Authors:

VDSM Coding Guidelines

  • VDSM is written primarily in Python, and its coding style should follow the best practices of Python coding unless otherwise declared.
  • PEP8 is holy.
  • API calls and arguments are mixedCased, but new internal modules should use underscore_separated_names.
  • Imports should be grouped in the following order:

    1. Standard library imports

    2. Related third party imports

    3. Local application-specific or library-specific imports You should put a blank line between each group of imports. More info about import? See PEP8 imports

  • Class names are in CamelCase.
  • All indentation is made of the space characters. Tabs are evil. In makefiles, however, tabs are obligatory.
  • White space between code stanzas are welcome. They help to create breathing while reading long code. However, splitting stanzas into helper functions could be even better.
  • Let logging method do the formatting for you:

    logging.debug(‘hello %s’, ‘world’)

Rather than:

  logging.debug('hello %s' % 'world')
  • try-except blocks should be tiny (if existing at all), and the caught exception should be the narrowest possible. Note the following code:

    try: code_that_may_raise except Exception: log

Code such as the above basically means “I do not care if code_that_may_raise fails or succeeds”. If this is the case, why try run that code at all?

  • Swallowing an exception is evil, but if you have to do it, log it.
  • Long if-elif should end with an else: clause. else: pass is perfectly acceptable because it tells the reader of the code, “yes, I thought of this case, and we should do nothing when we get to it”.
  • Configurables should be avoided. The code should do the “right thing” and not expect the end user to tweak vdsm.conf on each of their machines.
  • __repr__ is usually preferred over __str__ to make string information about an instance if only one of the methods is defined, since __repr__ is used in more situations than __str__ is.