[Bitcoin-development] overall bitcoin client code quality

Michael Offel michael.offel at web.de
Tue Jul 12 22:50:48 UTC 2011


Monday, July 11, 2011, 10:33:04 AM, Mike Hearn wrote:

>> My overall suggestion is to begin a complete rewrite, inspired by the old
>> code rather than moving a lot of "known to be somehow functional" around.

> This essay is old but still relevant, I think:

>   http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000069.html

It is indeed a very good one but I disagree in two points. First

> As  a  corollary  of  this  axiom, you can ask almost any programmer
> today  about  the code they are working on. "It's a big hairy mess,"
> they will tell you. "I'd like nothing better than to throw it out and start over."
If  someone  asks  me  this  question  about the project I'm currently
working  on  I  would never answer like that. This is important in the
threads  context  because  it  gives  me the confidence to say you can
build  very  large  C++ projects with lots of programers attached over
multiple years and still have a very clean and nice code base. And the
article does also accidently points to one of the roots of messy code.


> Back  to  that  two  page  function. Yes, I know, it's just a simple
> function  to  display  a  window,  but it has grown little hairs and
> stuff on it and nobody knows why. Well, I'll tell you why: those are
> bug  fixes. One of them fixes that bug that Nancy had when she tried
> to  install  the  thing  on  a  computer  that  didn't have Internet
> Explorer.  Another  one  fixes  that  bug  that occurs in low memory
> conditions.  Another  one fixes that bug that occurred when the file
> is  on  a floppy disk and the user yanks out the disk in the middle.
> That  LoadLibrary  call  is  ugly  but it makes the code work on old
> versions of Windows 95.
Well,   if   you  can not identify the meaning of some hairs, they are
either  attached  to  the  wrong  place, in an unclear way or are just
missing  a  line  of  comment.  There  are  studies about what size of
function  and  up  to  what  number  of  variables per function can be
covered  by  the average code reading programer. And these numbers are
low.


Second,  I  agree  with the point that you can not give up your market
leadership by beginning from scratch and you will if you do so. Unless
you  do  it like microsoft did in his example by simultaneously extend
the  old code base. And microsoft does this all the time, just look at
Windows 9x compared to Windows NT and the dead object oriented Windows
kernel. (They did buy lots of that but that is not the point here)
The  mistake  is  to  compare  a  small  project  like  Bitcoin to any
application  like  Word  or  Netscape. The author did explicitly write
that  he  does  not  mean  that  partial  rewrite  is a bad thing. And
rewriting  the  Bitcoin  client with three or four guys is like a tiny
rewrite in a real world application like Word.
> It's important to remember that when you start from scratch there is
> absolutely  no  reason  to believe that you are going to do a better
> job than you did the first time.
In  case of Bitcoin there is reason to believe that a rewrite would be
better.  The first version was hacked together by far less programmers
and  by at least one who did not care about readability, what tells me
that  he  possibly did never work on a real project before. And we now
have  a  known  to  work  protocol,  what  did  for sure slow down the
development a lot and caused rewrites.



Michael





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