cutter/docs/code.md
2018-10-19 15:11:37 +03:00

2.1 KiB

Contributing

This page shows some hints about the coding conventions.

Disclaimer: It is a work in progress and we will provide soon a fully documented API.

Coding advices

CutterCore class

This is the main class where every link with r2 is made. It is unique accross the whole process. To access it, simply call Core().

Example:

Core()->getOffset();

Calling a radare2 command

There are two ways to do it:

  • CutterCore::cmd() (Discouraged) Only use it for commands which yells no output
  • CutterCore::cmdj() To be used with json commands like cmdj("agj") or cmdj("aflj"). It is way easier to parse a json output.

Example:

QJsonArray array = Core()->cmdj("pdj 1 @ main").array();

Seek the current file

To modify radare2 seek use CutterCore::seek(const RVA offset). This is important because it will emit a CutterCore::seekChanged(RVA offset) signal. Never ever call cmd("s offset");

Example:

Core()->seek(0x00C0FFEE);

Creating a widget

Make sure to connect the CutterCore::seekChanged(RVA offset) signal so your widget refreshes its output when radare2 seek is modified (switching to another function, etc.).

General coding guidelines

Coding style

We follow these guidelines to format the code. If in doubt, you can use AStyle 2.06 to format the code. The command line for formatting the code according to the style is:

astyle --project=src/Cutter.astylerc src/filename.cpp

Loops

We use C++11 foreach loop style which means any "foreach" loop should look like:

for (QJsonValue value : importsArray) {
    doSomething(value);
}

Nullptr

Please do not use 0 nor Q_NULLPTR, only use nullptr.

Example:

QObject *object = nullptr;

Connecting signals

To connect a signal to a slot, this is the preferred way to do it:

connect(sender, &QObject::destroyed, this, &MyObject::objectDestroyed);

The main reason is that this syntax allows the use of lambda functions.

Functions documentation

TODO