This document contains guidance on writing API documentation for Fuchsia. It applies both to public-facing APIs (those surfaced via an SDK) and Fuchsia-internal ones. Public facing API documentation will be reviewed by the API Council for adherence to this rubric.
In most cases, documentation should follow the language's style guide for comments. If there is a rule in this document that contradicts the language-specific rules, follow this document's guidance. In some cases, the language-specific rules take precedence; these special cases are identified below.
Here are the links to language-specific guidelines for languages likely to be used in the Fuchsia repository: C and C++, Dart Rust, Java, Kotlin. We also recommend reading Google's guidelines on API documentation.
Fuchsia documentation is publically available, and should be written in a technical and neutral tone. There are some explicit restrictions on what you can write below, but they aren't intended to be comprehensive - use good judgment!
- Do not reference proprietary information. This includes personally sensitive information such as personally identifiable information and authentication keys.
- Do not use swear words or other potentially aggressive language (words like, e.g., "stupid")
- Fuchsia uses U.S. English, and follows the Fuchsia document standards and style guide
- Do not list authors explicitly. Author information goes out of date quickly, as developers move to different projects. Consider providing a maintainers file, although be wary that this goes out of date, too.
- Optimize your code for the intended display (e.g., use markdown or Javadoc as intended).
Only apply the following rules in the absence of language-specific practices and guidance:
- Documentation should immediately precede the element it is documenting.
- Use markdown for comments. The style of markdown is the style understood by
the tool most likely to consume the API.
- Use backticks for code blocks instead of 4-space indents.
- All comments should use complete sentences.
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A public facing API element is one that is made available to developers via an SDK. All public facing API elements (including, but not limited to methods, classes, fields, types) must have a description. Internal libraries should be documented; there should be a good reason if they are not.
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All parameters must have a description, unless that description would be redundant with the type and name.
- If it is not obvious from the type what a parameter's legal values are, consider changing the type. For example, {-1, 0, 1} is less useful than an enum with {LESS_THAN, EQUAL_TO, GREATER_THAN}.
- Otherwise, document the behavior of the API for all possible input values. We discourage undocumented values.
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All return values must have a description, unless that description would be redundant with the type and name.
- If a method or function returns a subset of its return type, document the subset.
- Document all returned errors and the circumstances under which they can be produced.
- For example, if the method's return type is zx_status_t, and it only returns ZX_OK and ZX_ERR_INVALID_ARGS, your documentation must state that explicitly.
- If it is not immediately obvious what a particular return value means, it must be documented. For example, if a method returns ZX_OK, you don't need to document it. If a method returns the length of a string, it should be documented.
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All possible thrown exceptions must have a description, which must include the conditions under which they are thrown, unless obvious from the type and name.
- Some third party code does not document exceptions consistently. It may be hard (or impossible) to document the behavior of code that depends such APIs. Best effort is acceptable; we can resolve resulting issues as they arise.
- Document whether exceptions are recoverable and, if so, how to recover from them.
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For any API elements that are extensible, indicate whether they are intended to be extended, and requirements for those who might want to extend them.
- If an API is extensible for internal reasons (e.g., testing), document that. For example, you should document if you have allowed a class to be extended in order to make it easy to create test doubles.
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Document deprecated API elements.
- Documentation on deprecated API elements must state what a user is expected to do instead of using the API.
- Plans to eliminate the API should be clearly documented (if they exist).
- If an explanation of the deprecation status of an API element would reduce the quality of the API documentation, consider providing a pointer to further information, including URLs and bug identifiers.
Document user-facing invariants, as well as pre- and post-conditions.
- As a rule, ensure that there are assertions / tests to enforce these conditions.
- Preconditions and postconditions that require explicit user action should
be documented. For example, provide documentation if an
Init()
method needs to be called before anything else happens. - Correlations between parameters or return values (e.g., one has to be less than another) should be documented.
Document the concurrency properties of APIs that have internal state.
- FIDL servers may execute requests in an unpredictable order. Documentation should account for situations where this might affect the behavior the caller observes.
- Every API with internal state falls into one of the following categories.
Document which one, using the following terms:
- Thread-safe: This means invocations of individual elements of the API (e.g., methods in a class) are atomic with respect to other concurrent processes. There is no need for a caller to use any external synchronization (e.g., a caller should not have to acquire a lock for the duration of the method invocation). You may still describe your API as thread-safe if a caller needs to use external synchronization to make references to instances of the API visible to other threads (e.g., by setting and getting a global pointer to an instance of a class with atomic operations).
- Thread-unsafe: This means that all methods must use external synchronization to ensure invariants are maintained (e.g., mutual exclusion enforced by a lock).
- Thread-hostile: This means that the API element should not be accessed from multiple threads (e.g., it has implementation details that rely on unsynchronized access to static data behind the scenes, like strtok()). This should include documentation about thread affinity (e.g., it uses thread-local storage (TLS)). It is only allowed in Fuchsia APIs by exception.
- Special: This means that the correct concurrent use of this API requires thought, please read the docs. This is especially relevant when entities need to be initialized and references to them published in a specific way.
- Immutable: The other four classes assume that internal state is mutable and thread safety is guaranteed by synchronization. Immutable classes appear constant without any additional synchronization, but you have to maintain strict rules about serialization / deserialization and how references to the object are shared between threads.
- An API is blocking if it is not guaranteed to make progress. Document
the blocking properties of your APIs.
- If an API is blocking, the documentation must state what is required for
the code to make progress, unless blocking is a low probability event that
requires implementation understanding.
- An example of when you must document a method's blocking behavior is when it blocks waiting for a response on a channel.
- An example of when you do not have to document a method's blocking behavior is when it may block if lock starvation is a theoretical possibility under high load.
- An API is not considered blocking only because it takes a long time to finish. A slow algorithm should not be documented to be blocking.
- Documentation should only state that an API is non-blocking when the non-blocking behavior is critical to its use (for example, if an API returns a future).
- If an API is blocking, the documentation must state what is required for
the code to make progress, unless blocking is a low probability event that
requires implementation understanding.
- An API is reentrant if it may be safely interrupted in the middle of its
execution and then called again. Document the reentrance properties of your
APIs.
- APIs may be assumed to be reentrant. Documentation must state if an API is not reentrant.
- Document whether a function relies on thread-local storage (TLS) to maintain its invariants, and any preconditions and postconditions related to that TLS (e.g., if it needs to call an initializer once per thread).
Document ownership and liveness properties.
- For parameters or return values that are stored beyond the life of a function, or resources allocated by the function and passed back to the caller, or resources with particular ownership constraints that must be observed by a set of APIs (i.e., shared resources), ownership and liveness must be documented.
- Document who is responsible for releasing any associated resources.
- Where appropriate, documentation should state the protocol for releasing
those resources. This can be a special issue when memory allocation
routines differ between the caller of an API and the API.
- Languages should call out default ownership behavior in their style guides.
All parameters and return values must have their nullness properties defined (if they are of a nullable type).
- Even in Dart!
- Where appropriate, refer to parameters and return values as nullable (may contain null) or non-null (may not contain null).
For all parameters and return types, units must be well defined (whether by documentation or by type).
This section contains guidance that should be taken into consideration when writing comments. It contains opinions, rather than the unambiguous rules given above.
- A reader should not have to look at an API's implementation to figure out what it does. Consider writing documentation that would allow a reader to implement your API independently based on the documentation. If you need to provide additional details on how your API works, create and link to additional docucumentation on Fuchsia.dev.
- Avoid jargon that may not be obvious to the reader (think: "if I am interested in this API, will I definitely know what this word means?"). If jargon is Fuchsia-specific and not defined, add it to the glossary.
- Avoid abbreviations and acronyms. When you need to use them, explain them. If the abbreviation is widely used in the industry (e.g., "Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol" (TCP/IP)), you do not need to explain it, but you should consider giving a link for more context.
- Code samples should be considered whenever they might be useful. Providing an example can often make patterns clearer. We recommend an example of API for every top level API element (e.g., class).
- It should be clear how to use your API from the comments.
- Consider writing examples as separate programs and linking to them, but be careful about stale links in docs.
- Examples should all compile and run.
- When someone who has read the docs asks a question that should be answered by the docs, improve the docs.
- Always add value. Don't restate what is already indicated by the type signature. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle applies. The following is not useful, because it repeats the same information twice:
/**
* Returns an instance of Foo.
* @return an instance of Foo.
*/
public Foo getFoo() { ... }
- Similarly, if the comment is very obvious, avoid making it. If, for example, a property is guaranteed by the type system, you do not need to document it separately. However, bear in mind that your API description should be enough to enable an independent implementation.
- Consider documenting performance considerations and resource consumption issues, but also remember that such issues are often implementation dependent and change over time, whereas the contract for your method will probably remain the same. Consider including this information in implementation notes / release notes instead.
- Avoid creating running words that are not compound words. For example "notready" is two words run together. Use an appropriate separator, for example "not ready", "notReady", "not_ready", or "not-ready").
- Avoid documenting features that may change rapidly over time, unless you specifically call out that feature may change over time. The more you prescribe, the less flexibility you give to future maintainers. However, recognize that it might not matter, since your users will depend on every behavior. See also Hyrum's Law.