We defer to the [Moloch Testing Guide](https://github.com/MolochVentures/moloch/tree/master/test#readme) for specific recommendations, though not all of it is relevant here. Note the introduction:
> Tests should be written, not only to verify correctness of the target code, but to be comprehensively reviewed by other programmers. Therefore, for mission critical Solidity code, the quality of the tests are just as important (if not more so) than the code itself, and should be written with the highest standards of clarity and elegance.
Solidity code should be written in a consistent format enforced by a linter, following the official [Solidity Style Guide](https://docs.soliditylang.org/en/latest/style-guide.html). See below for further [Solidity Conventions](#solidity-conventions).
The code should be simple and straightforward, prioritizing readability and understandability. Consistency and predictability should be maintained across the codebase. In particular, this applies to naming, which should be systematic, clear, and concise.
For users, features must be abundantly documented. Documentation should include answers to common questions, solutions to common problems, and recommendations for critical decisions that the user may face.
All changes to the core codebase (excluding tests, auxiliary scripts, etc.) must be documented in a changelog, except for purely cosmetic or documentation changes.
All changes must be submitted through pull requests and go through peer code review.
The review must be approached by the reviewer in a similar way as if it was an audit of the code in question (but importantly it is not a substitute for and should not be considered an audit).
Reviewers should enforce code and project guidelines.
Automations that make use of sensitive credentials must use secure secret management, and must be strengthened against attacks such as [those on GitHub Actions worklows](https://github.com/nikitastupin/pwnhub).
Pull requests are squash-merged to keep the `master` branch history clean. The title of the pull request becomes the commit message, so it should be written in a consistent format:
1) Begin with a capital letter.
2) Do not end with a period.
3) Write in the imperative: "Add feature X" and not "Adds feature X" or "Added feature X".
This repository does not follow conventional commits, so do not prefix the title with "fix:" or "feat:".
Work in progress pull requests should be submitted as Drafts and should not be prefixed with "WIP:".
Branch names don't matter, and commit messages within a pull request mostly don't matter either, although they can help the review process.
In addition to the official Solidity Style Guide we have a number of other conventions that must be followed.
* All state variables should be private.
Changes to state should be accompanied by events, and in some cases it is not correct to arbitrarily set state. Encapsulating variables as private and only allowing modification via setters enables us to ensure that events and other rules are followed reliably and prevents this kind of user error.
* Internal or private state variables or functions should have an underscore prefix.
* Unchecked arithmetic blocks should contain comments explaining why overflow is guaranteed not to happen. If the reason is immediately apparent from the line above the unchecked block, the comment may be omitted.
* Custom errors should be declared following the [EIP-6093](https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-6093) rationale whenever reasonable. Also, consider the following:
* The domain prefix should be picked in the following order:
1. Use `ERC<number>` if the error is a violation of an ERC specification.
2. Use the name of the underlying component where it belongs (eg. `Governor`, `ECDSA`, or `Timelock`).
* The location of custom errors should be decided in the following order:
1. Take the errors from their underlying ERCs if they're already defined.
2. Declare the errors in the underlying interface/library if the error makes sense in its context.
3. Declare the error in the implementation if the underlying interface/library is not suitable to do so (eg. interface/library already specified in an ERC).
4. Declare the error in an extension if the error only happens in such extension or child contracts.
* Custom error names should not be declared twice along the library to avoid duplicated identifier declarations when inheriting from multiple contracts.