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doc/developer.texi: add a section on API/ABI compatibility
Document established practices in it.
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@ -217,6 +217,7 @@ int myfunc(int my_parameter)
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...
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@end example
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@anchor{Naming conventions}
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@section Naming conventions
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Names of functions, variables, and struct members must be lowercase, using
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@ -387,22 +388,6 @@ time-frame (12h for build failures and security fixes, 3 days small changes,
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Also note, the maintainer can simply ask for more time to review!
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@section Code
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@subheading API/ABI changes should be discussed before they are made.
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Do not change behavior of the programs (renaming options etc) or public
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API or ABI without first discussing it on the ffmpeg-devel mailing list.
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Do not remove widely used functionality or features (redundant code can be removed).
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@subheading Remember to check if you need to bump versions for libav*.
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Depending on the change, you may need to change the version integer.
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Incrementing the first component means no backward compatibility to
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previous versions (e.g. removal of a function from the public API).
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Incrementing the second component means backward compatible change
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(e.g. addition of a function to the public API or extension of an
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existing data structure).
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Incrementing the third component means a noteworthy binary compatible
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change (e.g. encoder bug fix that matters for the decoder). The third
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component always starts at 100 to distinguish FFmpeg from Libav.
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@subheading Warnings for correct code may be disabled if there is no other option.
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Compiler warnings indicate potential bugs or code with bad style. If a type of
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warning always points to correct and clean code, that warning should
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@ -417,6 +402,151 @@ Never write to unallocated memory, never write over the end of arrays,
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always check values read from some untrusted source before using them
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as array index or other risky things.
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@section Library public interfaces
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Every library in FFmpeg provides a set of public APIs in its installed headers,
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which are those listed in the variable @code{HEADERS} in that library's
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@file{Makefile}. All identifiers defined in those headers (except for those
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explicitly documented otherwise), and corresponding symbols exported from
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compiled shared or static libraries are considered public interfaces and must
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comply with the API and ABI compatibility rules described in this section.
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Public APIs must be backward compatible within a given major version. I.e. any
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valid user code that compiles and works with a given library version must still
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compile and work with any later version, as long as the major version number is
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unchanged. "Valid user code" here means code that is calling our APIs in a
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documented and/or intended manner and is not relying on any undefined behavior.
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Incrementing the major version may break backward compatibility, but only to the
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extent described in @ref{Major version bumps}.
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We also guarantee backward ABI compatibility for shared and static libraries.
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I.e. it should be possible to replace a shared or static build of our library
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with a build of any later version (re-linking the user binary in the static
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case) without breaking any valid user binaries, as long as the major version
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number remains unchanged.
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@subsection Adding new interfaces
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Any new public identifiers in installed headers are considered new API - this
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includes new functions, structs, macros, enum values, typedefs, new fields in
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existing functions, new installed headers, etc. Consider the following
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guidelines when adding new APIs.
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@subsubheading Motivation
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While new APIs can be added relatively easily, changing or removing them is much
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harder due to abovementioned compatibility requirements. You should then
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consider carefully whether the functionality you are adding really needs to be
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exposed to our callers as new public API.
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Your new API should have at least one well-established use case outside of the
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library that cannot be easily achieved with existing APIs. Every library in
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FFmpeg also has a defined scope - your new API must fit within it.
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@subsubheading Replacing existing APIs
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If your new API is replacing an existing one, it should be strictly superior to
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it, so that the advantages of using the new API outweight the cost to the
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callers of changing their code. After adding the new API you should then
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deprecate the old one and schedule it for removal, as described in
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@ref{Removing interfaces}.
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If you deem an existing API deficient and want to fix it, the preferred approach
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in most cases is to add a differently-named replacement and deprecate the
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existing API rather than modify it. It is important to make the changes visible
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to our callers (e.g. through compile- or run-time deprecation warnings) and make
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it clear how to transition to the new API (e.g. in the Doxygen documentation or
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on the wiki).
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@subsubheading API design
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The FFmpeg libraries are used by a variety of callers to perform a wide range of
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multimedia-related processing tasks. You should therefore - within reason - try
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to design your new API for the broadest feasible set of use cases and avoid
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unnecessarily limiting it to a specific type of callers (e.g. just media
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playback or just transcoding).
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@subsubheading Consistency
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Check whether similar APIs already exist in FFmpeg. If they do, try to model
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your new addition on them to achieve better overall consistency.
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The naming of your new identifiers should follow the @ref{Naming conventions}
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and be aligned with other similar APIs, if applicable.
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@subsubheading Extensibility
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You should also consider how your API might be extended in the future in a
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backward-compatible way. If you are adding a new struct @code{AVFoo}, the
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standard approach is requiring the caller to always allocate it through a
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constructor function, typically named @code{av_foo_alloc()}. This way new fields
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may be added to the end of the struct without breaking ABI compatibility.
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Typically you will also want a destructor - @code{av_foo_free(AVFoo**)} that
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frees the indirectly supplied object (and its contents, if applicable) and
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writes @code{NULL} to the supplied pointer, thus eliminating the potential
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dangling pointer in the caller's memory.
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If you are adding new functions, consider whether it might be desirable to tweak
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their behavior in the future - you may want to add a flags argument, even though
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it would be unused initially.
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@subsubheading Documentation
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All new APIs must be documented as Doxygen-formatted comments above the
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identifiers you add to the public headers. You should also briefly mention the
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change in @file{doc/APIchanges}.
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@subsubheading Bump the version
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Backward-incompatible API or ABI changes require incrementing (bumping) the
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major version number, as described in @ref{Major version bumps}. Major
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bumps are significant events that happen on a schedule - so if your change
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strictly requires one you should add it under @code{#if} preprocesor guards that
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disable it until the next major bump happens.
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New APIs that can be added without breaking API or ABI compatibility require
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bumping the minor version number.
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Incrementing the third (micro) version component means a noteworthy binary
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compatible change (e.g. encoder bug fix that matters for the decoder). The third
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component always starts at 100 to distinguish FFmpeg from Libav.
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@anchor{Removing interfaces}
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@subsection Removing interfaces
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Due to abovementioned compatibility guarantees, removing APIs is an involved
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process that should only be undertaken with good reason. Typically a deficient,
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restrictive, or otherwise inadequate API is replaced by a superior one, though
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it does at times happen that we remove an API without any replacement (e.g. when
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the feature it provides is deemed not worth the maintenance effort, out of scope
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of the project, fundamentally flawed, etc.).
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The removal has two steps - first the API is deprecated and scheduled for
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removal, but remains present and functional. The second step is actually
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removing the API - this is described in @ref{Major version bumps}.
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To deprecate an API you should signal to our users that they should stop using
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it. E.g. if you intend to remove struct members or functions, you should mark
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them with @code{attribute_deprecated}. When this cannot be done, it may be
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possible to detect the use of the deprecated API at runtime and print a warning
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(though take care not to print it too often). You should also document the
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deprecation (and the replacement, if applicable) in the relevant Doxygen
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documentation block.
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Finally, you should define a deprecation guard along the lines of
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@code{#define FF_API_<FOO> (LIBAVBAR_VERSION_MAJOR < XX)} (where XX is the major
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version in which the API will be removed) in @file{libavbar/version_major.h}
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(@file{version.h} in case of @code{libavutil}). Then wrap all uses of the
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deprecated API in @code{#if FF_API_<FOO> .... #endif}, so that the code will
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automatically get disabled once the major version reaches XX. You can also use
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@code{FF_DISABLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS} and @code{FF_ENABLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS}
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to suppress compiler deprecation warnings inside these guards. You should test
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that the code compiles and works with the guard macro evaluating to both true
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and false.
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@anchor{Major version bumps}
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@subsection Major version bumps
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A major version bump signifies an API and/or ABI compatibility break. To reduce
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the negative effects on our callers, who are required to adapt their code,
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backward-incompatible changes during a major bump should be limited to:
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@itemize @bullet
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@item
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Removing previously deprecated APIs.
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@item
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Performing ABI- but not API-breaking changes, like reordering struct contents.
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@end itemize
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@section Documentation/Other
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@subheading Subscribe to the ffmpeg-devel mailing list.
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It is important to be subscribed to the
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