-doc "INCLUDE"> <!-- and we are a formal doc -->
+<!entity % seealso-extra "INCLUDE"> <!-- extra stuff from seealso.sgml -->
+<!entity my-copy "©"> <!-- kludge for docbook2man -->
+]>
<!--
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">
- File : $Source: /cvsroot/ijbswa/current/doc/webserver/faq.html,v $
+ File : doc/source/developer-manual.sgml
- Purpose : FAQ
- This file belongs into
- ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/home/groups/i/ij/ijbswa/htdocs/
-
- $Id: faq.html,v 1.3 2001/09/10 17:43:59 swa Exp $
+ Purpose : developer manual
- Written by and Copyright (C) 2001 the SourceForge
- IJBSWA team. http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net
+ Copyright (C) 2001-2020 Privoxy Developers https://www.privoxy.org/
+ See LICENSE.
+
+ ========================================================================
+ NOTE: Please read developer-manual/documentation.html before touching
+ anything in this, or other Privoxy documentation. You have been warned!
+ Failure to abide by this rule will result in the revocation of your license
+ to live a peaceful existence!
+ ========================================================================
- Based on the Internet Junkbuster originally written
- by and Copyright (C) 1997 Anonymous Coders and
- Junkbusters Corporation. http://www.junkbusters.com
-->
<article id="index">
-<artheader>
-<title>Junkbuster Developer Manual</title>
+ <artheader>
+ <title>Privoxy Developer Manual</title>
+ <pubdate>
+ <subscript>
+ <!-- Completely the wrong markup, but very little is allowed -->
+ <!-- in this part of an article. FIXME -->
+ <ulink url="https://www.privoxy.org/user-manual/copyright.html">Copyright</ulink>
+ &my-copy; 2001-2020 by
+ <ulink url="https://www.privoxy.org/">Privoxy Developers</ulink>
+ </subscript>
+ </pubdate>
-<pubdate>$Id: faq.html,v 1.3 2001/09/10 17:43:59 swa Exp $</pubdate>
+<!--
-<authorgroup>
- <author>
- <affiliation>
- <orgname>By: Junkbuster Developers</orgname>
- </affiliation>
- </author>
-</authorgroup>
+Note: this should generate a separate page, and a live link to it.
+But it doesn't for some mysterious reason. Please leave commented
+unless it can be fixed proper. For the time being, the copyright
+statement will be in copyright.smgl.
-<abstract>
- <para>
- The developer manual gives the users information on how to help the developer
-team. It provides guidance on coding, testing, documentation and other
-issues. The Internet Junkbuster is an application
-that provides privacy and security to the user of the world wide web.
- </para>
+Hal.
+
+<legalnotice id="legalnotice">
<para>
-You can find the latest version of the user manual at <ulink url="http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net/doc/developer-manual/">http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net/doc/developer-manual/</ulink>.
+ text goes here ........
</para>
+</legalnotice>
+
+-->
+
+ <abstract>
+<![%dummy;[
<para>
- Feel free to send a note to the developers at <email>ijbswa-developers@lists.sourceforge.net</email>.
+ <comment>
+ This is here to keep vim syntax file from breaking :/
+ If I knew enough to fix it, I would.
+ PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE! HB: hal@foobox.net
+ </comment>
</para>
-</abstract>
-</artheader>
-
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="introduction"><title>Introduction</title>
-<para>To be filled.
+ ]]>
+<para>
+ The developer manual provides guidance on coding, testing, packaging, documentation
+ and other issues of importance to those involved with
+ <application>Privoxy</application> development. It is mandatory (and helpful!) reading
+ for anyone who wants to join the team. Note that it's currently out of date
+ and may not be entirely correct. As always, patches are welcome.
</para>
-</sect1>
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="quickstart"><title>Quickstart to Junkbuster Development</title>
-<para>To be filled.
+<!-- Include privoxy.sgml boilerplate text: -->
+
+<!-- &p-intro; Someone interested enough in the project to contribute
+ will already know at this point what Privoxy is. -->
+
+<!-- end boilerplate -->
+
+<para>
+ Please note that this document is constantly evolving. This copy represents
+ the state at the release of version &p-version;.
+ You can find the latest version of the this manual at <ulink
+ url="https://www.privoxy.org/developer-manual/">https://www.privoxy.org/developer-manual/</ulink>.
+ Please have a look at the
+ <ulink url="https://www.privoxy.org/user-manual/contact.html">contact section in the user manual</ulink>
+ if you are interested in contacting the developers.
</para>
-</sect1>
+
+ </abstract>
+ </artheader>
+
<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect1 id="introduction"><title>Introduction</title>
+<!--
+
+ I don't like seeing blank space :) So added *something* here.
+
+ -->
+ <para>
+ <application>Privoxy</application>, as an heir to
+ <application>Junkbuster</application>, is a Free Software project
+ and the code is licensed under the GNU General Public License version 2.
+ As such, <application>Privoxy</application> development is potentially open
+ to anyone who has the time, knowledge, and desire to contribute
+ in any capacity. Our goals are simply to continue the mission,
+ to improve <application>Privoxy</application>, and
+ to make it available to as wide an audience as possible.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ One does not have to be a programmer to contribute. Packaging, testing,
+ documenting and porting, are all important jobs as well.
+ </para>
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect2 id="quickstart"><title>Quickstart to Privoxy Development</title>
+ <para>
+ The first step is to join the <ulink
+ url="https://lists.privoxy.org/mailman/listinfo/privoxy-devel">privoxy-devel mailing list</ulink>.
+ You can submit your ideas or, even better, patches. Patches are best
+ submitted to the Sourceforge tracker set up for this purpose, but
+ can be sent to the list for review too.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ You will also need to have a git package installed,
+ in order to access the git repository.
+ Having the GNU build tools is also going to be important (particularly,
+ autoconf and gmake).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For the time being (read, this section is under construction), you can
+ also refer to the extensive comments in the source code. In fact,
+ reading the code is recommended in any case.
+ </para>
+ </sect2>
+ </sect1>
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect1 id="git"><title>The Git Repository</title>
+ <para>
+ If you become part of the active development team, you will eventually
+ need write access to our holy grail, the Git repository. One of the
+ team members will need to set this up for you. Please read
+ this chapter completely before accessing via Git.
+ </para>
+
+ <sect2 id="gitaccess"><title>Access to Git</title>
+ <para>
+ The project's Git repository is hosted at the
+ <ulink url="https://privoxy.org/">Privoxy website</ulink>.
+ For Privoxy team members with push privileges the Git repository URL is
+ <literal>ssh://git@git.privoxy.org:23/git/privoxy.git</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Contributors without push privileges can
+ <quote>git clone https://www.privoxy.org/git/privoxy.git</quote>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The central repository is called <literal>privoxy</literal>, and the
+ source branch is called <literal>master</literal>. Subfolders exist
+ within the project for target-dependent build and packaging tools, each
+ including the name of the target operating system in their name (e.g.
+ Windows, OSXPackageBuilder, debian). There is a webview of the Git
+ hierarchy at
+ <ulink url="https://www.privoxy.org/gitweb/?p=privoxy.git;a=tree">
+ https://www.privoxy.org/gitweb/?p=privoxy.git;a=tree</ulink>,
+ which might help with visualizing how these pieces fit together.
+ </para>
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="gitbranches">
+ <title>Branches</title>
+ <para>
+ Whilst the central repository contains only the master branch, developers
+ are of course free to create branches in their local repositories as they
+ develop features, fixes, or update the target-dependent tools. Only once
+ such changes are fully tested ought they be pushed back to the central
+ repository master branch.
+ </para>
+ <!--
+ <para>
+ Branches are used to fork a sub-development path from the main trunk.
+ Within the <literal>current</literal> module where the sources are, there
+ is always at least one <quote>branch</quote> from the main trunk
+ devoted to a stable release series. The main trunk is where active
+ development takes place for the next stable series (e.g. 3.2.x).
+ So just prior to each stable series (e.g. 3.0.x), a branch is created
+ just for stable series releases (e.g. 3.0.0 -> 3.0.1 -> 3.0.2, etc).
+ Once the initial stable release of any stable branch has taken place,
+ this branch is <emphasis>only used for bugfixes</emphasis>, which have
+ had prior testing before being committed to Git. (See <link
+ linkend="versionnumbers">Version Numbers</link> below for details on
+ versioning.)
+ </para>
+ -->
+ <para>
+ At one time there were two distinct branches: stable and unstable. The
+ more drastic changes were to be in the unstable branch. These branches
+ have now been merged to minimize time and effort of maintaining two
+ branches.
+ </para>
+ <!--
+ <para>
+ This will result in at least two active branches, which means there may
+ be occasions that require the same (or similar) item to be
+ checked into to two different places (assuming its a bugfix and needs
+ fixing in both the stable and unstable trees). This also means that in
+ order to have access to both trees, both will have to be checked out
+ separately. Use the <literal>cvs -r</literal> flag to check out a
+ branch, e.g: <literal>cvs co -r v_3_0_branch current</literal>.
+ </para>
+ -->
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="gitcommit"><title>Git Commit Guidelines</title>
+ <para>
+ The source tree is the heart of every software project. Every effort must
+ be made to ensure that it is readable, compilable and consistent at all
+ times. <!-- There are differing guidelines for the stable branch and the
+ main development trunk, and --> We expect anyone with Git access to strictly
+ adhere to the following guidelines:
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Basic Guidelines, for all branches:
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Please don't commit even
+ a small change without testing it thoroughly first. When we're
+ close to a public release, ask a fellow developer to review your
+ changes.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Your commit message should give a concise overview of <emphasis>what you
+ changed</emphasis> (no big details) and <emphasis>why you changed it</emphasis>
+ Just check previous messages for good examples.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Don't use the same message on multiple files, unless it equally applies to
+ all those files.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ If your changes span multiple files, and the code won't recompile unless
+ all changes are committed (e.g. when changing the signature of a function),
+ then commit all files one after another, without long delays in between.
+ If necessary, prepare the commit messages in advance.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Before changing things on Git, make sure that your changes are in line
+ with the team's general consensus on what should be done.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Note that near a major public release, we get more cautious.
+ There is always the possibility to submit a patch to the <ulink
+ url="https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?atid=311118&group_id=11118&func=browse">patch
+ tracker</ulink> instead.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+<!--
+ <para>
+ Stable branches are handled with more care, especially after the
+ initial *.*.0 release, and we are just in bugfix mode. In addition to
+ the above, the below applies only to the stable branch (currently the
+ <literal>v_3_0_branch</literal> branch):
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not commit <emphasis>anything</emphasis> unless your proposed
+ changes have been well tested first, preferably by other members of the
+ project, or have prior approval of the project leaders or consensus
+ of the devel list.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Where possible, bugfixes and changes should be tested in the main
+ development trunk first. There may be occasions where this is not
+ feasible, though.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Alternately, proposed changes can be submitted as patches output by
+ <literal>git format-patch</literal> to the privoxy-devel mailing list
+ or alternatively to the patch tracker on Sourceforge:
+ <ulink url="https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=11118&atid=311118">
+ https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=11118&atid=311118</ulink>.
+ Then ask for peer review.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not even think about anything except bugfixes. No new features!
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+ -->
+ </sect2>
+
+ </sect1>
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
<sect1 id="documentation"><title>Documentation Guidelines</title>
-<para>
-All docs should be ...
-<ItemizedList>
- <ListItem>in a format that is widely used. I propose HTML.</ListItem>
- <ListItem>we either
- <ItemizedList>
- <ListItem>generate man pages from the documentation (let's _NOT_ write them manually), or </ListItem>
- <ListItem>we have a man page that points to the documentation (I propose</ListItem>
- this option)
- </ItemizedList></ListItem>
- <ListItem>have a consistent layout</ListItem>
- <ListItem>have a link to the latest version of the document (i.e. point to a URL at sf)</ListItem>
- <ListItem>be consistent with the redirect script (i.e. the junkbuster program
- points via the redirect URL at sf to valid end-points in the document)</ListItem>
- <ListItem>started from scratch but recycle parts from the original junkbuster documents</ListItem>
-</ItemizedList>
-</para>
-</sect1>
+ <para>
+ All formal documents are maintained in Docbook SGML and located in the
+ <computeroutput>doc/source/*</computeroutput> directory. You will need
+ <ulink url="http://www.docbook.org">Docbook</ulink>, the Docbook
+ DTD's and the Docbook modular stylesheets (or comparable alternatives),
+ and either <application>jade</application> or
+ <application>openjade</application> (recommended) installed in order to
+ build docs from source. Currently there is <ulink
+ url="../user-manual/index.html"><citetitle>user-manual</citetitle></ulink>,
+ <ulink url="../faq/index.html"><citetitle>FAQ</citetitle></ulink>, and, of
+ course this, the <citetitle>developer-manual</citetitle> in this format.
+ The <citetitle>README</citetitle>, <citetitle>AUTHORS</citetitle>,
+ <citetitle>INSTALL</citetitle>,
+ <citetitle>privoxy.1</citetitle> (man page), and
+ <citetitle>config</citetitle> files are also now maintained as Docbook
+ SGML. These files, when built, in the top-level source directory are
+ generated files! Also, the <application>Privoxy</application> <filename>index.html</filename> (and a
+ variation on this file, <filename>privoxy-index.html</filename>,
+ meant for inclusion with doc packages), are maintained as SGML as well.
+ <emphasis>DO NOT edit these directly</emphasis>. Edit the SGML source, or
+ contact someone involved in the documentation.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <filename>config</filename> requires some special handling. The reason it
+ is maintained this way is so that the extensive comments in the file
+ mirror those in <citetitle>user-manual</citetitle>. But the conversion
+ process requires going from SGML to HTML to text to special formatting
+ required for the embedded comments. Some of this does not survive so
+ well. Especially some of the examples that are longer than 80 characters.
+ The build process for this file outputs to <filename>config.new</filename>,
+ which should be reviewed for errors and mis-formatting. Once satisfied
+ that it is correct, then it should be hand copied to
+ <filename>config</filename>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Other, less formal documents (e.g. <filename>LICENSE</filename>) are
+ maintained as plain text files in the top-level source directory.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Packagers are encouraged to include this documentation. For those without
+ the ability to build the docs locally, text versions of each are kept in
+ Git. HTML versions are also being kept in Git under
+ <filename>doc/webserver/*</filename>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Formal documents are built with the Makefile targets of
+ <computeroutput>make dok</computeroutput>.
+ The build process uses the document SGML sources in
+ <computeroutput>doc/source/*/*</computeroutput> to update all text files in
+ <computeroutput>doc/text/</computeroutput> and to update all HTML
+ documents in <computeroutput>doc/webserver/</computeroutput>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Documentation writers should please make sure documents build
+ successfully before committing to Git, if possible.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ How do you update the webserver (i.e. the pages on privoxy.org)?
+ </para>
+
+ <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
+ <listitem><para>
+ First, build the docs by running <computeroutput>make
+ dok</computeroutput>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Run <computeroutput>make webserver</computeroutput> which copies all
+ files from <computeroutput>doc/webserver</computeroutput> to the
+ sourceforge webserver via scp.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </orderedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ Finished docs should be occasionally submitted to Git
+ (<filename>doc/webserver/*/*.html</filename>) so that those without
+ the ability to build them locally, have access to them if needed.
+ This is especially important just prior to a new release! Please
+ do this <emphasis>after</emphasis> the <literal>$VERSION</literal> and
+ other release specific data in <filename>configure.in</filename> has been
+ updated (this is done just prior to a new release).
+ </para>
<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="coding"><title>Coding Guidelines</title>
-<para>To be filled.
+<sect2 id="sgml">
+<title>Quickstart to Docbook and SGML</title>
+<para>
+ If you are not familiar with SGML, it is a markup language similar to HTML.
+ Actually, not a mark up language per se, but a language used to define
+ markup languages. In fact, HTML is an SGML application. Both will use
+ <quote>tags</quote> to format text and other content. SGML tags can be much
+ more varied, and flexible, but do much of the same kinds of things. The tags,
+ or <quote>elements</quote>, are definable in SGML. There is no set
+ <quote>standards</quote>. Since we are using
+ <application>Docbook</application>, our tags are those that are defined by
+ <application>Docbook</application>. Much of how the finish document is
+ rendered is determined by the <quote>stylesheets</quote>.
+ The stylesheets determine how each tag gets translated to HTML, or other
+ formats.
</para>
-</sect1>
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="testing"><title>Testing Guidelines</title>
-<para>To be filled.
+<para>
+ Tags in Docbook SGML need to be always <quote>closed</quote>. If not, you
+ will likely generate errors. Example: <literal><title>My
+ Title</title></literal>. They are also case-insensitive, but we
+ strongly suggest using all lower case. This keeps compatibility with
+ [Docbook] <application>XML</application>.
</para>
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect2 id="testing-plan"><title>Testplan for releases</title>
<para>
-<OrderedList Numeration="Arabic">
- <ListItem>
-Remove any existing rpm with rpm -e
-</ListItem>
- <ListItem>
-Remove any file that was left over. This includes (but is not limited to)
- <ItemizedList>
- <ListItem>/var/log/junkbuster</ListItem>
- <ListItem>/etc/junkbuster</ListItem>
- <ListItem>/usr/sbin/junkbuster</ListItem>
- <ListItem>/etc/init.d/junkbuster</ListItem>
- <ListItem>/usr/doc/junkbuster*</ListItem>
- </ItemizedList>
-</ListItem>
-<ListItem>
-Install the rpm. Any error messages?
-</ListItem>
- <ListItem>start,stop,status junkbuster with the specific script
- (e.g. /etc/rc.d/init/junkbuster stop). Reboot your machine. Does
- autostart work?</ListItem>
- <ListItem>Start browsing. Does the junkbuster work? Logfile written?</ListItem>
- <ListItem>Remove the rpm. Any error messages? All files removed?</ListItem>
-</OrderedList>
+ Our documents use <quote>sections</quote> for the most part. Sections
+ will be processed into HTML headers (e.g. <literal>h1</literal> for
+ <literal>sect1</literal>). The <application>Docbook</application> stylesheets
+ will use these to also generate the Table of Contents for each doc. Our
+ TOC's are set to a depth of three. Meaning <literal>sect1</literal>,
+ <literal>sect2</literal>, and <literal>sect3</literal> will have TOC
+ entries, but <literal>sect4</literal> will not. Each section requires
+ a <literal><title></literal> element, and at least one
+ <literal><para></literal>. There is a limit of five section
+ levels in Docbook, but generally three should be sufficient for our
+ purposes.
</para>
-</sect2>
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect2 id="testing-report"><title>Test reports</title>
<para>
-Please submit test reports only with the <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=add&group_id=11118&atid=395005">test form</ulink>
-at sourceforge. Three simple steps:
-<ItemizedList>
- <ListItem>Select category: the distribution you test on.</ListItem>
- <ListItem>Select group: the version of Junkbuster that we are about to release.</ListItem>
- <ListItem>Fill the Summary and Detailed Description with something intelligent (keep it short and precise).</ListItem>
-</ItemizedList>
-Do not mail to the mailinglist (we cannot keep track on issues there).
+ Some common elements that you likely will use:
</para>
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><para></para></emphasis>, paragraph delimiter. Most
+ text needs to be within paragraph elements (there are some exceptions).
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><emphasis></emphasis></emphasis>, the stylesheets
+ make this italics.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><filename></filename></emphasis>, files and directories.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><command></command></emphasis>, command examples.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><literallayout></literallayout></emphasis>, like
+ <literal><pre></literal>, more or less.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><itemizedlist></itemizedlist></emphasis>, list with bullets.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><listitem></listitem></emphasis>, member of the above.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><screen></screen></emphasis>, screen output, implies
+ <literal><literallayout></literal>.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><ulink url="example.com"></ulink></emphasis>, like
+ HTML <literal><a></literal> tag.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis><quote></quote></emphasis>, for, doh, quoting text.
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="contact"><title>Contact the developers</title>
-<para>Please see the user manual for information on how to contact the developers.
+<para>
+ Look at any of the existing docs for examples of all these and more.
</para>
-</sect1>
-<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="copyright"><title>Copyright and History</title>
-<para>To be filled.
+<para>
+ You might also find
+ <!-- <quote><ulink url="http://opensource.bureau-cornavin.com/crash-course/index.html">
+ domain no longer exists so link to the wayback archive -->
+ <quote><ulink url="https://web.archive.org/web/20160315230758/http://opensource.bureau-cornavin.com/crash-course/index.html">
+ Writing Documentation Using DocBook - A Crash Course</ulink></quote> useful.
</para>
-</sect1>
+</sect2>
<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
-<sect1 id="seealso"><title>See also</title>
-<para>To be filled.
+ <sect2 id="docstyle">
+ <title><application>Privoxy</application> Documentation Style</title>
+ <para>
+ It will be easier if everyone follows a similar writing style. This
+ just makes it easier to read what someone else has written if it
+ is all done in a similar fashion.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Here it is:
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All tags should be lower case.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Tags delimiting a <emphasis>block</emphasis> of text (even small
+ blocks) should be on their own line. Like:
+ </para>
+ <literallayout>
+ <para>
+ Some text goes here.
+ </para>
+</literallayout>
+ <para>
+ Tags marking individual words, or few words, should be in-line:
+ </para>
+ <literallayout>
+ Just to <emphasis>emphasize</emphasis>, some text goes here.
+</literallayout>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Tags should be nested and step indented for block text like: (except
+ in-line tags)
+ </para>
+ <literallayout>
+ <para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <para>
+ <listitem>
+ Some text goes here in our list example.
+ </listitem>
+ </para>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </para>
+</literallayout>
+ <para>
+ This makes it easier to find the text amongst the tags ;-)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Use white space to separate logical divisions within a document,
+ like between sections. Running everything together consistently
+ makes it harder to read and work on.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Do not hesitate to make comments. Comments can either use the
+ <comment> element, or the <!-- --> style comment
+ familiar from HTML. (Note in Docbook v4.x <comment> is
+ replaced by <remark>.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ We have an international audience. Refrain from slang, or English
+ idiosyncrasies (too many to list :). Humor also does not translate
+ well sometimes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Try to keep overall line lengths in source files to 80 characters or less
+ for obvious reasons. This is not always possible, with lengthy URLs for
+ instance.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Our documents are available in differing formats. Right now, they
+ are just plain text and/or HTML, but others are always a
+ future possibility. Be careful with URLs (<ulink>), and avoid
+ this mistake:
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ My favorite site is <ulink url="http://example.com">here</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This will render as <quote>My favorite site is here</quote>, which is
+ not real helpful in a text doc. Better like this:
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ My favorite site is <ulink url="http://example.com">example.com</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All documents should be spell checked occasionally.
+ <application>aspell</application> can check SGML with the
+ <literal>-H</literal> option. (<application>ispell</application> I think
+ too.)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+
+ <sect2><title>Privoxy Custom Entities</title>
+ <para>
+ <application>Privoxy</application> documentation is using
+ a number of customized <quote>entities</quote> to facilitate
+ documentation maintenance.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ We are using a set of <quote>boilerplate</quote> files with generic text,
+ that is used by multiple docs. This way we can write something once, and use
+ it repeatedly without having to re-write the same content over and over again.
+ If editing such a file, keep in mind that it should be
+ <emphasis>generic</emphasis>. That is the purpose; so it can be used in varying
+ contexts without additional modifications.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ We are also using what <application>Docbook</application> calls
+ <quote>internal entities</quote>. These are like variables in
+ programming. Well, sort of. For instance, we have the
+ <literal>p-version</literal> entity that contains the current
+ <application>Privoxy</application> version string. You are strongly
+ encouraged to use these where possible. Some of these obviously
+ require re-setting with each release (done by the Makefile). A sampling of
+ custom entities are listed below. See any of the main docs for examples.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Re- <quote>boilerplate</quote> text entities are defined like:
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal><!entity supported SYSTEM "supported.sgml"></literal>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In this example, the contents of the file,
+ <filename>supported.sgml</filename> is available for inclusion anywhere
+ in the doc. To make this happen, just reference the now defined
+ entity: <literal>&supported;</literal> (starts with an ampersand
+ and ends with a semi-colon), and the contents will be dumped into
+ the finished doc at that point.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Commonly used <quote>internal entities</quote>:
+ </para>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis>p-version</emphasis>: the <application>Privoxy</application>
+ version string, e.g. <quote>&p-version;</quote>.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis>p-status</emphasis>: the project status, either
+ <quote>alpha</quote>, <quote>beta</quote>, or <quote>stable</quote>.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis>p-not-stable</emphasis>: use to conditionally include
+ text in <quote>not stable</quote> releases (e.g. <quote>beta</quote>).
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis>p-stable</emphasis>: just the opposite.
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <emphasis>p-text</emphasis>: this doc is only generated as text.
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ <para>
+ There are others in various places that are defined for a specific
+ purpose. Read the source!
+ </para>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ </sect1>
+
+<!-- <listitem><para>be consistent with the redirect script (i.e. the <application>Privoxy</application> program -->
+<!-- points via the redirect URL at sf to valid end-points in the document)</para></listitem> -->
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect1 id="coding"><title>Coding Guidelines</title>
+
+ <sect2 id="s1"><title>Introduction</title>
+
+ <para>This set of standards is designed to make our lives easier. It is
+ developed with the simple goal of helping us keep the "new and improved
+ <application>Privoxy</application>" consistent and reliable. Thus making
+ maintenance easier and increasing chances of success of the
+ project.</para>
+
+ <para>And that of course comes back to us as individuals. If we can
+ increase our development and product efficiencies then we can solve more
+ of the request for changes/improvements and in general feel good about
+ ourselves. ;-></para>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="s2"><title>Using Comments</title>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s3"><title>Comment, Comment, Comment</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Comment as much as possible without commenting the obvious.
+ For example do not comment "variable_a is equal to variable_b".
+ Instead explain why variable_a should be equal to the variable_b.
+ Just because a person can read code does not mean they will
+ understand why or what is being done. A reader may spend a lot
+ more time figuring out what is going on when a simple comment
+ or explanation would have prevented the extra research. Please
+ help your fellow Privoxy developers out!</para>
+
+ <para>The comments will also help justify the intent of the code.
+ If the comment describes something different than what the code
+ is doing then maybe a programming error is occurring.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+/* if page size greater than 1k ... */
+if (page_length() > 1024)
+{
+ ... "block" the page up ...
+}
+
+/* if page size is small, send it in blocks */
+if (page_length() > 1024)
+{
+ ... "block" the page up ...
+}
+
+This demonstrates 2 cases of "what not to do". The first is a
+"syntax comment". The second is a comment that does not fit what
+is actually being done.
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s4"><title>Use blocks for comments</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Comments can help or they can clutter. They help when they
+ are differentiated from the code they describe. One line
+ comments do not offer effective separation between the comment
+ and the code. Block identifiers do, by surrounding the code
+ with a clear, definable pattern.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+/*********************************************************************
+ * This will stand out clearly in your code!
+ *********************************************************************/
+if (this_variable == that_variable)
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+}
+
+
+/* unfortunately, this may not */
+if (this_variable == that_variable)
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+}
+
+
+if (this_variable == that_variable) /* this may not either */
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+}</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Exception:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>If you are trying to add a small logic comment and do not
+ wish to "disrupt" the flow of the code, feel free to use a 1
+ line comment which is NOT on the same line as the code.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s5"><title>Keep Comments on their own line</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>It goes back to the question of readability. If the comment
+ is on the same line as the code it will be harder to read than
+ the comment that is on its own line.</para>
+
+ <para>There are three exceptions to this rule, which should be
+ violated freely and often: during the definition of variables,
+ at the end of closing braces, when used to comment
+ parameters.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+/*********************************************************************
+ * This will stand out clearly in your code,
+ * But the second example won't.
+ *********************************************************************/
+if (this_variable == this_variable)
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+}
+
+if (this_variable == this_variable) /*can you see me?*/
+{
+ do_something_very_important(); /*not easily*/
+}
+
+
+/*********************************************************************
+ * But, the encouraged exceptions:
+ *********************************************************************/
+int urls_read = 0; /* # of urls read + rejected */
+int urls_rejected = 0; /* # of urls rejected */
+
+if (1 == X)
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+}
+
+
+short do_something_very_important(
+ short firstparam, /* represents something */
+ short nextparam /* represents something else */ )
+{
+ ...code here...
+
+} /* -END- do_something_very_important */
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s6"><title>Comment each logical step</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Logical steps should be commented to help others follow the
+ intent of the written code and comments will make the code more
+ readable.</para>
+
+ <para>If you have 25 lines of code without a comment, you should
+ probably go back into it to see where you forgot to put
+ one.</para>
+
+ <para>Most "for", "while", "do", etc... loops _probably_ need a
+ comment. After all, these are usually major logic
+ containers.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s7"><title>Comment All Functions Thoroughly</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>A reader of the code should be able to look at the comments
+ just prior to the beginning of a function and discern the
+ reason for its existence and the consequences of using it. The
+ reader should not have to read through the code to determine if
+ a given function is safe for a desired use. The proper
+ information thoroughly presented at the introduction of a
+ function not only saves time for subsequent maintenance or
+ debugging, it more importantly aids in code reuse by allowing a
+ user to determine the safety and applicability of any function
+ for the problem at hand. As a result of such benefits, all
+ functions should contain the information presented in the
+ addendum section of this document.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s8"><title>Comment at the end of braces if the
+ content is more than one screen length</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Each closing brace should be followed on the same line by a
+ comment that describes the origination of the brace if the
+ original brace is off of the screen, or otherwise far away from
+ the closing brace. This will simplify the debugging,
+ maintenance, and readability of the code.</para>
+
+ <para>As a suggestion , use the following flags to make the
+ comment and its brace more readable:</para>
+
+ <para>use following a closing brace: } /* -END- if() or while ()
+ or etc... */</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+if (1 == X)
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+ ...some long list of commands...
+} /* -END- if x is 1 */
+
+or:
+
+if (1 == X)
+{
+ do_something_very_important();
+ ...some long list of commands...
+} /* -END- if (1 == X) */
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="s9"><title>Naming Conventions</title>
+
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s10"><title>Variable Names</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Use all lowercase, and separate words via an underscore
+ ('_'). Do not start an identifier with an underscore. (ANSI C
+ reserves these for use by the compiler and system headers.) Do
+ not use identifiers which are reserved in ANSI C++. (E.g.
+ template, class, true, false, ...). This is in case we ever
+ decide to port Privoxy to C++.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+int ms_iis5_hack = 0;</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+<programlisting>
+int msiis5hack = 0; int msIis5Hack = 0;
+</programlisting>
+
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="s11"><title>Function Names</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Use all lowercase, and separate words via an underscore
+ ('_'). Do not start an identifier with an underscore. (ANSI C
+ reserves these for use by the compiler and system headers.) Do
+ not use identifiers which are reserved in ANSI C++. (E.g.
+ template, class, true, false, ...). This is in case we ever
+ decide to port Privoxy to C++.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+int load_some_file(struct client_state *csp)</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+<programlisting>
+int loadsomefile(struct client_state *csp)
+int loadSomeFile(struct client_state *csp)
+</programlisting>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s12"><title>Header file prototypes</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Use a descriptive parameter name in the function prototype
+ in header files. Use the same parameter name in the header file
+ that you use in the c file.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+(.h) extern int load_aclfile(struct client_state *csp);
+(.c) int load_aclfile(struct client_state *csp)</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+(.h) extern int load_aclfile(struct client_state *); or
+(.h) extern int load_aclfile();
+(.c) int load_aclfile(struct client_state *csp)
+</programlisting>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s13"><title>Enumerations, and #defines</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Use all capital letters, with underscores between words. Do
+ not start an identifier with an underscore. (ANSI C reserves
+ these for use by the compiler and system headers.)</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+(enumeration) : enum Boolean {FALSE, TRUE};
+(#define) : #define DEFAULT_SIZE 100;</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> We have a standard naming scheme for #defines
+ that toggle a feature in the preprocessor: FEATURE_>, where
+ > is a short (preferably 1 or 2 word) description.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+#define FEATURE_FORCE 1
+
+#ifdef FEATURE_FORCE
+#define FORCE_PREFIX blah
+#endif /* def FEATURE_FORCE */
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s14"><title>Constants</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Spell common words out entirely (do not remove vowels).</para>
+
+ <para>Use only widely-known domain acronyms and abbreviations.
+ Capitalize all letters of an acronym.</para>
+
+ <para>Use underscore (_) to separate adjacent acronyms and
+ abbreviations. Never terminate a name with an underscore.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+#define USE_IMAGE_LIST 1</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+<programlisting>
+#define USE_IMG_LST 1 or
+#define _USE_IMAGE_LIST 1 or
+#define USE_IMAGE_LIST_ 1 or
+#define use_image_list 1 or
+#define UseImageList 1
+</programlisting>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+
+ <sect2 id="s15"><title>Using Space</title>
+
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s16"><title>Put braces on a line by themselves.</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>The brace needs to be on a line all by itself, not at the
+ end of the statement. Curly braces should line up with the
+ construct that they're associated with. This practice makes it
+ easier to identify the opening and closing braces for a
+ block.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+if (this == that)
+{
+ ...
+}</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>if (this == that) { ... }</para>
+
+ <para>or</para>
+
+ <para>if (this == that) { ... }</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> In the special case that the if-statement is
+ inside a loop, and it is trivial, i.e. it tests for a
+ condition that is obvious from the purpose of the block,
+ one-liners as above may optically preserve the loop structure
+ and make it easier to read.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example exception:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+while (more lines are read)
+{
+ /* Please document what is/is not a comment line here */
+ if (it's a comment) continue;
+
+ do_something(line);
+}
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s17"><title>ALL control statements should have a
+ block</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Using braces to make a block will make your code more
+ readable and less prone to error. All control statements should
+ have a block defined.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+if (this == that)
+{
+ do_something();
+ do_something_else();
+}</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>if (this == that) do_something(); do_something_else();</para>
+
+ <para>or</para>
+
+ <para>if (this == that) do_something();</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The first example in "Instead of" will execute
+ in a manner other than that which the developer desired (per
+ indentation). Using code braces would have prevented this
+ "feature". The "explanation" and "exception" from the point
+ above also applies.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s18"><title>Do not belabor/blow-up boolean
+ expressions</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+structure->flag = (condition);</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>if (condition) { structure->flag = 1; } else {
+ structure->flag = 0; }</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The former is readable and concise. The later
+ is wordy and inefficient. Please assume that any developer new
+ to the project has at least a "good" knowledge of C/C++. (Hope
+ I do not offend by that last comment ... 8-)</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s19"><title>Use white space freely because it is
+ free</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Make it readable. The notable exception to using white space
+ freely is listed in the next guideline.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+int first_value = 0;
+int some_value = 0;
+int another_value = 0;
+int this_variable = 0;
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s20"><title>Don't use white space around structure
+ operators</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>- structure pointer operator ( "->" ) - member operator (
+ "." ) - functions and parentheses</para>
+
+ <para>It is a general coding practice to put pointers, references,
+ and function parentheses next to names. With spaces, the
+ connection between the object and variable/function name is not
+ as clear.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+a_struct->a_member;
+a_struct.a_member;
+function_name();</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis> a_struct -> a_member; a_struct . a_member;
+ function_name ();</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s21"><title>Make the last brace of a function stand
+ out</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+int function1( ... )
+{
+ ...code...
+ return(ret_code);
+
+} /* -END- function1 */
+
+
+int function2( ... )
+{
+} /* -END- function2 */
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>int function1( ... ) { ...code... return(ret_code); } int
+ function2( ... ) { }</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> Use 1 blank line before the closing brace and 2
+ lines afterward. This makes the end of function standout to
+ the most casual viewer. Although function comments help
+ separate functions, this is still a good coding practice. In
+ fact, I follow these rules when using blocks in "for", "while",
+ "do" loops, and long if {} statements too. After all whitespace
+ is free!</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion on the number of blank
+ lines. Enforced is the end of function comments.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s22"><title>Use 3 character indentions</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>If some use 8 character TABs and some use 3 character TABs,
+ the code can look *very* ragged. So use 3 character indentions
+ only. If you like to use TABs, pass your code through a filter
+ such as "expand -t3" before checking in your code.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+static const char * const url_code_map[256] =
+{
+ NULL, ...
+};
+
+
+int function1( ... )
+{
+ if (1)
+ {
+ return ALWAYS_TRUE;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ return HOW_DID_YOU_GET_HERE;
+ }
+
+ return NEVER_GETS_HERE;
+
+}
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+
+ <sect2 id="s23"><title>Initializing</title>
+
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s24"><title>Initialize all variables</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Do not assume that the variables declared will not be used
+ until after they have been assigned a value somewhere else in
+ the code. Remove the chance of accidentally using an unassigned
+ variable.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+short a_short = 0;
+float a_float = 0;
+struct *ptr = NULL;</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> It is much easier to debug a SIGSEGV if the
+ message says you are trying to access memory address 00000000
+ and not 129FA012; or array_ptr[20] causes a SIGSEV vs.
+ array_ptr[0].</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion if and only if the
+ variable is assigned a value "shortly after" declaration.</para>
+
+ </sect3>
+ </sect2>
+
+
+ <sect2 id="s25"><title>Functions</title>
+
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s26"><title>Name functions that return a boolean as a
+ question.</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Value should be phrased as a question that would logically
+ be answered as a true or false statement</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+should_we_block_this();
+contains_an_image();
+is_web_page_blank();
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s27"><title>Always specify a return type for a
+ function.</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>The default return for a function is an int. To avoid
+ ambiguity, create a return for a function when the return has a
+ purpose, and create a void return type if the function does not
+ need to return anything.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s28"><title>Minimize function calls when iterating by
+ using variables</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>It is easy to write the following code, and a clear argument
+ can be made that the code is easy to understand:</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+for (size_t cnt = 0; cnt < block_list_length(); cnt++)
+{
+ ....
+}</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> Unfortunately, this makes a function call for
+ each and every iteration. This increases the overhead in the
+ program, because the compiler has to look up the function each
+ time, call it, and return a value. Depending on what occurs in
+ the block_list_length() call, it might even be creating and
+ destroying structures with each iteration, even though in each
+ case it is comparing "cnt" to the same value, over and over.
+ Remember too - even a call to block_list_length() is a function
+ call, with the same overhead.</para>
+
+ <para>Instead of using a function call during the iterations,
+ assign the value to a variable, and evaluate using the
+ variable.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+size_t len = block_list_length();
+
+for (size_t cnt = 0; cnt < len; cnt++)
+{
+ ....
+}</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Exceptions:</emphasis> if the value of block_list_length()
+ *may* change or could *potentially* change, then you must code the
+ function call in the for/while loop.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s29"><title>Pass and Return by Const Reference</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>This allows a developer to define a const pointer and call
+ your function. If your function does not have the const
+ keyword, we may not be able to use your function. Consider
+ strcmp, if it were defined as: extern int strcmp(char *s1,
+ char *s2);</para>
+
+ <para>I could then not use it to compare argv's in main: int
+ main(int argc, const char *argv[]) { strcmp(argv[0], "privoxy");
+ }</para>
+
+ <para>Both these pointers are *const*! If the c runtime library
+ maintainers do it, we should too.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s30"><title>Pass and Return by Value</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Most structures cannot fit onto a normal stack entry (i.e.
+ they are not 4 bytes or less). Aka, a function declaration
+ like: int load_aclfile(struct client_state csp)</para>
+
+ <para>would not work. So, to be consistent, we should declare all
+ prototypes with "pass by value": int load_aclfile(struct
+ client_state *csp)</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s31"><title>Names of include files</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Your include statements should contain the file name without
+ a path. The path should be listed in the Makefile, using -I as
+ processor directive to search the indicated paths. An exception
+ to this would be for some proprietary software that utilizes a
+ partial path to distinguish their header files from system or
+ other header files.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+#include <iostream.h> /* This is not a local include */
+#include "config.h" /* This IS a local include */
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Exception:</emphasis></para>
+
+<programlisting>
+/* This is not a local include, but requires a path element. */
+#include <sys/fileName.h>
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> Please! do not add "-I." to the Makefile
+ without a _very_ good reason. This duplicates the #include
+ "file.h" behavior.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s32"><title>Provide multiple inclusion
+ protection</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Prevents compiler and linker errors resulting from
+ redefinition of items.</para>
+
+ <para>Wrap each header file with the following syntax to prevent
+ multiple inclusions of the file. Of course, replace PROJECT_H
+ with your file name, with "." Changed to "_", and make it
+ uppercase.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+#ifndef PROJECT_H_INCLUDED
+#define PROJECT_H_INCLUDED
+ ...
+#endif /* ndef PROJECT_H_INCLUDED */
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s33"><title>Use `extern "C"` when appropriate</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>If our headers are included from C++, they must declare our
+ functions as `extern "C"`. This has no cost in C, but increases
+ the potential re-usability of our code.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+extern "C"
+{
+#endif /* def __cplusplus */
+
+... function definitions here ...
+
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+}
+#endif /* def __cplusplus */
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s34"><title>Where Possible, Use Forward Struct
+ Declaration Instead of Includes</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Useful in headers that include pointers to other struct's.
+ Modifications to excess header files may cause needless
+ compiles.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+/*********************************************************************
+ * We're avoiding an include statement here!
+ *********************************************************************/
+struct file_list;
+extern file_list *xyz;</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If you declare "file_list xyz;" (without the
+ pointer), then including the proper header file is necessary.
+ If you only want to prototype a pointer, however, the header
+ file is unnecessary.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> Use with discretion.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="s35"><title>General Coding Practices</title>
+
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s36"><title>Turn on warnings</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Compiler warnings are meant to help you find bugs. You
+ should turn on as many as possible. With GCC, the switch is
+ "-Wall". Try and fix as many warnings as possible.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s37"><title>Provide a default case for all switch
+ statements</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>What you think is guaranteed is never really guaranteed. The
+ value that you don't think you need to check is the one that
+ someday will be passed. So, to protect yourself from the
+ unknown, always have a default step in a switch statement.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+switch (hash_string(cmd))
+{
+ case hash_actions_file:
+ ... code ...
+ break;
+
+ case hash_confdir:
+ ... code ...
+ break;
+
+ default:
+ log_error( ... );
+ ... anomaly code goes here ...
+ continue; / break; / exit( 1 ); / etc ...
+
+} /* end switch (hash_string(cmd)) */</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If you already have a default condition, you
+ are obviously exempt from this point. Of note, most of the
+ WIN32 code calls `DefWindowProc' after the switch statement.
+ This API call *should* be included in a default statement.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Another Note:</emphasis> This is not so much a readability issue
+ as a robust programming issue. The "anomaly code goes here" may
+ be no more than a print to the STDERR stream (as in
+ load_config). Or it may really be an abort condition.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> Programmer discretion is advised.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s38"><title>Try to avoid falling through cases in a
+ switch statement.</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>In general, you will want to have a 'break' statement within
+ each 'case' of a switch statement. This allows for the code to
+ be more readable and understandable, and furthermore can
+ prevent unwanted surprises if someone else later gets creative
+ and moves the code around.</para>
+
+ <para>The language allows you to plan the fall through from one
+ case statement to another simply by omitting the break
+ statement within the case statement. This feature does have
+ benefits, but should only be used in rare cases. In general,
+ use a break statement for each case statement.</para>
+
+ <para>If you choose to allow fall through, you should comment both
+ the fact of the fall through and reason why you felt it was
+ necessary.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s40"><title>Don't mix size_t and other types</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>The type of size_t varies across platforms. Do not make
+ assumptions about whether it is signed or unsigned, or about
+ how long it is. Do not compare a size_t against another
+ variable of a different type (or even against a constant)
+ without casting one of the values.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s41"><title>Declare each variable and struct on its
+ own line.</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>It can be tempting to declare a series of variables all on
+ one line. Don't.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+long a = 0;
+long b = 0;
+long c = 0;</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Instead of:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>long a, b, c;</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis> - there is more room for comments on the
+ individual variables - easier to add new variables without
+ messing up the original ones - when searching on a variable to
+ find its type, there is less clutter to "visually"
+ eliminate</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Exceptions:</emphasis> when you want to declare a bunch of loop
+ variables or other trivial variables; feel free to declare them
+ on one line. You should, although, provide a good comment on
+ their functions.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s42"><title>Use malloc/zalloc sparingly</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>Create a local struct (on the stack) if the variable will
+ live and die within the context of one function call.</para>
+
+ <para>Only "malloc" a struct (on the heap) if the variable's life
+ will extend beyond the context of one function call.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+If a function creates a struct and stores a pointer to it in a
+list, then it should definitely be allocated via `malloc'.
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s43"><title>The Programmer Who Uses 'malloc' is
+ Responsible for Ensuring 'free'</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>If you have to "malloc" an instance, you are responsible for
+ insuring that the instance is `free'd, even if the deallocation
+ event falls within some other programmer's code. You are also
+ responsible for ensuring that deletion is timely (i.e. not too
+ soon, not too late). This is known as "low-coupling" and is a
+ "good thing (tm)". You may need to offer a
+ free/unload/destructor type function to accommodate this.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+int load_re_filterfile(struct client_state *csp) { ... }
+static void unload_re_filterfile(void *f) { ... }</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Exceptions:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>The developer cannot be expected to provide `free'ing
+ functions for C run-time library functions ... such as
+ `strdup'.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Status:</emphasis> developer-discretion. The "main" use of this
+ standard is for allocating and freeing data structures (complex
+ or nested).</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s44"><title>Add loaders to the `file_list' structure
+ and in order</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>I have ordered all of the "blocker" file code to be in alpha
+ order. It is easier to add/read new blockers when you expect a
+ certain order.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> It may appear that the alpha order is broken in
+ places by POPUP tests coming before PCRS tests. But since
+ POPUPs can also be referred to as KILLPOPUPs, it is clear that
+ it should come first.</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+
+ <sect3 id="s45"><title>"Uncertain" new code and/or changes to
+ existing code, use XXX</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Explanation:</emphasis></para>
+
+ <para>If you have enough confidence in new code or confidence in
+ your changes, but are not *quite* sure of the repercussions,
+ add this:</para>
+
+ <para>/* XXX: this code has a logic error on platform XYZ, *
+ attempting to fix */ #ifdef PLATFORM ...changed code here...
+ #endif</para>
+
+ <para>or:</para>
+
+ <para>/* XXX: I think the original author really meant this...
+ */ ...changed code here...</para>
+
+ <para>or:</para>
+
+ <para>/* XXX: new code that *may* break something else... */
+ ...new code here...</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If you make it clear that this may or may not
+ be a "good thing (tm)", it will be easier to identify and
+ include in the project (or conversely exclude from the
+ project).</para>
+
+
+ </sect3>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="s46"><title>Addendum: Template for files and function
+ comment blocks:</title>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example for file comments:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+/*********************************************************************
+ *
+ * File : $Source
+ *
+ * Purpose : (Fill me in with a good description!)
+ *
+ * Copyright : Written by and Copyright (C) 2001-2009
+ * the Privoxy team. https://www.privoxy.org/
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it
+ * and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
+ * Public License as published by the Free Software
+ * Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
+ * your option) any later version.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will
+ * be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
+ * implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
+ * PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
+ * License for more details.
+ *
+ * The GNU General Public License should be included with
+ * this file. If not, you can view it at
+ * http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html
+ * or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
+ * 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 ,
+ * USA
+ *
+ *********************************************************************/
+
+
+#include "config.h"
+
+ ...necessary include files for us to do our work...
+
+const char FILENAME_h_rcs[] = FILENAME_H_VERSION;
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> This declares the rcs variables that should be
+ added to the "show-version" page. If this is a brand new
+ creation by you, you are free to change the "Copyright" section
+ to represent the rights you wish to maintain.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The formfeed character that is present right
+ after the comment flower box is handy for (X|GNU)Emacs users to
+ skip the verbiage and get to the heart of the code (via
+ `forward-page' and `backward-page'). Please include it if you
+ can.</para>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example for file header comments:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+#ifndef _FILENAME_H
+#define _FILENAME_H
+/*********************************************************************
+ *
+ * File : $Source
+ *
+ * Purpose : (Fill me in with a good description!)
+ *
+ * Copyright : Written by and Copyright (C) 2001-2009
+ * the Privoxy team. https://www.privoxy.org/
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it
+ * and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
+ * Public License as published by the Free Software
+ * Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
+ * your option) any later version.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will
+ * be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
+ * implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
+ * PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
+ * License for more details.
+ *
+ * The GNU General Public License should be included with
+ * this file. If not, you can view it at
+ * http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html
+ * or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
+ * 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 ,
+ * USA
+ *
+ *********************************************************************/
+
+
+#include "project.h"
+
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+extern "C" {
+#endif
+
+ ... function headers here ...
+
+
+/* Revision control strings from this header and associated .c file */
+extern const char FILENAME_rcs[];
+extern const char FILENAME_h_rcs[];
+
+
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+} /* extern "C" */
+#endif
+
+#endif /* ndef _FILENAME_H */
+
+/*
+ Local Variables:
+ tab-width: 3
+ end:
+*/
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Example for function comments:</emphasis></para>
+<programlisting>
+/*********************************************************************
+ *
+ * Function : FUNCTION_NAME
+ *
+ * Description : (Fill me in with a good description!)
+ *
+ * parameters :
+ * 1 : param1 = pointer to an important thing
+ * 2 : x = pointer to something else
+ *
+ * Returns : 0 => Ok, everything else is an error.
+ *
+ *********************************************************************/
+int FUNCTION_NAME(void *param1, const char *x)
+{
+ ...
+ return 0;
+
+}
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> If we all follow this practice, we should be
+ able to parse our code to create a "self-documenting" web
+ page.</para>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ </sect1>
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect1 id="testing"><title>Testing Guidelines</title>
+ <para>To be filled.
</para>
-</sect1>
-
-<!-- hhmts end -->
- <!--
- Tue 09/11/01 06:38:14 PM EST: Test SGML doc by Hal Burgiss.
-
- Last modified: Mon Sep 10 19:22:09 CEST 2001
-
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it
- and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
- Public License as published by the Free Software
- Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
- your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will
- be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
- implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
- PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
- License for more details.
-
- The GNU General Public License should be included with
- this file. If not, you can view it at
- http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
- or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
- Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
-
-$Log: faq.html,v $
-Revision 1.3 2001/09/10 17:43:59 swa
-first proposal of a structure.
-
-Revision 1.2 2001/06/13 14:28:31 swa
-docs should have an author.
-
-Revision 1.1 2001/06/13 14:20:37 swa
-first import of project's documentation for the webserver.
--->
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect2 id="testing-plan"><title>Testplan for releases</title>
+ <para>
+ Explain release numbers. major, minor. developer releases. etc.
+ </para>
+<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
+ <listitem><para>
+Remove any existing rpm with rpm -e
+</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+Remove any file that was left over. This includes (but is not limited to)
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>/var/log/privoxy</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>/etc/privoxy</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>/usr/sbin/privoxy</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>/etc/init.d/privoxy</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>/usr/doc/privoxy*</para></listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+Install the rpm. Any error messages?
+</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>start,stop,status <application>Privoxy</application> with the specific script
+ (e.g. /etc/rc.d/init/privoxy stop). Reboot your machine. Does
+ autostart work?</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>Start browsing. Does <application>Privoxy</application> work? Logfile written?</para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>Remove the rpm. Any error messages? All files removed?</para></listitem>
+ </orderedlist>
+ </sect2>
+ <!-- XXX: Document how to write test reports and where to send them -->
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect2 id="fuzzing"><title>Fuzzing Privoxy</title>
+ <para>
+ To make fuzzing more convenient, Privoxy can be configured
+ with --enable-fuzz which will result in the --fuzz option
+ becoming available.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Example (tested on ElectroBSD):
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+# Compile Privoxy with instrumentation for afl
+$ export CC=afl-clang
+$ export CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -ggdb"
+$ export CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/local/include/
+$ export LDFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -L/usr/local/lib"
+$ export AFL_USE_ASAN=1
+$ export AFL_HARDEN=1
+$ ./configure --with-debug --enable-extended-host-patterns --enable-accept-filter --enable-no-gifs --enable-compression --enable-strptime-sanity-checks --enable-external-filters --enable-fuzz
+
+$ ./privoxy --fuzz
+Privoxy version 3.0.24 (http://www.privoxy.org/)
+Usage: ./privoxy [--config-test] [--chroot] [--help] [--no-daemon] [--pidfile pidfile] [--pre-chroot-nslookup hostname] [--user user[.group]] [--version] [configfile]
+ ./privoxy --fuzz fuzz-mode ./path/to/fuzzed/input [--stfu]
+
+Supported fuzz modes and the expected input:
+ action: Text to parse as action file.
+ client-request: Client request to parse. Currently incomplete
+ client-header: Client header to parse.
+ chunked-transfer-encoding: Chunk-encoded data to dechunk.
+ deflate: deflate-compressed data to decompress.
+ filter: Text to parse as filter file.
+ gif: gif to deanimate.
+ gzip: gzip-compressed data to decompress.
+ pcrs-substitute: A pcrs-substitute to compile. Not a whole pcrs job! Example: Bla $1 bla C $3 blah.
+ server-header: Server header to parse.
+ server-response: Server response to parse.
+
+The following fuzz modes read data from stdin if the 'file' is '-'
+ client-request
+ client-header
+ chunked-transfer-encoding
+ deflate
+ gif
+ gzip
+ pcrs-substitute
+ server-header
+ server-response
+
+Aborting
+
+$ export ASAN_OPTIONS='abort_on_error=1'
+$ mkdir input output
+$ echo '$1 bla fasel $2' > input/pcrs
+$ afl-fuzz -i input -o output -m none ~/git/privoxy/privoxy --fuzz pcrs-substitute - --stfu
+
+$ cat >input/pcrs.txt
+FILTER: bla fasel
+s@(.{1})[432](\d+)@$1$2$hostname@UgisT
+
+$ afl-fuzz -i input/ -o output/ -f bla.filter -m none privoxy --fuzz filter bla.filter --stfu
+</programlisting>
+ </sect2>
+ </sect1>
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect1 id="newrelease"><title>Releasing a New Version</title>
+ <para>
+ When we release versions of <application>Privoxy</application>,
+ our work leaves our cozy secret lab and has to work in the cold
+ RealWorld[tm]. Once it is released, there is no way to call it
+ back, so it is very important that great care is taken to ensure
+ that everything runs fine, and not to introduce problems in the
+ very last minute.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ So when releasing a new version, please adhere exactly to the
+ procedure outlined in this chapter.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The following programs are required to follow this process:
+ <filename>ncftpput</filename> (ncftp), <filename>scp, ssh</filename> (ssh),
+ <filename>gmake</filename> (GNU's version of make), autoconf, cvs.
+ </para>
+
+ <sect2 id="versionnumbers">
+ <title>Version numbers</title>
+
+ <para>
+ First you need to determine which version number the release will have.
+ <application>Privoxy</application> version numbers consist of three numbers,
+ separated by dots, like in X.Y.Z (e.g. 3.0.0), where:
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ X, the version major, is rarely ever changed. It is increased by one if
+ turning a development branch into stable substantially changes the functionality,
+ user interface or configuration syntax. Majors 1 and 2 were
+ <application>Junkbuster</application>, and 3 will be the first stable
+ <application>Privoxy</application> release.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <!-- FIXME this is not the way it works anymore -->
+ Y, the version minor, represents the branch within the major version.
+ At any point in time, there are two branches being maintained:
+ The stable branch, with an even minor, say, 2N, in which no functionality is
+ being added and only bug-fixes are made, and 2N+1, the development branch, in
+ which the further development of <application>Privoxy</application> takes
+ place.
+ This enables us to turn the code upside down and inside out, while at the same time
+ providing and maintaining a stable version.
+ The minor is reset to zero (and one) when the major is incremented. When a development
+ branch has matured to the point where it can be turned into stable, the old stable branch
+ 2N is given up (i.e. no longer maintained), the former development branch 2N+1 becomes the
+ new stable branch 2N+2, and a new development branch 2N+3 is opened.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Z, the point or sub version, represents a release of the software within a branch.
+ It is therefore incremented immediately after each software release.
+ <!-- FIXME this is not the way it works any more
+ In development branches, only the even point versions correspond to actual releases,
+ while the odd ones denote the evolving state of the sources on Git in between.
+ It follows that Z is odd on Git in development branches most of the time. There, it gets
+ increased to an even number immediately before a code freeze, and is increased to an odd
+ number again immediately thereafter.
+ This ensures that builds from Git snapshots are easily distinguished from released versions.
+ didn't Fabian get rid of the even=stable, odd=dev convention for release numbering? -->
+ The point version is reset to zero when the minor changes.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Stable branches work a little differently, since there should be
+ little to no development happening in such branches. Remember,
+ only bugfixes, which presumably should have had some testing
+ before being committed. Stable branches will then have their
+ version reported as <literal>0.0.0</literal>, during that period
+ between releases when changes are being added. This is to denote
+ that this code is <emphasis>not for release</emphasis>. Then
+ as the release nears, the version is bumped according: e.g.
+ <literal>3.0.1 -> 0.0.0 -> 3.0.2</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ <para>
+ In summary, the main Git trunk is the development branch where new
+ features are being worked on for the next stable series. This should
+ almost always be where the most activity takes place. There is always at
+ least one stable branch from the trunk, e.g now it is
+ <literal>3.0</literal>, which is only used to release stable versions.
+ Once the initial *.0 release of the stable branch has been done, then as a
+ rule, only bugfixes that have had prior testing should be committed to
+ the stable branch. Once there are enough bugfixes to justify a new
+ release, the version of this branch is again incremented Example: 3.0.0
+ -> 3.0.1 -> 3.0.2, etc are all stable releases from within the stable
+ branch. 3.1.x is currently the main trunk, and where work on 3.2.x is
+ taking place. If any questions, please post to the devel list
+ <emphasis>before</emphasis> committing to a stable branch!
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Developers should remember too that if they commit a bugfix to the stable
+ branch, this will more than likely require a separate submission to the
+ main trunk, since these are separate development trees within Git. If you
+ are working on both, then this would require at least two separate check
+ outs (i.e main trunk, <emphasis>and</emphasis> the stable release branch,
+ which is <literal>v_3_0_branch</literal> at the moment).
+ </para>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="beforerelease">
+ <title>Before the Release</title>
+ <para>
+ The following <emphasis>must be done by one of the
+ developers</emphasis> prior to each new release.
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Make sure that everybody who has worked on the code in the last
+ couple of days has had a chance to yell <quote>no!</quote> in case
+ they have pending changes/fixes in their pipelines. Announce the
+ freeze so that nobody will interfere with last minute changes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Update the code status (CODE_STATUS="xxx") in configure.in to one of
+ "alpha", "beta" or "stable".
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Rebuild configure and GNUMakefile to make sure the updated values are being used.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+$ autoheader && autoconf # rebuild configure
+$ ./configure # rebuild GNUmakefile
+</programlisting>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <command>make dok-release</command> to update the sgml documentation source files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ If action file processing has changed and is not backward-compatible,
+ make sure the "for-privoxy-version=x.y.z" minimum version number in
+ default.action.master has been updated:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+{{settings}}
+#############################################################################
+#MASTER# COMMENT: The minimum Privoxy version:
+for-privoxy-version=3.0.11
+</programlisting>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Create the change log:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ $ git tag
+ # to see the tags
+ $ git log [last release tag]..HEAD > /tmp/log
+ # get the commit log since the last release
+ $ utils/makeChangeLog /tmp/log > /tmp/change.log
+ # reformat the commit log
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Edit <filename>/tmp/change.log</filename> to remove trivial
+ changes and group the changes under general headings like:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+- Bug fixes:
+- Action file improvements:
+- Filter file improvements:
+- General improvements:
+- Documentation improvements:
+- Build system improvements:
+- Code cleanups:
+- Privoxy-Log-Parser:
+- Privoxy-Regression-Test:
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Add the contents of <filename>/tmp/change.log</filename> to the
+ start of <filename>ChangeLog</filename> and re-create
+ <filename>doc/source/changelog.sgml</filename>:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ $ utils/changelog2doc.pl /tmp/change.log >| doc/source/changelog.sgml
+</programlisting>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All developers should look at the <filename>ChangeLog</filename> and
+ make sure noteworthy changes are referenced.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All documentation should be rebuilt:
+ <programlisting>
+ $ make man
+ $ make dok
+ $ make dok-man
+ $ make dok-tidy
+ $ make config-file
+</programlisting>
+ Finished docs should be then be committed to Git (for those
+ without the ability to build these). Some docs may require
+ rather obscure processing tools. <filename>config</filename>,
+ the man page (and the html version of the man page)
+ fall in this category. README, the man page, AUTHORS, and config
+ should all also be committed to Git for other packagers. The
+ formal docs should be uploaded to the webserver. See the section
+ <ulink url="webserver-update.html">"Updating the webserver"</ulink>
+ in this manual for details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <emphasis>Commit all files that were changed in the above steps!</emphasis>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The <citetitle>User Manual</citetitle> is also used for context
+ sensitive help for the CGI editor. This is version sensitive, so that
+ the user will get appropriate help for his/her release. So with
+ each release a fresh version should be uploaded to the webserver
+ (this is in addition to the main <citetitle>User Manual</citetitle>
+ link from the main page since we need to keep manuals for various
+ versions available). The CGI pages will link to something like
+ <literal>http://privoxy.org/$(VERSION)/user-manual/</literal>. This
+ will need to be updated for each new release. There is no Makefile
+ target for this at this time!!! It needs to be done manually.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Tag all files in Git with the version number with
+ <quote><command>git tag v_X_Y_Z</command></quote>.
+ Don't use vX_Y_Z, ver_X_Y_Z, v_X.Y.Z (won't work) etc.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ On the webserver, copy the user manual to a new top-level directory
+ called <filename>X.Y.Z</filename>. This ensures that help links from the CGI
+ pages, which have the version as a prefix, will go into the right version of the manual.
+ If this is a development branch release, also symlink <filename>X.Y.(Z-1)</filename>
+ to <filename>X.Y.Z</filename> and <filename>X.Y.(Z+1)</filename> to
+ <filename>.</filename> (i.e. dot).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="therelease">
+ <title>Building and Releasing the Packages</title>
+ <para>
+ Now the individual packages can be built and released. Note that for
+ GPL reasons the first package to be released is always the source tarball.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For <emphasis>all</emphasis> types of packages, including the source tarball,
+ <emphasis>you must make sure that you build from clean sources by exporting
+ the right version from Git into an empty directory</emphasis> (just press return when
+ asked for a password):
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+ mkdir dist # delete or choose different name if it already exists
+ cd dist
+ git clone https://www.privoxy.org/git/privoxy.git
+ cd privoxy
+ git checkout v_X_Y_Z
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ <emphasis>Do NOT change</emphasis> a single bit, including, but not limited to
+ version information after export from Git. This is to make sure that
+ all release packages, and with them, all future bug reports, are based
+ on exactly the same code.
+ </para>
+
+ <warning>
+ <para>
+ Every significant release of Privoxy has included at least one
+ package that either had incorrect versions of files, missing files,
+ or incidental leftovers from a previous build process that gave
+ unknown numbers of users headaches to try to figure out what was
+ wrong. PLEASE, make sure you are using pristene sources, and are
+ following the prescribed process!
+ </para>
+ </warning>
+
+ <para>
+ Please find additional instructions for the source tarball and the
+ individual platform dependent binary packages below. And details
+ on the Sourceforge release process below that.
+ </para>
+
+ <sect3 id="pack-guidelines">
+ <title>Note on Privoxy Packaging</title>
+ <para>
+ Please keep these general guidelines in mind when putting together
+ your package. These apply to <emphasis>all</emphasis> platforms!
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <application>Privoxy</application> <emphasis>requires</emphasis>
+ write access to: all <filename>*.action</filename> files, all
+ logfiles, and the <filename>trust</filename> file. You will
+ need to determine the best way to do this for your platform.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Please include up to date documentation. At a bare minimum:
+ </para>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <filename>LICENSE</filename> (top-level directory)
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <filename>README</filename> (top-level directory)
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <filename>AUTHORS</filename> (top-level directory)
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <filename>man page</filename> (top-level directory, Unix-like
+ platforms only)
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <filename>The User Manual</filename> (doc/webserver/user-manual/)
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ <simplelist>
+ <member>
+ <filename>FAQ</filename> (doc/webserver/faq/)
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ <para>
+ Also suggested: <filename>Developer Manual</filename>
+ (doc/webserver/developer-manual) and <filename>ChangeLog</filename>
+ (top-level directory). <filename>FAQ</filename> and the manuals are
+ HTML docs. There are also text versions in
+ <filename>doc/text/</filename> which could conceivably also be
+ included.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The documentation has been designed such that the manuals are linked
+ to each other from parallel directories, and should be packaged
+ that way. <filename>privoxy-index.html</filename> can also be
+ included and can serve as a focal point for docs and other links of
+ interest (and possibly renamed to <filename>index.html</filename>).
+ This should be one level up from the manuals. There is a link also
+ on this page to an HTMLized version of the man page. To avoid 404 for
+ this, it is in Git as
+ <filename>doc/webserver/man-page/privoxy-man-page.html</filename>,
+ and should be included along with the manuals. There is also a
+ css stylesheets that can be included for better presentation:
+ <filename>p_doc.css</filename>. This should be in the same directory
+ with <filename>privoxy-index.html</filename>, (i.e. one level up from
+ the manual directories).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <filename>user.action</filename> and <filename>user.filter</filename>
+ are designed for local preferences. Make sure these do not get overwritten!
+ <filename>config</filename> should not be overwritten either. This
+ has especially important configuration data in it.
+ <filename>trust</filename> should be left in tact as well.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Other configuration files (<filename>default.action</filename> and
+ <filename>default.filter</filename>) should be installed as the new
+ defaults, but all previously installed configuration files should be
+ preserved as backups. This is just good manners :-) These files are
+ likely to change between releases and contain important new features
+ and bug fixes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Please check platform specific notes in this doc, if you haven't
+ done <quote>Privoxy</quote> packaging before for other platform
+ specific issues. Conversely, please add any notes that you know
+ are important for your platform (or contact one of the doc
+ maintainers to do this if you can't).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Packagers should do a <quote>clean</quote> install of their
+ package after building it. So any previous installs should be
+ removed first to ensure the integrity of the newly built package.
+ Then run the package for a while to make sure there are no
+ obvious problems, before uploading.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-tarball"><title>Source Tarball</title>
+ <para>
+ First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
+ version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
+ packages" above). Then run:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cd current
+ autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Then do:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make tarball-dist
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ To upload the package to Sourceforge, simply issue
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make tarball-upload
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Go to the displayed URL and release the file publicly on Sourceforge.
+ For the change log field, use the relevant section of the
+ <filename>ChangeLog</filename> file.
+ </para>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-rpm"><title>SuSE, Conectiva or Red Hat RPM</title>
+ <para>
+ In following text, replace <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable>
+ with either <quote>rh</quote> for Red Hat or <quote>suse</quote> for SuSE.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
+ version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
+ packages" above).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ As the only exception to not changing anything after export from Git,
+ now examine the file <filename>privoxy-</filename><replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable><filename>.spec</filename>
+ and make sure that the version information and the RPM release number are
+ correct. The RPM release numbers for each version start at one. Hence it must
+ be reset to one if this is the first RPM for
+ <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable> which is built from version
+ X.Y.Z. Check the
+ <ulink url="https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=11118">file
+ list</ulink> if unsure. Else, it must be set to the highest already available RPM
+ release number for that version plus one.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Then run:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cd current
+ autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Then do
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable>-dist
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ To upload the package to Sourceforge, simply issue
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make <replaceable class="parameter">dist</replaceable>-upload <replaceable class="parameter">rpm_packagerev</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ where <replaceable class="parameter">rpm_packagerev</replaceable> is the
+ RPM release number as determined above.
+ Go to the displayed URL and release the file publicly on Sourceforge.
+ Use the release notes and change log from the source tarball package.
+ </para>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-os2"><title>OS/2</title>
+ <para>
+ First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
+ version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
+ packages" above). Then get the OS/2 Setup module:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@ijbswa.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co os2setup
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ You will need a mix of development tools.
+ The main compilation takes place with IBM Visual Age C++.
+ Some ancillary work takes place with GNU tools, available from
+ various sources like hobbes.nmsu.edu.
+ Specifically, you will need <filename>autoheader</filename>,
+ <filename>autoconf</filename> and <filename>sh</filename> tools.
+ The packaging takes place with WarpIN, available from various sources, including
+ its home page: <ulink url="http://www.xworkplace.org/">xworkplace</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Change directory to the <filename>os2setup</filename> directory.
+ Edit the os2build.cmd file to set the final executable filename.
+ For example,
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ installExeName='privoxyos2_setup_X.Y.Z.exe'
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Next, edit the <filename>IJB.wis</filename> file so the release number matches
+ in the <filename>PACKAGEID</filename> section:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ PACKAGEID="Privoxy Team\Privoxy\Privoxy Package\X\Y\Z"
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ You're now ready to build. Run:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ os2build
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ You will find the WarpIN-installable executable in the
+ <filename>./files</filename> directory. Upload this anonymously to
+ <filename>uploads.sourceforge.net/incoming</filename>, create a release
+ for it, and you're done. Use the release notes and Change Log from the
+ source tarball package.
+ </para>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-solaris"><title>Solaris</title>
+ <para>
+ Login to Sourceforge's compilefarm via ssh:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ ssh cf.sourceforge.net
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Choose the right operating system (not the Debian one).
+ When logged in, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
+ version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
+ packages" above). Then run:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cd current
+ autoheader && autoconf && ./configure
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Then run
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ gmake solaris-dist
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ which creates a gzip'ed tar archive. Sadly, you cannot use <command>make
+ solaris-upload</command> on the Sourceforge machine (no ncftpput). You now have
+ to manually upload the archive to Sourceforge's ftp server and release
+ the file publicly. Use the release notes and Change Log from the
+ source tarball package.
+ </para>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="NEWRELEASE-WINDOWS"><title>Windows</title>
+ <!-- so annoying: docbook generated ids are UPPERCASE so
+ links to "whatever.html#idtag" DO NOT WORK!!
+ They have to be "whatever.html#IDTAG".
+ So be consistent and use uppercase on the definition.
+ -->
+ <para>
+ Note that the docbook generated files might need some hand editing,
+ so the Windows build makefile does not rebuild the docs.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
+ version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
+ packages" above).
+ <!-- XXX ??? are we still basing releases off a tarball???
+ -->
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Then you can build the package. This is fully automated, and is
+ controlled by <filename>windows/GNUmakefile</filename>.
+ All you need to do is:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cd windows
+ make
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Now you can manually rename <filename>privoxy_setup.exe</filename> to
+ <filename>privoxy_setup_X.Y.Z.exe</filename>, and the <filename>build</filename>
+ directory to <filename>privoxy_X.Y.Z</filename>.
+ Create a .zip file of the newly renamed <filename>privoxy_X.Y.Z</filename> directory,
+ GPG sign the installer and zip file,
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ $ gpg --armor --detach --sign <filename>privoxy_setup_X.Y.Z.exe</filename>
+ $ gpg --armor --detach --sign <filename>privoxy_X.Y.Z.zip</filename>
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ and upload the files to SourceForge.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When releasing the package on SourceForge, use the release notes
+ and Change Log from the source tarball package.
+ </para>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-debian"><title>Debian</title>
+ <para>
+ First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the
+ right version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See
+ "Building and releasing packages" above). Then add a log
+ entry to <filename>debian/changelog</filename>, if it is not
+ already there, for example by running:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ debchange -v &p-version;-&p-status;-1 "New upstream version"
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Then, run:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -us -uc -b
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ This will create
+ <filename>../privoxy_&p-version;-&p-status;-1_i386.deb</filename>
+ which can be uploaded. To upload the package to Sourceforge, simply
+ issue
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make debian-upload
+</programlisting>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-macosx"><title>Mac OS X</title>
+ <para>
+ First, <emphasis>make sure that you have freshly exported the right
+ version into an empty directory</emphasis>. (See "Building and releasing
+ packages" above).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ There are three modules available in the Git repository for use on Mac
+ OS X, though technically only two of them generate a release (the other
+ can be used to install from source).
+ </para>
+ <sect4 id="OS-X-OSXPackageBuilder-module">
+ <title>OSXPackageBuilder module</title>
+ <para>
+ The OSXPackageBuilder module generates OS X installer packages
+ supporting all Macs running OS X 10.4 and above. Obtain it from Git as
+ follows into a folder parallel to the exported privoxy source:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@ijbswa.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co OSXPackageBuilder
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ The module contains complete instructions on its usage in the file
+ <filename>OS X Package Builder HOWTO.txt</filename>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Once the package(s) have been generated, you can then upload them
+ directly to the Files section of the Sourceforge project in the
+ Macintosh (OS X) folder. Each new version release of Privoxy should
+ have a new subfolder created in which to store its files. Please
+ ensure that the folder contains a readme file that makes it clear
+ which package is for whichversion of OS X.
+ </para>
+ </sect4>
+ <sect4 id="OS-X-osxsetup-module">
+ <title>osxsetup module (DEPRECATED)</title>
+ <para>
+ <emphasis>This module is deprecated since the installer it generates
+ places all Privoxy files in one folder in a non-standard location, and
+ supports only Intel Macs running OS X 10.6 or higher.</emphasis>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Check out the module from Git as follows into a folder parallel to the
+ exported privoxy source:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@ijbswa.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co osxsetup
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ Then run:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cd osxsetup
+ build
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ This will run <filename>autoheader</filename>, <filename>autoconf</filename>
+ and <filename>configure</filename> as well as <filename>make</filename>.
+ Finally, it will copy over the necessary files to the ./osxsetup/files
+ directory for further processing by <filename>PackageMaker</filename>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bring up PackageMaker with the PrivoxyPackage.pmsp definition file,
+ modify the package name to match the release, and hit the "Create
+ package" button. If you specify ./Privoxy.pkg as the output package
+ name, you can then create the distributable zip file with the command:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ zip -r privoxyosx_setup_x.y.z.zip Privoxy.pkg
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ You can then upload this file directly to the Files section of the
+ Sourceforge project in the Macintosh (OS X) folder. Each new version
+ release of Privoxy should have a new subfolder created in which to
+ store its files.
+ Please ensure that the folder contains a readme file that makes it
+ clear which version(s) of OS X the package supports.
+ </para>
+ </sect4>
+ <sect4 id="OS-X-macsetup-module">
+ <title>macsetup module</title>
+ <para>
+ The macsetup module is ideal if you wish to build and install Privoxy
+ from source on a single machine.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Check out the module from Git as follows into a folder parallel to the
+ exported privoxy source:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@ijbswa.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co macsetup
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ The module contains complete instructions on its usage in its
+ <filename>README</filename> file. The end result will be the
+ exported version of Privoxy installed on the build machine.
+ </para>
+ </sect4>
+ </sect3>
+
+ <sect3 id="newrelease-freebsd"><title>FreeBSD</title>
+ <para>
+ Update the www/privoxy port and submit a diff upstream.
+ For details see the <ulink url="https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/">FreeBSD Porter's Handbook</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ </sect3>
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="releasing">
+ <title>Uploading and Releasing Your Package</title>
+ <para>
+ After the package is ready, it is time to upload it
+ to SourceForge, and go through the release steps. The upload
+ is done via FTP:
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Upload to: <ulink url="ftp://upload.sourceforge.net/incoming">ftp://upload.sourceforge.net/incoming</ulink>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ user: <literal>anonymous</literal>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ password: <literal>ijbswa-developers@lists.sourceforge.net</literal>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ <para>
+ Or use the <command>make</command> targets as described above.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Once this done go to
+ <ulink url="https://sourceforge.net/project/admin/editpackages.php?group_id=11118">
+ https://sourceforge.net/project/admin/editpackages.php?group_id=11118</ulink>,
+ making sure you are logged in. Find your target platform in the
+ second column, and click <literal>Add Release</literal>. You will
+ then need to create a new release for your package, using the format
+ of <literal>$VERSION ($CODE_STATUS)</literal>, e.g. <emphasis>&p-version;
+ (beta)</emphasis>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Now just follow the prompts. Be sure to add any appropriate Release
+ notes. You should see your freshly uploaded packages in
+ <quote>Step 2. Add Files To This Release</quote>. Check the
+ appropriate box(es). Remember at each step to hit the
+ <quote>Refresh/Submit</quote> buttons! You should now see your
+ file(s) listed in Step 3. Fill out the forms with the appropriate
+ information for your platform, being sure to hit <quote>Update</quote>
+ for each file. If anyone is monitoring your platform, check the
+ <quote>email</quote> box at the very bottom to notify them of
+ the new package. This should do it!
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you have made errors, or need to make changes, you can go through
+ essentially the same steps, but select <literal>Edit Release</literal>,
+ instead of <literal>Add Release</literal>.
+ </para>
+ </sect2>
+
+ <sect2 id="afterrelease">
+ <title>After the Release</title>
+ <para>
+ When all (or: most of the) packages have been uploaded and made available,
+ send an email to the
+ <ulink url="mailto:privoxy-announce@lists.privoxy.org">announce mailing
+ list</ulink>, Subject: "Version X.Y.Z available for download". Be sure to
+ include the
+ <ulink url="https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=11118">
+ download location</ulink>, the release notes and the Changelog. Also, post an
+ updated News item on the project page Sourceforge, and update the Home
+ page and docs linked from the Home page (see below). Other news sites
+ and release oriented sites, such as Freshmeat, should also be notified.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Then update the source code for the next version to be released:
+ </para>
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Increment the version number and change the code status to "UNRELEASED"
+ in <filename>configure.in</filename>
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Rebuild configure (<quote><command>autoheader && autoconf</command></quote>)
+ and GNUMakefile (<quote><command>./configure</command></quote>)
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ <quote><command>make dok-release</command></quote> to update the sgml documentation source files.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Commit all your changes.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ </sect2>
+
+ </sect1>
+
+ <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+ <sect1 id="webserver-update"><title>Update the Webserver</title>
+ <para>
+ The webserver should be updated at least with each stable release. When
+ updating, please follow these steps to make sure that no broken links,
+ inconsistent contents or permission problems will occur (as it has many
+ times in the past!):
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you have changed anything in the stable-branch documentation source
+ SGML files, do:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make dok
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ That will generate <filename>doc/webserver/user-manual</filename>,
+ <filename>doc/webserver/developer-manual</filename>,
+ <filename>doc/webserver/faq</filename>,
+ <filename>doc/webserver/index.html</filename> automatically.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you changed the manual page sources, generate
+ <filename>doc/webserver/man-page/privoxy-man-page.html</filename>
+ by running <quote><command>make man</command></quote>. (This is
+ a separate target due to dependencies on some obscure perl scripts
+ [now in Git, but not well tested]. See comments in <filename>GNUmakefile</filename>.)
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ If you want to add new files to the webserver, create them locally in
+ the <filename>doc/webserver/*</filename> directory (or
+ create new directories under <filename>doc/webserver</filename>).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Next, commit any changes from the above steps to Git. All set?
+ If these are docs in the stable branch, then do:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+ make webserver
+</programlisting>
+ <para>
+ This will do the upload to <ulink url="https://www.privoxy.org/">the
+ webserver</ulink> (www.privoxy.org) and ensure all files and directories
+ there are group writable.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Please do <emphasis>NOT</emphasis> use any other means of transferring
+ files to the webserver to avoid permission problems. Also, please do not
+ upload docs from development branches or versions. The publicly posted
+ docs should be in sync with the last official release.
+ </para>
+ </sect1>
+
+ <!--
+
+ This program is free software; you can redistribute it
+ and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
+ Public License as published by the Free Software
+ Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
+ your option) any later version.
+
+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will
+ be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
+ implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
+ PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
+ License for more details.
+
+ The GNU General Public License should be included with
+ this file. If not, you can view it at
+ http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
+ or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
+ Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+
+ -->
</article>