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Guidelines for Contributing to OpenSim-Core

OpenSim is a community resource that is housed in the OpenSim-Core repository. We encourage everyone to contribute to the OpenSim project. This could be adding new code for a feature, improving an algorithm, or letting us know about a bug or making a feature request. The purpose of our contribution policy is to ensure that all code in OpenSim-Core has undergone real scrutiny, thereby reducing the likelihood of errors.

Even great programmers benefit from additional eyeballs on their code to catch bugs, avoid duplication and inefficiency, watch for standards violations, and to check that the code is as clear to others as it is to its author. We appreciate contributions and our development team is collaborative and constructive -- don't be shy!

Public advisory: OpenSim is an open source project licensed under very liberal terms intended to encourage use by anyone, for any purpose. When you make a contribution to the OpenSim project, you are agreeing to do so under those same terms. The details are below. If you are uncomfortable with these terms, please contact us before contributing.

Contents:

Thank you for contributing!

Ways to Contribute

There are lots of ways to contribute to the OpenSim project, and people with widely varying skill sets can make meaningful contributions. Please don't think your contribution has to be momentous to be appreciated. See a typo? Tell us about it or fix it! Here are some contribution ideas:

  • Use OpenSim and let us know how you're using it by posting to the OpenSim user forum.

  • Ask and/or answer questions on the forum.

  • File bug reports, documentation problems, feature requests, and developer discussion topics using the GitHub Issue tracker.

  • Submit GitHub Pull Requests providing new features, examples, or bug fixes to code or documentation (see below).

  • If our hard work has helped you with yours, please consider acknowledging your use of OpenSim and encourage others to do so. Please cite the following papers:

    Delp SL, Anderson FC, Arnold AS, Loan P, Habib A, John CT, Guendelman E, Thelen DG (2007) OpenSim: open-source software to create and analyze dynamic simulations of movement. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 54:1940–50.

    Seth A, Sherman M, Reinbolt JA, Delp SL (2011) OpenSim: A musculoskeletal modeling and simulation framework for in silico investigations and exchange. Procedia IUTAM 2:212–232.

Making a Pull Request (PR)

Please don't surprise us with a big out-of-the-blue pull request (PR). Preferably, target an existing Issue and post a comment to that effect in the Issue. That way, you can engage in discussion with others to coordinate your work with theirs and avoid duplication, see what people think of the approach you have planned, and so on. If there is not yet a relevant Issue in place, a great way to start is by creating one, and then engaging in an Issue conversation.

If you have never made a PR before, there are excellent GitHub tutorials to familiarize you with the concepts and steps like the GitHub Bootcamp.

When you are ready to make a PR, please adhere to the following guidelines:

  1. To help the people who review your pull request, include a detailed description of what changes or additions the PR includes and what you have done to test and verify the changes. Reference the existing Issue (or set of Issues) that documents the problem the PR is adressing (e.g., use #<issue_number> ). Also, please make sure detailed information about the commits is easily available.

  2. Make sure that your request conforms to our coding standards.

  3. Make sure that your code executes as intended and that all tests pass on your local machine before making a pull request. The README.md explains how to run the tests. If your changes introduce runtime options or branching in the code, please ensure that all options or branches are being tested and that exceptions are being thrown in invalid scenarios.

  4. Typo fixes can be merged by any member of the Development (Dev) Team.

  5. Updates to comments, Doxygen, compiler compatibility, or CMake files must be reviewed by at least one member of the Dev Team before being merged. The original author or the reviewer(s) may merge the pull request.

  6. Any other changes to the code require review by at least two members of the Dev Team. If the pull request involves adding a new class or performing a major object/algorithm refactor, one of these reviewers must be an Owner. The Owners and Dev Team are Teams within the opensim-org GitHub organization. The original author may NOT merge the pull request.

  7. As the changes introduced by your pull request become finalized throughout the review process, you should decide if your changes warrant being mentioned in the change log. If so, update the CHANGELOG.md with an additional commit to your pull request.

A few additional practices will help streamline the code review process. Please use tags (i.e., @user_name) and quoting to help keep the discussion organized. Please also call for a meeting or Skype call when discussions start to stagnate. In addition, we recommend getting input on your interface design before implementing a major new component or other change.

It is important that reviewers also review the effect that your PR has on the doxygen documentation. To facilitate this, we automatically upload the doxygen documentation for each PR to myosin.sourceforge.net; you can view the documentation for a specific PR at myosin.sourceforge.net/<issue-number>.

Writing tests

There are directories of tests scattered throughout the repository. Each directory contains most of the files (e.g., .osim model files) necessary to run the tests. When building, these files are copied over into the build tree. Some of these files are used by multiple tests from different parts of the repository. To avoid duplicating such files within the repository, the files should go into the OpenSim/Tests/shared directory. You can then use the OpenSimCopySharedTestFiles CMake macro (in cmake/OpenSimMacros.osim) to copy the necessary shared files to the proper build directory. DO NOT CHANGE files that are already in OpenSim/Tests/shared; you could inadvertently weaken tests that rely on some obscure aspect of the files.

Checking for Memory Leaks through GitHub

If you want to check memory leaks, you can have Travis-CI run valgrind on the test cases. Just put [ci valgrind] in your commit message.

Coding Standards

Header guards

Header guards are preprocessor defines that surround every header file to prevent it from being included multiple times. OpenSim header guards should be written like this:

#ifndef OPENSIM_PROPERTY_TABLE_H_
#define OPENSIM_PROPERTY_TABLE_H_
 // ... stuff ...
#endif // OPENSIM_PROPERTY_TABLE_H_

This matches the scheme used in Simbody and avoids all of the following problems. (Trailing underscore, but not leading, is allowed.)

Common problems with header guards:

  1. They can interfere with user code, and
  2. They violate the C++ standard.

OpenSim uses many very common class names, like Object and Array. These are likely to appear in other code libraries as well, so anyone who combines the OpenSim API with other libraries or their own code may have conflicts. A simple rule to avoid conflicts is for the header guards to be unique symbols, easily achieved by including the product name in them (that is, they should contain OPENSIM).

As a reminder, the C++ standard prohibits user code from using identifiers that contain double underscore (__) or begin with an underscore followed by a capital letter (_P). Those symbols are reserved for the compiler and the standard library (std). Use of symbols like that means it is subject to conflict with the compiler, either now or in future releases or new platforms. Hopefully those conflicts would cause compiler errors, but that is not guaranteed.

One other minor point is that preprocessor macros should typically have very ugly names with LOTS_OF_CAPS to make it obvious that they are not ordinary identifiers, and to avoid conflicts with NiceUpperCamelCaseIdentifiers used for class names.

Creating new OpenSim objects

Every OpenSim object class now automatically defines a typedef “Super” that refers to the immediate parent (“superclass”) of that class. If an object has to delegate something to its parent, use “Super” rather than explicitly listing the parent class. If the parent changes due to future refactoring, your code will still compile but it will be wrong! This is not a hypothetical problem - this construct was developed because these bugs kept recurring. By using automatically defined Super you can completely avoid these issues in the future.

Example:

In MyNewComponent.h:

class MyNewComponent : public SomeIntermediateClassDerivedFromObject {
 ...
 void extendBaseClassMethod() override;
}

In MyNewComponent.cpp:

void MyNewComponent::extendBaseClassMethod() {
 Super::extendBaseClassMethod(); // invoke the parent’s method
 //NOT: SomeIntermediateClassDerivedFromObject::extendBaseClassMethod()

 // now do the local stuff
}

Now if someone changes the class structure later so that the Component's parent changes in the header file, the code in the .cpp file (which will have been long forgotten) will automatically change its behavior.

Assignment operators in C++

You should let the compiler automatically generate the copy constructor and copy assignment operator for your classes whenever possible. But sometimes you have to write one. Here is the basic template for copy assignment:

MyClass& operator=(const MyClass& source) {
 if (&source != this) {
   // copy stuff from source to this
 }
 return *this;
}

You run into problems if copy assignment operators are missing lines 2 and 4. Since the “copy stuff” part often begins by deleting the contents of “this”, a self assignment like a=a will fail without those lines; that is always supposed to work (and does for all the built-in and std library types). Of course no one intentionally does that kind of assignment, but they occur anyway in general code since you don’t always know where the source comes from.

If the “copy stuff” part consists only of assignments that work for self assignment, then you can get away without the test, but unless you’ve thought it through carefully you should just get in the habit of putting in the test.

Documenting your code

Doxygen only looks in your .h files; it does not generate documentation from .cpp files. Thus, comments in .cpp files don't need to follow doxygen formatting, and in fact they should not because it is confusing and makes it look like there is API documentation when there isn't. You should mostly use //-style comments in .cpp files, and be sure you are addressing your comments to the right audience -- no doxygen reader will ever see them.

We produce two sets of doxygen-generated documentation, one for (scripting) users and one for C++ developers. The primary difference is that the user documentation only shows public members, while the developer documentation also shows protected members, nested classes, etc. When writing doxygen comments, you can use \internal or \if developer ... \endif for documentation that is only intended for developers.

Read more about doxygen on this page: Guide to Building Doxygen

Each line of text should be at most 80 characters

It is common to display multiple code windows side-by-side. For the code to display nicely, it is necessary to choose a limit on the line length.

Replace tabs with four spaces

Please be sure that your IDE (code editor) is set to replace tabs with four spaces. You should never allow tab characters to get into your code. They will look great to you, but most other people will see your code as randomly formatted.

If you use Visual Studio, goto Tools:Options:Text Editor:C/C++:Tabs, set tab size=indent size=4, and check the "Insert spaces" button.

Renaming classes in the OpenSim API

Sometimes it makes sense to change the name of a class in OpenSim because the name is confusing or doesn't reflect the desired function. This seemingly innocent, and usually desirable, refactoring has some side effects that API developers should be aware of so that changes do not break working functionality.

Deserialization: The code that reads objects from XML files keys on the String representing the class name to create corresponding objects (e.g., "PinJoint" class shows in XML as <PinJoint>). If you change the name of PinJoint (e.g., to MyPinJoint) you need to make sure old models that have the tag still work. Normally this is captured by test cases. If you decide to make the change, you'll have to edit the file "RegisterTypes_osimSimulation.cpp" and add the line Object::renameType("PinJoint", "MyPinJoint"), so that the deserialization code knows how to handle the XML tag.

Swig wrapping and GUI: Most API users don't build the GUI, however they should continue to build the JavaWrap project used by the GUI to make sure changes on the C++ side do not cause serious problems downstream to either the GUI or scripts that we'll be distributing that utilize the Java wrapping. The mechanics for this procedure are as follows:

  • Turn on JavaWrapping in CMake (BULD_JAVA_WRAPPING=on). You must have SWIG and Java installed.
  • Build JavaWrap project to run SWIG (see README.md for obtaining SWIG).
  • Run test case testContext, which simulates a few GUI calls.

If a class is not included in the wrapping interface file OpenSim/Java/swig/javaWrapOpenSim.i then the class is likely not used by the GUI and so is safe to change; otherwise, please consult with GUI developers first before renaming.

Naming conventions

Please follow the convention that property, input, and output names use the lower_case_with_underscores convention, while class names use UpperCamelCaseWithoutUnderscores. This ensures no conflicts with XML tag names and makes it easy to tell a property name from a class name.

Functions and methods

Names should begin with a verb and use the lowerCamelCase convention.

getBodyVelocity()
setDefaultLength()

We have some conventional starting verbs; you should use the same ones when they apply and avoid them if your methods are doing something different.

verb meaning
get Return a const reference to something that has already been computed.
set Change the value of some internal quantity; may cause invalidation of dependent computations.
upd (update) Return a writable reference to some internal variable. May cause invalidation of dependent computations.
find Perform a small calculation (e.g., find the distance between two points) and return the result without changing anything else.
calc (calculate) Perform an expensive calculation and return the result. Does not cause any other changes.
realize Initiate state-dependent computations and cache results internally; no result returned.
add Add the object (Component) to an internal list of references. Should not take over ownership.
adopt Take over ownership (e.g., Set::adoptAndAppend()).
extend A virtual method intended to extend a defining capability of a Base class; can either be pure virtual or not. The first line of the derived class implementation must be Super::extend<DoSomething>(). For example, a ModelComponent knows how to connectToModel, but the details of how each concrete ModelComponent type does this is implemented by the derived class.
implement A virtual method intended to implement a pure virtual function of a Base class. The derived class's implementation does not call any method on Super.
express Express a vector in a different basis (i.e., without translation). Typically used as Frame::expressVectorIn*().

throw and return are not functions

In C++, throw and return are not functions. It is misleading to enclose their arguments in parentheses. That is, you should write “return x;” not “return(x);”. A parenthesized expression is not treated the same as a function argument list. For example f(a,b) and return(a,b) mean different things (the former is a 2-argument function call; the latter is an invocation of the rarely-used “comma operator”).

Always use pre-increment and pre-decrement operators when you have a choice

Both pre-increment i and post-increment i are available. When you don’t look at the result, they are logically equivalent. For simple types they are physically equivalent too. But for complicated types (like iterators), the pre-increment is much cheaper computationally because it doesn’t require separate storage for saving the previous result. Therefore, you should get in the habit of using pre-increment in all your loops:

/*YES*/ for (int i = 0; i < limit; ++i);

/*NO*/ for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++);

This will prevent you from using the wrong operator in the expensive cases, which are not always obvious.

Of course, in cases where you actually need the pre- or post-value for something, you should use the appropriate operator.

Place pointer and reference symbols with the type

References and pointers create new types. That is “T”, “T*”, and “T&” are three distinct types. You can tell because you can make typedefs like this:

typedef T  SameAsT;

typedef T* PointerToT;

typedef T& ReferenceToT;

// and then declare

SameAsT      t1,      t2;      // both are type T

PointerToT   tptr1,   tptr2;   // both are type T*

ReferenceToT tref1=a, tref2=b; // both are type T&

Therefore, you should place the * and & next to the type, not the variable, because logically they are part of the type. Unfortunately, the C language had a bug in its syntax which has been inherited by C++. A line like char* a,b is treated like char* a; char b; rather than char* a; char* b; but if we write typedef char* CharPtr; then CharPtr a,b declares both to be pointers. There is no perfect solution because the language is broken. However, there is no problem in argument lists (since each variable has to have its own type). We recommend that you simply avoid the misleading multiple-declaration form when using pointers or references. Just use separate declarations or a typedef. Then always put the * and & with the type where they belong. So argument lists should look like this:

/*YES*/ f(int I, string& name, char* something);

/*NO*/  f(int I, string &name, char *something);

Removing methods

If you are cleaning up a class and decide to remove a method, then it's necessary to remove both the prototype from the header and the implementation from the .cpp file (if any). While C++ doesn't complain, leaving the prototype in the header file with no implementation anywhere causes problems for wrapping. Swig runs only on the headers and has no way of knowing whether there's an implementation or not. Since the methods end up being exported, they then have to be resolved at compile time of the osimJavaJNI project.

List of Contributors

Here is a partial list of contributors to the OpenSim C++ code base and Java/Python wrapping via Swig (not to the OpenSim project as a whole); please let us know if a name is missing (including yours!).

Real name GitHub Id Contributions/expertise
Ayman Habib @aymanhab Applications developer; Original code base; Java wrapping
Ajay Seth @aseth1 Lead developer; Component API; Musculoskeletal dynamics
Chris Dembia @chrisdembia Build system; Component API; Python wrapping; Documentation
Michael Sherman @sherm1 Properties; Component API; Documentation; Simbody
Jennifer Hicks @jenhicks Project manager; Documentation
Matthew Millard @mjhmilla Muscle modeling
Tim Dorn @twdorn Probes and ProbeReporter
Peter Eastman @peastman Contact and Prescribed Forces
Kevin Xu @kevunix 64bit build, Bug fixes
Thomas Uchida @tkuchida Muscle & Metabolics modeling; Bug fixes
Soha Pouya @sohapouya BodyActuator; Test cases; Bug fixes
Matt DeMers @msdemers Frames; Bug fixes
James Dunne @jimmyDunne Documentation; Examples
Chand John @unusualinsights RRATool; Controller example; Bug fixes
Cassidy Kelly @cassidykelly Testing; Properties; Bug fixes
Nabeel Allana @nallana ExpressionBasedCoordinateForce; McKibbenActuator
Jack Wang @jmwang Bug fixes; Linux compilation
Ian Stavness @stavness Mac-Xcode build
Weiguang Si @JustinSi Model properties; Bug fixes
Apoorva Rajagopal @apoorvar Xcode compatibility
Jason Moore @moorepants Linux build; Typo fix
Jenny Yong @jryong Actuator outputs; Typo fix
Carmichael Ong @carmichaelong Typo fix
Sam Hamner PointOnLineConstraint; Controller example; Doxygen
Frank Anderson Original code base; CMC; Musculoskeletal modeling
Peter Loan Original code base; SIMM Translator; WrapObjects
Kate Saul Original MuscleAnalysis
Jack Middleton Initial Simbody integration
Jeffrey Reinbolt Static Optimization; Examples; Musculoskeletal modeling
Shrinidhi Lakshmikanth @klshrinidhi Data interface
Andrew LaPre @ankela IK error output to file
Neil Dhir @wagglefoot Python API contributions; specifically example usages

Contributor License Agreement

OpenSim is licensed under the permissive Apache 2.0 license. OpenSim users are not required to follow our noble egalitarian principles, nor to share their profits with us, nor even to acknowledge us (though they often do and it is greatly appreciated). When you make a contribution in any of the ways described above, you are agreeing to allow your contribution to be used under the same terms, adding no additional restrictions to the OpenSim project nor requirements on OpenSim users.

Specifically, by contributing you are agreeing to the following terms:

  1. The code, text, or images you submit are your original work (you own and retain the copyright) or you otherwise have the right to submit the work.
  2. You grant the OpenSim project, developers, and users a nonexclusive, irrevocable license to use your submission and any necessary intellectual property, under terms of the Apache 2.0 license.
  3. No part of your contribution is covered by a viral ("copyleft") license like GPL or LGPL.
  4. You are capable of granting these rights for the contribution.

If your contribution contains others' open source code licensed under Apache 2.0 or other non-viral license like BSD, MIT, or ZLib, it is probably fine. But be sure to mention that in the Pull Request you submit so we can discuss it.

Thank you for agreeing to these terms.

If you remain unsure, you can compile and distribute your work (e.g., a new Component) as an OpenSim plugin licensed under different terms. We encourage OpenSim users to share their work as plugins at least until the code can be thoroughly tested and reviewed through the PR process.