These design principles make it easier to write, debug, and maintain desktop
code in //chrome/browser. Most, but not all code in //chrome/browser is desktop
code. Some code is used on Android.
## Caveats:
* These are recommendations, not requirements.
* These are not intended to be static. If you think a
principle doesn't make sense, reach out to //chrome/OWNERS.
* These are intended to apply to new code and major refactors. We do not expect
existing features to be refactored, except as need arises.
## Structure, modularity:
* Features should be modular.
* For most features, all code should live in some combination of
//component/<feature> and //chrome/browser/<feature> (or
//chrome/browser/ui/<feature>), and not in //chrome/browser/ui/views.
* The historical rule restricting access to views in //chrome/browser
and //chrome/browser/ui has been removed.
* The historical rule disallowing ui code in //chrome/browser has been
removed.
* WebUI resources are the only exception. They will continue to live in
//chrome/browser/resources/<feature> alongside standalone BUILD.gn files.
* This directory should have a standalone BUILD.gn and OWNERs file.
* All files in the directory should belong to targets in the BUILD.gn.
* Do NOT add to `//chrome/browser/BUILD.gn:browser`,
`//chrome/test/BUILD.gn` or `//chrome/browser/ui/BUILD.gn:ui`.
* gn circular dependencies are disallowed. Logical
circular dependencies are allowed (for legacy reasons) but discouraged.
* [Lens
overlay](https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:chrome/browser/ui/lens/BUILD.gn;drc=8e2c1c747f15a93c55ab2f10ebc8b32801ba129e)
is an example of a feature with no circular dependencies.
* The BUILD.gn should use public/sources separation.
* The main reason for this is to guard against future, unexpected usage
of parts of the code that were intended to be private. This makes it
difficult to change implementation details in the future.
* This directory may have a public/ subdirectory to enforce further
encapsulation, though this example does not use it.
* [cookie
controls](https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5771416/5/chrome/browser/ui/cookie_controls/BUILD.gn)
is an example of a feature with logical circular dependencies.
* The header files are moved into a "cookie_controls" target with no
circular dependencies.
* The cc files are moved into a "impl" target, with circular
dependencies allowed with `//chrome/browser:browser` and
`//chrome/browser/ui:ui`. These circular dependencies will
disappear when all sources are removed from `//chrome/browser:browser` and `//chrome/browser/ui:ui`.
* The separation between header and cc files is functionally
equivalent to creating abstract base classes in one target, with
h/cc files in a separate target. This just skips the boilerplate
of creating the abstract base classes.
* Even though there are no build circular dependencies, there are
still logical circular dependencies from the cc files. This
discrepancy is because C++ allows headers to forward declare
dependencies, which do not need to be reflected in gn.
* This directory may have its own namespace.
* Corollary: There are several global functions that facilitate dependency
inversion. It will not be possible to call them from modularized features
(no dependency cycles), and their usage in non-modularized features is
considered a red flag:
* `chrome::FindBrowserWithTab` (and everything in browser_finder.h)
* `GetBrowserViewForNativeWindow` (via browser_view.h)
* `FindBrowserWindowWithWebContents` (via browser_window.h)
* Corollary: Don't use `Browser*`. This is functionally a container of
hundreds of other pointers. It is impossible to specify dependencies,
since `Browser*` functionally depends on everything. Instead, pass in the
relevant pointers, e.g. `Profile*`, `FooFeatureController`, etc.
* Code that uses `Browser*` is also impossible to properly unit test.
* Rationale: Modularity enforces the creation of API surfaces and explicit
dependencies. This has several positive externalities:
* Separation of interface from implementation prevents unnecessarly
tight coupling between features. This in turn reduces spooky action at
a distance, where seemingly innocuous changes break a distant,
supposedly unrelated feature.
* Explicit listing of circular dependencies exposes the likely fragile
areas of code.
* Alongside the later guidance of global functions must be pure,
modularity adds the requirement that test-code perform dependency
injection. This eliminates a common bug where test behavior diverges
from production behavior, and logic is added to production code to
work around test-only behaviors.
```cpp
// Do not do this:
FooFeature(Browser* browser) : browser_(browser) {}
FooFeature::DoStuff() { DoStuffWith(browser_->profile()->GetPrefs()); }
// Do this:
FooFeature(PrefService* prefs) : prefs_(prefs) {}
FooFeature::DoStuff() { DoStuffWith(prefs_); }
```
* Features should have a core controller with precise lifetime semantics. The
core controller for most desktop features should be owned and instantiated by
one of the following classes:
* `TabFeatures` (member of `TabModel`)
* This class should own all tab-centric features. e.g. print preview,
lens overlay, compose, find-in-page, etc.
* If the feature requires instantiation of
`content::WebContentsUserData`, it should be done in this class.
* For desktop chrome, `TabHelpers::AttachTabHelpers` will become a
remove-only method. Clank/WebView may continue to use section 2 of
`TabHelpers::AttachTabHelpers` (Clank/WebView only).
* More complex features that also target mobile platforms or other
supported embedders (e.g. android webview) will continue to use the
layered components architecture.
* We defer to //components/OWNERS for expertise and feedback on the
architecture of these features, and encourage feature-owners to
proactively reach out to them.
* Lazy instantiation of `content::WebContentsUserData` is an
anti-pattern.
* `BrowserWindowFeatures` (member of `Browser`)
* example: omnibox, security chip, bookmarks bar, side panel
* `BrowserContextKeyedServiceFactory` (functionally a member of `Profile`)
* Override `ServiceIsCreatedWithBrowserContext` to return `true`. This
guarantees precise lifetime semantics.
* Lazy instantiation is an anti-pattern.
* Production code is started via `content::ContentMain()`. Test
harnesses use a test-suite dependent start-point, e.g.
`base::LaunchUnitTests`. Tests typically instantiate a subset of
the lazily-instantiated factories instantiated by production code,
at a different time, with a different order. This results in
different, sometimes broken behavior in tests. This is typically
papered over by modifying the production logic to include
otherwise unnecessary conditionals, typically early-exits.
Overriding `ServiceIsCreatedWithBrowserContext` guarantees
identical behavior between test and production code.
* Use `TestingProfile::Builder::AddTestingFactory` to stub or fake
services.
* Separating the .h and .cc file into different build targets is
allowed.
* BrowserContextKeyedServiceFactory combines 3 pieces of
functionality:
* A getter to receive a service based on an instance of
`Profile`.
* A mechanism to establishing dependencies.
* A way to glue together //chrome layer logic with //components
layer logic.
* The latter two pieces of functionality are implemented in the
.cc file and typically result in dependencies on other parts
of //chrome. The first piece of functionality is implemented
in the .h file and does not necessarily introduce a dependency
on //chrome, since the returned service can be defined in
//components.
* GlobalFeatures.
* Features which are scoped to the entire process and span multiple
Profiles should be members of GlobalFeatures.
* GlobalFeatures is a member of BrowserProcess and they have similar
lifetime semantics. The main difference is that historically
BrowserProcess used the antipattern of lazy instantiation, and the
setup of TestingBrowserProcess encourages divergence between test
logic and production logic. On the other hand, GlobalFeatures is
always instantiated.
* This is not making any statements about initialization (e.g.
performing non-trivial setup).
* The core controller should not be a `NoDestructor` singleton.
```cpp
// Properly scoped state avoids categories of bugs and subtle issues. For
// example: one common mistake is to store window-scoped state on a tab-scoped
// object. This results in subtle bugs (or crashes) when tab is dragged into a
// new window.
// Do not do this:
FooTabFeature {
// As per (1) above, we shouldn't be passing or storing Browser* anyways.
// Another common anti-pattern is to dynamically look up Browser* via
// browser_finder methods. These often result in the wrong Browser*
Browser* browser_;
// This will point to the wrong BrowserView if the tab is dragged into a new
// window. Furthermore, BrowserView* itself is a container of hundreds of
// other views. The tab-scoped feature typically wants something much more
// specific.
BrowserView* browser_view_;
// Extensions are profile-scoped, and thus any state/logic should be in a
// ProfileKeyedService. If the user has multiple tabs (possibly across
// multiple windows) simultaneously interacting with FooTabFeature, then it's
// likely that the extension will uninstall while it's still in use.
void InstallExtension();
void UninstallExtension();
};
// Instead do this:
FooTabFeature {
// Guaranteed to remain valid for the lifetime of this class. This can be used
// to dynamically access relevant window state via
// tab_->GetBrowserWindowInterface()->GetFeatures().GetFooWindowFeature()
TabInterface* tab_;
};
FooService : public KeyedService {
void InstallExtension();
void UninstallExtension();
};
```
* Global functions should not access non-global state.
* Pure functions do not access global state and are allowed. e.g. `base::UTF8ToWide()`
* Global functions that wrap global state are allowed, e.g.
`IsFooFeatureEnabled()` wraps the global variable
`BASE_FEATURE(kFooFeature,...)`
* Global functions that access non-global state are disallowed. e.g.
static methods on `BrowserList`.
* No distinction between `//chrome/browser/BUILD.gn` and
`//chrome/browser/ui/BUILD.gn`
* There is plenty of UI code outside of the `ui` subdirectory, and plenty of
non-UI code inside of the `ui` subdirectory. Currently the two BUILD files
allow circular includes. We will continue to treat these directories and
BUILD files as interchangeable.
## UI
* Features should use WebUI and Views toolkit, which are x-platform.
* Usage of underlying primitives is discouraged (aura, Cocoa, gtk, win32,
etc.). This is usually a sign that either the feature is misusing the UI
toolkits, or that the UI toolkits are missing important functionality.
* Features should use "MVC"
* Clear separation between controller (control flow), view (presentation of
UI) and model (storage of data).
* For simple features that do not require data persistence, we only require
separation of controller from view.
* TODO: work with UI/toolkit team to come up with appropriate examples.
* Views:
* For simple configuration changes, prefer to use existing setter methods
and builder syntax.
* Feel free to create custom view subclasses to encapsulate logic or
override methods where doing so helps implement layout as the composition
of smaller standard layouts, or similar. Don't try to jam the kitchen sink
into a single giant view.
* However, avoid subclassing existing concrete view subclasses, e.g. to add
or tweak existing behavior. This risks violating the Google style guidance
on multiple inheritance and makes maintenance challenging. In particular
do not do this with core controls, as the behaviors of common controls
should not vary across the product.
* Avoid subclassing Widgets.
* Avoid self-owned objects/classes for views or controllers.
## General
* Code unrelated to building a web-browser should not live in //chrome.
* See [chromeos/code.md](chromeos/code.md) for details on ChromeOS (non-browser) code.
* We may move some modularized x-platform code into //components. The main
distinction is that ChromeOS can depend on //components, but not on
//chrome. This will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
* Avoid nested message loops.
* Threaded code should have DCHECKs asserting correct sequence.
* Provides documentation and correctness checks.
* See base/sequence_checker.h.
* Most features should be gated by base::Feature, API keys and/or gn build
configuration, not C preprocessor conditionals e.g. `#if
BUILDFLAG(FEATURE_FOO)`.
* We ship a single product (Chrome) to multiple platforms. The purpose of
preprocessor conditionals is:
* (1) to allow platform-agnostic code to reference platform-specific
code.
* e.g. `#if BUILDFLAG(OS_WIN)`
* (2) to glue src-internal into public //chromium/src.
* e.g. `#if BUILDFLAG(GOOGLE_CHROME_BRANDING)`
* (3) To make behavior changes to non-production binaries
* e.g. `#if !defined(NDEBUG)`
* e.g. `#if defined(ADDRESS_SANITIZER)`
* (1) primarily serves as glue.
* (2) turns Chromium into Chrome. We want the two to be as similar as
possible. This preprocessor conditional should be used very sparingly.
Almost all our tests are run against Chromium, so any logic behind this
conditional will be mostly untested.
* (3) is a last resort. The point of DEBUG/ASAN/... builds is to provide
insight into problems that affect the production binaries we ship. By
changing the production logic to do something different, we are no longer
accomplishing this goal.
* In all cases, large segments of code should not be gated behind
preprocessor conditionals. Instead, they should be pulled into separate
files via gn.
* In the event that a feature does have large swathes of code in separate
build files/translation units (e.g. extensions), using a custom feature
flag (e.g. `BUILDFLAG(ENABLE_EXTENSIONS)`) to glue this into the main source
is allowed. The glue code should be kept to a minimum.
* Avoid run-time channel checking.
* Avoid test only conditionals
* This was historically common in unit_tests, because it was not possible to
stub out dependencies due to lack of a clear API surface. By requiring
modular features with clear API surfaces, it also becomes easy to perform
dependency injection for tests, thereby removing the need for conditionals
that can be nullptr in tests.
* In the event that they are necessary, document and enforce via
`CHECK_IS_TEST()`.
* As a corollary: do not use BrowserWithTestWindowTest. In production code,
there is a 1:1 correspondence between "class Browser" and "class
BrowserView". Features that span the two classes (which is most UI
features) should be able to unconditionally reference "class BrowserView".
The existence of this test suite forces features tested by these tests to
have "if (!browser_view)" test-only checks in production code. Either
write a browser test (where both classes are provided by the test fixture) or a unit test
that requires neither.
* This also comes from a corollary of don't use "class Browser".
Historically, features were written that take a "class Browser" as an
input parameter. "class Browser" cannot be stubbed/faked/mocked, and
BrowserWithTestWindowTest was written as a workaround as a way to
provide a "class Browser" without a "class BrowserView". New features
should not be taking "class Browser" as input, and should instead
perform dependency injection.
* Avoid unreachable branches.
* We should have a semantic understanding of each path of control flow. How
is this reached? If we don't know, then we should not have a conditional.
* For a given `base::Callback`, execution should either be always synchronous, or
always asynchronous. Mixing the two means callers have to deal with two distinct
control flows, which often leads to incorrect handling of one.
Avoid the following:
```cpp
if (result.cached) {
RunCallbackSync())
} else {
GetResultAndRunCallbackAsync()
}
```
* Avoid re-entrancy. Control flow should remain as localized as possible.
Bad (unnecessary delegation, re-entrancy)
```cpp
class CarFactory {
std::unique_ptr<Car> CreateCar() {
if (!CanCreateCar()) {
return nullptr;
}
if (FactoryIsBusy() && !delegate->ShouldShowCarIfFactoryIsBusy()) {
return nullptr;
}
return std::make_unique<Car>();
}
bool CanCreateCar();
bool FactoryIsBusy();
Delegate* delegate_ = nullptr;
};
class CarSalesPerson : public Delegate {
// Can return nullptr, in which case no car is shown.
std::unique_ptr<Car> ShowCar() {
return car_factory_->CreateCar();
}
// Delegate overrides:
// Whether the car should be shown, even if the factory is busy.
bool ShouldShowCarIfFactoryIsBusy() override;
CarFactory* car_factory_ = nullptr;
};
```
Good, version 1: Remove delegation. Pass all relevant state to CarFactory so that CreateCar() does not depend on non-local state.
```cpp
class CarFactory {
std::unique_ptr<Car> CreateCar(bool show_even_if_factory_is_busy) {
if (!CanCreateCar()) {
return nullptr;
}
if (FactoryIsBusy() && !show_even_if_factory_is_busy) {
return nullptr;
}
return std::make_unique<Car>();
}
bool CanCreateCar();
bool FactoryIsBusy();
};
class CarSalesPerson {
// Can return nullptr, in which case no car is shown.
std::unique_ptr<Car> ShowCar() {
return car_factory_->CreateCar(ShouldShowCarIfFactoryIsBusy());
}
// Whether the car should be shown, even if the factory is busy.
bool ShouldShowCarIfFactoryIsBusy();
CarFactory* car_factory_ = nullptr;
};
```
Good, version 2: Remove delegation. CreateCar always creates a car (fewer conditionals). State only flows from CarFactory to CarSalesPerson (and never backwards).
```cpp
class CarFactory {
bool CanCreateCar();
bool FactoryIsBusy();
// Never returns nullptr.
std::unique_ptr<Car> CreateCar();
};
class CarSalesPerson {
// Can return nullptr, in which case no car is shown
std::unique_ptr<Car> ShowCar() {
if (!car_factory_->CanCreateCar()) {
return nullptr;
}
if (car_factory_->FactoryIsBusy() && !ShouldShowCarIfFactoryIsBusy()) {
return nullptr;
}
return car_factory_->CreateCar();
}
// Whether the car should be shown, even if the factory is busy.
bool ShouldShowCarIfFactoryIsBusy();
CarFactory* car_factory_ = nullptr;
};
```
* Circular dependencies are a symptom of problematic design.
Bad. FeatureShowcase depends on FeatureA. FeatureA depends on FeatureB.
FeatureB depends on FeatureShowcase. The root problem is that the design for
FeatureShowcase uses both a pull and a push model for control flow.
```cpp
// Shows an icon per feature. Needs to know whether each icon is visible.
class FeatureShowcase {
FeatureShowcase() {
// Checks whether A should be visible, and if so, shows A.
if (FeatureA::IsVisible())
ShowFeatureA();
}
// Called to make B visible.
void ShowFeatureB();
};
class FeatureA {
// Feature A depends on feature B.
FeatureA(FeatureB* b);
static bool IsVisible();
};
class FeatureB {
FeatureB(FeatureShowcase* showcase) {
if (IsVisible())
showcase->ShowFeatureB();
}
static bool IsVisible();
};
```
Good, version 1. FeatureShowcase uses a pull model for control flow.
FeatureShowcase depends on FeatureA and FeatureB. FeatureA depends on FeatureB.
There is no circular dependency.
```cpp
// Shows an icon per feature. Needs to know whether each icon is visible.
class FeatureShowcase {
FeatureShowcase() {
if (FeatureA::IsVisible())
ShowFeatureA();
if (FeatureB::IsVisible())
ShowFeatureB();
}
};
class FeatureA {
// Feature A depends on feature B.
FeatureA(FeatureB* b);
static bool IsVisible();
};
class FeatureB {
FeatureB();
static bool IsVisible();
};
```
Good, version 2. FeatureShowcase uses a push model for control flow. FeatureA
and FeatureB both depend on FeatureShowcase. There is no circular dependency.
```cpp
// Shows an icon per feature. Needs to know whether each icon is visible.
class FeatureShowcase {
FeatureShowcase();
// Called to make A visible.
void ShowFeatureA();
// Called to make B visible.
void ShowFeatureB();
};
class FeatureA {
// Feature A depends on feature B.
FeatureA(FeatureB* b, FeatureShowcase* showcase) {
if (IsVisible())
showcase->ShowFeatureA();
}
static bool IsVisible();
};
class FeatureB {
FeatureB(FeatureShowcase* showcase) {
if (IsVisible())
showcase->ShowFeatureB();
}
static bool IsVisible();
};
```