The PKP team is happy to accept patches in the PKP Community Forum at http://forum.pkp.sfu.ca or Github at https://www.github.com/pkp. If you would like to have your patch included in the OJS codebase, we suggest discussing it with the OJS team before implementation to ensure that it suits upcoming development plans.
For code that is intended for inclusion in the main codebase:
- Pull requests against a current git clone are preferred; alternately, pull requests against the most recent release version are acceptable. Patches will also be accepted.
- Unless agreed with the development team, users should be able to toggle contributed features between enabled and disabled with a single setting; the system behavior should not be modified when the feature is disabled.
- The feature should be suitable for situations where very distinct journals are hosted within the same deployment; i.e. settings should generally be journal- level, not system-level.
- The design patterns used in OJS should be understood and adhered to.
- Localization standards should be maintained.
- Database IDs should be checked as in the current codebase.
- XSS (cross-site scripting) attacks should be checked as in the current codebase.
- Contributors are responsible for writing code compatible with the primary platforms listed in README.
- OJS management features should be kept in mind, such as upgrade and
installation; database schema information should be maintained in the
dbscripts/xml/ojs_schema.xml
file for OJS-specific functionality and inlib/pkp/xml/schema
for functionality that can be shared across PKP apps; etc. - The development team is happy to review contributed patches, but we have a limited amount of time to spend integrating patches with the codebase or modifying contributed code. If aspects of the code need work, we would rather inform the author and have them perform the modifications.
For contributions that are distributed separately as patches or plugins:
- If contributors haven't met all the conditions above, they are welcome to distribute additional features as patches or plugins. However, the OJS team won't be able to provide support in this case.
- If the option is available, coding a feature as a plugin is the preferred method. The OJS team is continuing to refine the plugin infrastructure and welcomes discussion with plugin developers.
- Tabs: Configure your editor to use tabs instead of spaces for indentation.
- Linefeeds: Your editor must save files using UNIX linefeed format (not DOS CR/LF or Mac CR format).
- Use K&R indentation style.
- For example:
if (condition) {
...
} else {
...
}
- Use descriptive names. One character names are only acceptable as index variables in for loops.
- Variable and function/method names (excluding constructors) should start with
a lowercase letter and capitalize all other words.
E.g.,
$myVariableName; function myMethodName() { }
- Class names should start with a capital letter and capitalize all words.
E.g.,
MyClassName
- Constant names should be capitalized with words separated by an underscore. In
general, constant names should also be prefixed with the package/class name to
avoid collisions. E.g.,
ROLE_ID_MANAGER
- PHPDoc/Javadoc-style commenting is encouraged. See http://www.phpdoc.de/
- For example:
/**
* My method.
* @param $foo string
* @return boolean
*/
function myMethod($foo) {
...
}
- Use the
<?php
tag to begin PHP code instead of the abbreviated<?
form. - Omit ending
?>
tags at the end of PHP files, as recommended per modern PHP standards.
- Use single quotes (
'
) instead of double quotes ("
) to quote strings unless the string contains variables or escape sequences. Single quotes are slightly more efficient since PHP does not have to perform variable interpolation.
- Code must not produce any error or warning messages with the error_reporting
level set to
E_ALL
(this is the default level set inincludes/driver.inc.php
). - This means using
$array['key']
rather than$array[key]
, not using uninitialized variables, etc. - Note that this means that "
@
" should not be used haphazardly to suppress error messages.
- Code should not rely on register_globals being enabled.
- GET/POST/Cookie variables should be accessed through the appropriate helper function.
- The inline form of if/else is acceptable for small statements (e.g.,
assignments) only. E.g.,
$foo = $bar ? 1 : 0;
- Compatibility with PHP per the
README.md
document is required. Appropriate abstractions should be used around non-backwards compatible code (e.g., usingfunction_exists()
to check for an available function and using an alternate implementation if it does not exist). - Traditionally we used static access to class methods a lot. These provide a relatively easy to implement Singleton-like design pattern. They have two important drawbacks though: static methods cannot be overridden which inhibits clean OO design and they are notoriously difficult to unit test. That's why we try to no longer introduce static method calls and refactor to object methods where possible.
- Tag names should be lower case.
- Uppercase SQL keywords. E.g.,
INSERT
,UPDATE
, etc. - Long SQL statements should be logically broken up into multiple lines.
- SQL INSERT statements should always specify the column names.
- For example:
INSERT INTO mytable (x, y, z)
VALUES (?, ?, ?)
- All SQL queries should be compatible with at least the versions of MySQL and PostgreSQL supported by the application. Although vendor-specific SQL expressions should be avoided, a record should be kept of any non-portable SQL that does get used (e.g., by filing a bug report).
- A web interface to the git repository is located at http://github.com/pkp.
- A brief log message describing the changes made must be included with all git commits.
- Whenever possible, git commit log messages should be prefixed with
pkp/pkp-lib#ISSUENUM
to reference a git issue; see https://github.com/pkp/pkp-lib#issues. - Please consult http://pkp.sfu.ca/wiki/index.php/HOW-TO_check_out_PKP_applications_from_git for instructions on setting up a development environment.
- PHP files should begin with a header similar to the following. Non-PHP files should begin with a similar header adapted to the appropriate comment style.
/**
* @file /path/to/filename.inc.php
*
* Copyright (c) 2014-2018 Simon Fraser University
* Copyright (c) 2003-2018 John Willinsky
* Distributed under the GNU GPL v2. For full terms see the file docs/COPYING.
*
* @package PACKAGE
* @class CLASS
*
* DESCRIPTION.
*/
- SQL queries should use the ADOdb or Laravel abstraction layer.
- SQL should use placeholders for variables.
- Explicit typecasts should be used where possible in variable replacements.
- For example:
$dbconn = DBConnection::getConn();
$result = $dbconn->execute('SELECT x FROM mytable WHERE y = ?', array($y));
$result = $dbconn->execute('INSERT INTO mytable (x, y) VALUES (?, ?)', array((int) $x, $y));
- Only portable, standards compliant SQL should be used - compatibility with MySQL and PostgreSQL (versions as per README) is required. If database specific logic cannot be avoided it should be abstracted into DBConnection or ADOdb.
- DAO classes should be used to encapsulate all database calls.
- For example:
$sessionDao = DAORegistry::getDAO('SessionDAO');
- DAO classes are expected to handle date/datetime format conversion between the database and PHP, and insertion ID retrieval for sequenced records; abstractions are provided in the base DAO class.
- HTML output in PHP code should be kept to a minimum.
- HTML output should come from the Smarty template abstraction layer.
- The template engine supports basic conditional logic and loops and can access objects and arrays, but the complexity of the business logic used in templates should be minimized.
- Basic template skeleton:
{**
* /path/to/filename.tpl
*
* Copyright (c) 2014-2018 Simon Fraser University
* Copyright (c) 2003-2018 John Willinsky
* Distributed under the GNU GPL v2. For full terms see the file docs/COPYING.
*
* DESCRIPTION.
*}
{include file="common/header.tpl" pageTitle="user.userHome"}
...
{include file="common/footer.tpl"}
- i18n strings are defined in locale/<locale_key>/locale.xml.
- Key names should be in the form "sectionname(.subsectionname)*.name". E.g., "manager.setup.journalTitle"
- Use {translate key="my.key.name"} in templates to translate i18n keys.
- Use the String wrapper class in place of the built-in string manipulation/regexp routines when handling data that could potentially be in UTF-8 (e.g., user input, parsed user files, etc.).
- User input should be properly validated/escaped (do not rely on magic_quotes_gpc being on or off).
- For example, in template forms:
<input type="text" name="title" value="{$title|escape}" />
- Retrieving user input:
$foo = $request->getUserVar('foo');
- Escaping habits in order of precedence:
- Manager's setup text fields: No escaping performed
- Abstracts, notes, comments, emails: {$field|strip_unsafe_html|nl2br}
- Database IDs safely fetched from DB: no escaping necessary.
- Mailing Address fields: {$mailingAddress|escape|nl2br}
- Biography fields: {$biography|escape|nl2br}
- Custom issue or article IDs in URLs: {$pageUrl}/.../{$customId|escape:"url"}
- Date fields: Use date_format.
- Comment fields: {$comment|strip_unsafe_html}
- Multi-line fields inside textarea tags: {$field|escape}
- Multi-line input fields that are filled in by the Manager or Site Administrator: {$field|nl2br}
- All other fields: {$field|escape}
Note that these should apply to parameters supplied to {translate key="..."} and {mailto address="..."} calls, e.g {translate key="my.key.takes.parameter" myParam=$myVar|escape}
- Use
$request->redirectUrl($url)
, or better yet,$request->redirect(...)
for HTTP redirects instead ofheader('Location: ...');
- For additional coding convention information, see the OJS Design Document at http://pkp.sfu.ca/ojs/OJSTechnicalReference.pdf.