Copyright 2022-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. This file contains advice on developing and contributing to groff. It assumes that developers will install the 'git' revision control system and build groff using the instructions in 'INSTALL.repo'. Familiarize yourself with the structure of the source tree by studying its 'MANIFEST' file at the top level. Automake -------- A document explaining the basics of GNU Automake and its usage in groff is available in 'doc/automake.mom'; peruse a PDF rendering in 'doc/automake.pdf' in your build tree. Testing ------- Running the test suite with 'make check' after building any substantive change to groff logic is encouraged. You should certainly do so, and confirm that the tests pass, before submitting patches to the groff mailing list or Savannah issue tracker. If you find a defect in a test script, that can be reported via Savannah like any other bug. Documenting changes ------------------- The groff project has a long history and a large, varied audience. Changes may need to be documented in up to three places depending on their impact. 1. Changes should of course be documented in the Git commit message. If a change alters only comments or formatting of source code, or makes editorial changes to documentation, and does not resolve a Savannah ticket, you can stop at that. 2. The 'ChangeLog' file follows the format and practices documented in the GNU Coding Standards. https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Change-Logs.html The sub-projects in the 'contrib' directory each have their own dedicated ChangeLog files. The file specifications documented there are relative to the sub-project, not the root of the groff source tree. When converted to a commit message, add 'contrib/$SUBPROJECT' to the entries. Apart from 'contrib', groff uses a single (current) 'ChangeLog' file for the rest of its source tree. It is convenient to write the ChangeLog entry or entries first, then construct a commit message from it (or them). 3. The 'NEWS' file documents changes to groff that a user, not just a developer, would notice, not including the resolution of defects. As a hypothetical example, correcting a rendering error in tbl(1) such that any table with more than 20 rows no longer had the text "FOOBAR" spuriously added to some entries would not be a 'NEWS' item, because the appearance of such text in the first place is a surprising deviation from tbl's ideal and historical behavior. In contrast, adding a command-line option to tbl, or changing the meaning of its "expand" region option such that it no longer horizontally compresses tables as well, _would_ be 'NEWS'-worthy. Writing Tests ------------- Here are some portability notes on writing automated tests. * Write to the POSIX standard for the shell and utilities where possible. Issue 4 from 1994 is old enough that no contemporary system has a good reason for not conforming. A copy of the standard is available at the Open Group's web site. https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009656399/toc.pdf * The GNU coreutils "seq" command is handy but not standardized by POSIX. Replace it with a while loop. seq 53 n=1; while [ $n -le 53 ]; do echo $n; n=$(( n + 1 )); done "unset" is supported by POSIX-conformant shell; use it to remove temporary shell variables after use. * The "od" command on macOS can put extra space characters (i.e., spaces that don't correspond to the input) at the ends of lines when using the "od -t c" format; GNU od does not. So a regex like this that works with GNU od: grep -Eqx '0000000 +A +\\b +B +\\b +C D +\\n' might need to be weakened to the following on macOS. grep -Eqx '0000000 +A +\\b +B +\\b +C D +\\n *' * The "od" command on macOS does not respect the environment variable assignment "LC_ALL=C" when processing byte values 127