Add two guidelines: - pipe characters should appear at the end of lines, and not cause indentation - pipes should be avoided when they swallow exit codes that can potentially fail --- Documentation/CodingGuidelines | 29 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 29 insertions(+) diff --git a/Documentation/CodingGuidelines b/Documentation/CodingGuidelines index 48aa4edfb..7f903c1aa 100644 --- a/Documentation/CodingGuidelines +++ b/Documentation/CodingGuidelines @@ -163,6 +163,35 @@ For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive): does not have such a problem. + - In a piped sequence which spans multiple lines, put each statement + on a separate line and put pipes on the end of each line, rather + than the start. This means you don't need to use \ to join lines, + since | implies a join already. Also, do not indent subsequent + lines; if you need a sequence to visually stand apart from the + surrounding code, use a blank line before and/or after the piped + sequence. + + (incorrect) + echo '...' > expected + git ls-files -s file.1 file.2 file.3 file.4 file.5 \ + | awk '{print $1}' \ + | sort >observed + test_cmp expected actual + + (correct) + echo '...' > expected + + git ls-files -s file.1 file.2 file.3 file.4 file.5 | + awk '{print $1}' | + sort >observed + + test_cmp expected actual + + - In a pipe, any non-zero exit codes returned by processes besides + the last will be ignored. If there is any possibility some + non-final command in the pipe will raise an error, prefer writing + the output of that command to a temporary file with '>' rather than + pipe it. For C programs: -- 2.19.0.444.g18242da7ef-goog