1.\"- 2.\" Copyright (c) 1995-2005 The FreeBSD Project 3.\" All rights reserved. 4.\" 5.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7.\" are met: 8.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 9.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 10.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 12.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13.\" 14.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 15.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 16.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 17.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL [your name] OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 18.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 19.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 20.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 21.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 22.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 23.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 24.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 25.\" 26.\" From: @(#)style 1.14 (Berkeley) 4/28/95 27.\" $FreeBSD$ 28.\" 29.Dd July 6, 2015 30.Dt STYLE 9 31.Os 32.Sh NAME 33.Nm style 34.Nd "kernel source file style guide" 35.Sh DESCRIPTION 36This file specifies the preferred style for kernel source files in the 37.Fx 38source tree. 39It is also a guide for the preferred userland code style. 40Many of the style rules are implicit in the examples. 41Be careful to check the examples before assuming that 42.Nm 43is silent on an issue. 44.Bd -literal 45/* 46 * Style guide for FreeBSD. Based on the CSRG's KNF (Kernel Normal Form). 47 * 48 * @(#)style 1.14 (Berkeley) 4/28/95 49 * $FreeBSD$ 50 */ 51 52/* 53 * VERY important single-line comments look like this. 54 */ 55 56/* Most single-line comments look like this. */ 57 58/* 59 * Multi-line comments look like this. Make them real sentences. Fill 60 * them so they look like real paragraphs. 61 */ 62.Ed 63.Pp 64The copyright header should be a multi-line comment, with the first 65line of the comment having a dash after the star like so: 66.Bd -literal 67/*- 68 * Copyright (c) 1984-2025 John Q. Public 69 * All rights reserved. 70 * 71 * Long, boring license goes here, but trimmed for brevity 72 */ 73.Ed 74.Pp 75An automatic script collects license information from the tree for 76all comments that start in the first column with 77.Dq Li "/*-" . 78If you desire to flag 79.Xr indent 1 80to not reformat a comment that starts in the first column which is not a 81license or copyright notice, change the dash to a star for those 82comments. 83Comments starting in columns other than the first are never 84considered license statements. 85.Pp 86After any copyright header, there is a blank line, and the 87.Li $\&FreeBSD$ 88for non C/C++ language source files. 89Version control system ID tags should only exist once in a file 90(unlike in this one). 91Non-C/C++ source files follow the example above, while C/C++ source files 92follow the one below. 93All VCS (version control system) revision identification in files obtained 94from elsewhere should be maintained, including, where applicable, multiple IDs 95showing a file's history. 96In general, do not edit foreign IDs or their infrastructure. 97Unless otherwise wrapped (such as 98.Dq Li "#if defined(LIBC_SCCS)" ) , 99enclose both in 100.Dq Li "#if 0 ... #endif" 101to hide any uncompilable bits 102and to keep the IDs out of object files. 103Only add 104.Dq Li "From: " 105in front of foreign VCS IDs if the file is renamed. 106.Bd -literal 107#if 0 108#ifndef lint 109static char sccsid[] = "@(#)style 1.14 (Berkeley) 4/28/95"; 110#endif /* not lint */ 111#endif 112 113#include <sys/cdefs.h> 114__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$"); 115.Ed 116.Pp 117Leave another blank line before the header files. 118.Pp 119Kernel include files (i.e.\& 120.Pa sys/*.h ) 121come first; normally, include 122.In sys/types.h 123OR 124.In sys/param.h , 125but not both. 126.In sys/types.h 127includes 128.In sys/cdefs.h , 129and it is okay to depend on that. 130.Bd -literal 131#include <sys/types.h> /* Non-local includes in angle brackets. */ 132.Ed 133.Pp 134For a network program, put the network include files next. 135.Bd -literal 136#include <net/if.h> 137#include <net/if_dl.h> 138#include <net/route.h> 139#include <netinet/in.h> 140#include <protocols/rwhod.h> 141.Ed 142.Pp 143Do not use files in 144.Pa /usr/include 145for files in the kernel. 146.Pp 147Leave a blank line before the next group, the 148.Pa /usr/include 149files, 150which should be sorted alphabetically by name. 151.Bd -literal 152#include <stdio.h> 153.Ed 154.Pp 155Global pathnames are defined in 156.In paths.h . 157Pathnames local 158to the program go in 159.Qq Pa pathnames.h 160in the local directory. 161.Bd -literal 162#include <paths.h> 163.Ed 164.Pp 165Leave another blank line before the user include files. 166.Bd -literal 167#include "pathnames.h" /* Local includes in double quotes. */ 168.Ed 169.Pp 170Do not 171.Ic #define 172or declare names in the implementation namespace except 173for implementing application interfaces. 174.Pp 175The names of 176.Dq unsafe 177macros (ones that have side effects), and the names of macros for 178manifest constants, are all in uppercase. 179The expansions of expression-like macros are either a single token 180or have outer parentheses. 181Put a single tab character between the 182.Ic #define 183and the macro name. 184If a macro is an inline expansion of a function, the function name is 185all in lowercase and the macro has the same name all in uppercase. 186.\" XXX the above conflicts with ANSI style where the names are the 187.\" same and you #undef the macro (if any) to get the function. 188.\" It is not followed for MALLOC(), and not very common if inline 189.\" functions are used. 190Right-justify the 191backslashes; it makes it easier to read. 192If the macro encapsulates a compound statement, enclose it in a 193.Ic do 194loop, 195so that it can safely be used in 196.Ic if 197statements. 198Any final statement-terminating semicolon should be 199supplied by the macro invocation rather than the macro, to make parsing easier 200for pretty-printers and editors. 201.Bd -literal 202#define MACRO(x, y) do { \e 203 variable = (x) + (y); \e 204 (y) += 2; \e 205} while (0) 206.Ed 207.Pp 208When code is conditionally compiled using 209.Ic #ifdef 210or 211.Ic #if , 212a comment may be added following the matching 213.Ic #endif 214or 215.Ic #else 216to permit the reader to easily discern where conditionally compiled code 217regions end. 218This comment should be used only for (subjectively) long regions, regions 219greater than 20 lines, or where a series of nested 220.Ic #ifdef 's 221may be confusing to the reader. 222Exceptions may be made for cases where code is conditionally not compiled for 223the purposes of 224.Xr lint 1 , 225even though the uncompiled region may be small. 226The comment should be separated from the 227.Ic #endif 228or 229.Ic #else 230by a single space. 231For short conditionally compiled regions, a closing comment should not be 232used. 233.Pp 234The comment for 235.Ic #endif 236should match the expression used in the corresponding 237.Ic #if 238or 239.Ic #ifdef . 240The comment for 241.Ic #else 242and 243.Ic #elif 244should match the inverse of the expression(s) used in the preceding 245.Ic #if 246and/or 247.Ic #elif 248statements. 249In the comments, the subexpression 250.Dq Li defined(FOO) 251is abbreviated as 252.Dq Li FOO . 253For the purposes of comments, 254.Dq Ic #ifndef Li FOO 255is treated as 256.Dq Ic #if Li !defined(FOO) . 257.Bd -literal 258#ifdef KTRACE 259#include <sys/ktrace.h> 260#endif 261 262#ifdef COMPAT_43 263/* A large region here, or other conditional code. */ 264#else /* !COMPAT_43 */ 265/* Or here. */ 266#endif /* COMPAT_43 */ 267 268#ifndef COMPAT_43 269/* Yet another large region here, or other conditional code. */ 270#else /* COMPAT_43 */ 271/* Or here. */ 272#endif /* !COMPAT_43 */ 273.Ed 274.Pp 275The project is slowly moving to use the 276.St -isoC-99 277unsigned integer identifiers of the form 278.Vt uintXX_t 279in preference to the older 280.Bx Ns -style 281integer identifiers of the form 282.Vt u_intXX_t . 283New code should use the former, and old code should be converted to 284the new form if other major work is being done in that area and 285there is no overriding reason to prefer the older 286.Bx Ns -style . 287Like white-space commits, care should be taken in making 288.Vt uintXX_t 289only commits. 290.Pp 291Enumeration values are all uppercase. 292.Bd -literal 293enum enumtype { ONE, TWO } et; 294.Ed 295.Pp 296The use of internal_underscores in identifiers is preferred over 297camelCase or TitleCase. 298.Pp 299In declarations, do not put any whitespace between asterisks and 300adjacent tokens, except for tokens that are identifiers related to 301types. 302(These identifiers are the names of basic types, type 303qualifiers, and 304.Ic typedef Ns -names 305other than the one being declared.) 306Separate these identifiers from asterisks using a single space. 307.Pp 308When declaring variables in structures, declare them sorted by use, then 309by size (largest to smallest), and then in alphabetical order. 310The first category normally does not apply, but there are exceptions. 311Each one gets its own line. 312Try to make the structure 313readable by aligning the member names using either one or two tabs 314depending upon your judgment. 315You should use one tab only if it suffices to align at least 90% of 316the member names. 317Names following extremely long types 318should be separated by a single space. 319.Pp 320Major structures should be declared at the top of the file in which they 321are used, or in separate header files if they are used in multiple 322source files. 323Use of the structures should be by separate declarations 324and should be 325.Ic extern 326if they are declared in a header file. 327.Bd -literal 328struct foo { 329 struct foo *next; /* List of active foo. */ 330 struct mumble amumble; /* Comment for mumble. */ 331 int bar; /* Try to align the comments. */ 332 struct verylongtypename *baz; /* Won't fit in 2 tabs. */ 333}; 334struct foo *foohead; /* Head of global foo list. */ 335.Ed 336.Pp 337Use 338.Xr queue 3 339macros rather than rolling your own lists, whenever possible. 340Thus, 341the previous example would be better written: 342.Bd -literal 343#include <sys/queue.h> 344 345struct foo { 346 LIST_ENTRY(foo) link; /* Use queue macros for foo lists. */ 347 struct mumble amumble; /* Comment for mumble. */ 348 int bar; /* Try to align the comments. */ 349 struct verylongtypename *baz; /* Won't fit in 2 tabs. */ 350}; 351LIST_HEAD(, foo) foohead; /* Head of global foo list. */ 352.Ed 353.Pp 354Avoid using typedefs for structure types. 355Typedefs are problematic because they do not properly hide their 356underlying type; for example you need to know if the typedef is 357the structure itself or a pointer to the structure. 358In addition they must be declared exactly once, whereas an 359incomplete structure type can be mentioned as many times as 360necessary. 361Typedefs are difficult to use in stand-alone header files: 362the header that defines the typedef must be included 363before the header that uses it, or by the header that uses 364it (which causes namespace pollution), or there must be a 365back-door mechanism for obtaining the typedef. 366.Pp 367When convention requires a 368.Ic typedef , 369make its name match the struct tag. 370Avoid typedefs ending in 371.Dq Li _t , 372except as specified in Standard C or by 373.Tn POSIX . 374.Bd -literal 375/* Make the structure name match the typedef. */ 376typedef struct bar { 377 int level; 378} BAR; 379typedef int foo; /* This is foo. */ 380typedef const long baz; /* This is baz. */ 381.Ed 382.Pp 383All functions are prototyped somewhere. 384.Pp 385Function prototypes for private functions (i.e., functions not used 386elsewhere) go at the top of the first source module. 387Functions 388local to one source module should be declared 389.Ic static . 390.Pp 391Functions used from other parts of the kernel are prototyped in the 392relevant include file. 393Function prototypes should be listed in a logical order, preferably 394alphabetical unless there is a compelling reason to use a different 395ordering. 396.Pp 397Functions that are used locally in more than one module go into a 398separate header file, e.g.\& 399.Qq Pa extern.h . 400.Pp 401Do not use the 402.Dv __P 403macro. 404.Pp 405In general code can be considered 406.Dq "new code" 407when it makes up about 50% or more of the file(s) involved. 408This is enough 409to break precedents in the existing code and use the current 410.Nm 411guidelines. 412.Pp 413The kernel has a name associated with parameter types, e.g., in the kernel 414use: 415.Bd -literal 416void function(int fd); 417.Ed 418.Pp 419In header files visible to userland applications, prototypes that are 420visible must use either 421.Dq protected 422names (ones beginning with an underscore) 423or no names with the types. 424It is preferable to use protected names. 425E.g., use: 426.Bd -literal 427void function(int); 428.Ed 429.Pp 430or: 431.Bd -literal 432void function(int _fd); 433.Ed 434.Pp 435Prototypes may have an extra space after a tab to enable function names 436to line up: 437.Bd -literal 438static char *function(int _arg, const char *_arg2, struct foo *_arg3, 439 struct bar *_arg4); 440static void usage(void); 441 442/* 443 * All major routines should have a comment briefly describing what 444 * they do. The comment before the "main" routine should describe 445 * what the program does. 446 */ 447int 448main(int argc, char *argv[]) 449{ 450 char *ep; 451 long num; 452 int ch; 453.Ed 454.Pp 455For consistency, 456.Xr getopt 3 457should be used to parse options. 458Options 459should be sorted in the 460.Xr getopt 3 461call and the 462.Ic switch 463statement, unless 464parts of the 465.Ic switch 466cascade. 467Elements in a 468.Ic switch 469statement that cascade should have a 470.Li FALLTHROUGH 471comment. 472Numerical arguments should be checked for accuracy. 473Code which is unreachable for non-obvious reasons may be marked /* 474.Li NOTREACHED 475*/. 476.Bd -literal 477 while ((ch = getopt(argc, argv, "abNn:")) != -1) 478 switch (ch) { /* Indent the switch. */ 479 case 'a': /* Don't indent the case. */ 480 aflag = 1; /* Indent case body one tab. */ 481 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 482 case 'b': 483 bflag = 1; 484 break; 485 case 'N': 486 Nflag = 1; 487 break; 488 case 'n': 489 num = strtol(optarg, &ep, 10); 490 if (num <= 0 || *ep != '\e0') { 491 warnx("illegal number, -n argument -- %s", 492 optarg); 493 usage(); 494 } 495 break; 496 case '?': 497 default: 498 usage(); 499 } 500 argc -= optind; 501 argv += optind; 502.Ed 503.Pp 504Space after keywords 505.Pq Ic if , while , for , return , switch . 506Two styles of braces 507.Ql ( \&{ 508and 509.Ql \&} ) 510are allowed for single line statements. 511Either they are used for all single statements, or 512they are used only where needed for clarity. 513Usage within a function should be consistent. 514Forever loops are done with 515.Ic for Ns 's , 516not 517.Ic while Ns 's . 518.Bd -literal 519 for (p = buf; *p != '\e0'; ++p) 520 ; /* nothing */ 521 for (;;) 522 stmt; 523 for (;;) { 524 z = a + really + long + statement + that + needs + 525 two + lines + gets + indented + four + spaces + 526 on + the + second + and + subsequent + lines; 527 } 528 for (;;) { 529 if (cond) 530 stmt; 531 } 532 if (val != NULL) 533 val = realloc(val, newsize); 534.Ed 535.Pp 536Parts of a 537.Ic for 538loop may be left empty. 539Do not put declarations 540inside blocks unless the routine is unusually complicated. 541.Bd -literal 542 for (; cnt < 15; cnt++) { 543 stmt1; 544 stmt2; 545 } 546.Ed 547.Pp 548Indentation is an 8 character tab. 549Second level indents are four spaces. 550If you have to wrap a long statement, put the operator at the end of the 551line. 552.Bd -literal 553 while (cnt < 20 && this_variable_name_is_too_long && 554 ep != NULL) 555 z = a + really + long + statement + that + needs + 556 two + lines + gets + indented + four + spaces + 557 on + the + second + and + subsequent + lines; 558.Ed 559.Pp 560Do not add whitespace at the end of a line, and only use tabs 561followed by spaces 562to form the indentation. 563Do not use more spaces than a tab will produce 564and do not use spaces in front of tabs. 565.Pp 566Closing and opening braces go on the same line as the 567.Ic else . 568Braces that are not necessary may be left out. 569.Bd -literal 570 if (test) 571 stmt; 572 else if (bar) { 573 stmt; 574 stmt; 575 } else 576 stmt; 577.Ed 578.Pp 579No spaces after function names. 580Commas have a space after them. 581No spaces 582after 583.Ql \&( 584or 585.Ql \&[ 586or preceding 587.Ql \&] 588or 589.Ql \&) 590characters. 591.Bd -literal 592 error = function(a1, a2); 593 if (error != 0) 594 exit(error); 595.Ed 596.Pp 597Unary operators do not require spaces, binary operators do. 598Do not use parentheses unless they are required for precedence or unless the 599statement is confusing without them. 600Remember that other people may 601confuse easier than you. 602Do YOU understand the following? 603.Bd -literal 604 a = b->c[0] + ~d == (e || f) || g && h ? i : j >> 1; 605 k = !(l & FLAGS); 606.Ed 607.Pp 608Exits should be 0 on success, or 1 on failure. 609.Bd -literal 610 exit(0); /* 611 * Avoid obvious comments such as 612 * "Exit 0 on success." 613 */ 614} 615.Ed 616.Pp 617The function type should be on a line by itself 618preceding the function. 619The opening brace of the function body should be 620on a line by itself. 621.Bd -literal 622static char * 623function(int a1, int a2, float fl, int a4) 624{ 625.Ed 626.Pp 627When declaring variables in functions declare them sorted by size, 628then in alphabetical order; multiple ones per line are okay. 629If a line overflows reuse the type keyword. 630.Pp 631Be careful to not obfuscate the code by initializing variables in 632the declarations. 633Use this feature only thoughtfully. 634DO NOT use function calls in initializers. 635.Bd -literal 636 struct foo one, *two; 637 double three; 638 int *four, five; 639 char *six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve; 640 641 four = myfunction(); 642.Ed 643.Pp 644Do not declare functions inside other functions; ANSI C says that 645such declarations have file scope regardless of the nesting of the 646declaration. 647Hiding file declarations in what appears to be a local 648scope is undesirable and will elicit complaints from a good compiler. 649.Pp 650Casts and 651.Ic sizeof Ns 's 652are not followed by a space. 653Note that 654.Xr indent 1 655does not understand this rule. 656.Ic sizeof Ns 's 657are written with parenthesis always. 658The redundant parenthesis rules do not apply to 659.Fn sizeof var 660instances. 661.Pp 662.Dv NULL 663is the preferred null pointer constant. 664Use 665.Dv NULL 666instead of 667.Vt ( "type *" ) Ns 0 668or 669.Vt ( "type *" ) Ns Dv NULL 670in contexts where the compiler knows the 671type, e.g., in assignments. 672Use 673.Vt ( "type *" ) Ns Dv NULL 674in other contexts, 675in particular for all function args. 676(Casting is essential for 677variadic args and is necessary for other args if the function prototype 678might not be in scope.) 679Test pointers against 680.Dv NULL , 681e.g., use: 682.Bd -literal 683(p = f()) == NULL 684.Ed 685.Pp 686not: 687.Bd -literal 688!(p = f()) 689.Ed 690.Pp 691Do not use 692.Ic \&! 693for tests unless it is a boolean, e.g.\& use: 694.Bd -literal 695if (*p == '\e0') 696.Ed 697.Pp 698not: 699.Bd -literal 700if (!*p) 701.Ed 702.Pp 703Routines returning 704.Vt "void *" 705should not have their return values cast 706to any pointer type. 707.Pp 708Values in 709.Ic return 710statements should be enclosed in parentheses. 711.Pp 712Use 713.Xr err 3 714or 715.Xr warn 3 , 716do not roll your own. 717.Bd -literal 718 if ((four = malloc(sizeof(struct foo))) == NULL) 719 err(1, (char *)NULL); 720 if ((six = (int *)overflow()) == NULL) 721 errx(1, "number overflowed"); 722 return (eight); 723} 724.Ed 725.Pp 726Old-style function declarations look like this: 727.Bd -literal 728static char * 729function(a1, a2, fl, a4) 730 int a1, a2; /* Declare ints, too, don't default them. */ 731 float fl; /* Beware double vs. float prototype differences. */ 732 int a4; /* List in order declared. */ 733{ 734.Ed 735.Pp 736Use ANSI function declarations unless you explicitly need K&R compatibility. 737Long parameter lists are wrapped with a normal four space indent. 738.Pp 739Variable numbers of arguments should look like this: 740.Bd -literal 741#include <stdarg.h> 742 743void 744vaf(const char *fmt, ...) 745{ 746 va_list ap; 747 748 va_start(ap, fmt); 749 STUFF; 750 va_end(ap); 751 /* No return needed for void functions. */ 752} 753 754static void 755usage() 756{ 757 /* Insert an empty line if the function has no local variables. */ 758.Ed 759.Pp 760Use 761.Xr printf 3 , 762not 763.Xr fputs 3 , 764.Xr puts 3 , 765.Xr putchar 3 , 766whatever; it is faster and usually cleaner, not 767to mention avoiding stupid bugs. 768.Pp 769Usage statements should look like the manual pages 770.Sx SYNOPSIS . 771The usage statement should be structured in the following order: 772.Bl -enum 773.It 774Options without operands come first, 775in alphabetical order, 776inside a single set of brackets 777.Ql ( \&[ 778and 779.Ql \&] ) . 780.It 781Options with operands come next, 782also in alphabetical order, 783with each option and its argument inside its own pair of brackets. 784.It 785Required arguments 786(if any) 787are next, 788listed in the order they should be specified on the command line. 789.It 790Finally, 791any optional arguments should be listed, 792listed in the order they should be specified, 793and all inside brackets. 794.El 795.Pp 796A bar 797.Pq Ql \&| 798separates 799.Dq either-or 800options/arguments, 801and multiple options/arguments which are specified together are 802placed in a single set of brackets. 803.Bd -literal -offset 4n 804"usage: f [-aDde] [-b b_arg] [-m m_arg] req1 req2 [opt1 [opt2]]\en" 805"usage: f [-a | -b] [-c [-dEe] [-n number]]\en" 806.Ed 807.Bd -literal 808 (void)fprintf(stderr, "usage: f [-ab]\en"); 809 exit(1); 810} 811.Ed 812.Pp 813Note that the manual page options description should list the options in 814pure alphabetical order. 815That is, without regard to whether an option takes arguments or not. 816The alphabetical ordering should take into account the case ordering 817shown above. 818.Pp 819New core kernel code should be reasonably compliant with the 820.Nm 821guides. 822The guidelines for third-party maintained modules and device drivers are more 823relaxed but at a minimum should be internally consistent with their style. 824.Pp 825Stylistic changes (including whitespace changes) are hard on the source 826repository and are to be avoided without good reason. 827Code that is approximately 828.Fx 829KNF 830.Nm 831compliant in the repository must not diverge from compliance. 832.Pp 833Whenever possible, code should be run through a code checker 834(e.g., 835.Xr lint 1 836or 837.Nm gcc Fl Wall ) 838and produce minimal warnings. 839.Sh SEE ALSO 840.Xr indent 1 , 841.Xr lint 1 , 842.Xr err 3 , 843.Xr warn 3 , 844.Xr style.Makefile 5 845.Sh HISTORY 846This manual page is largely based on the 847.Pa src/admin/style/style 848file from the 849.Bx 4.4 Lite2 850release, with occasional updates to reflect the current practice and 851desire of the 852.Fx 853project. 854.Pa src/admin/style/style 855is a codification by the CSRG of the programming style of Ken Thompson and 856Dennis Ritchie in 857.At v6 . 858