| Goal: |
| ----- |
| CppClean attempts to find problems in C++ source that slow development |
| in large code bases, for example various forms of unused code. |
| Unused code can be unused functions, methods, data members, types, etc |
| to unnecessary #include directives. Unnecessary #includes can cause |
| considerable extra compiles increasing the edit-compile-run cycle. |
| |
| The project home page is: http://code.google.com/p/cppclean/ |
| |
| |
| Features: |
| --------- |
| * Find and print C++ language constructs: classes, methods, functions, etc. |
| * Find classes with virtual methods, no virtual destructor, and no bases |
| * Find global/static data that are potential problems when using threads |
| * Unnecessary forward class declarations |
| * Unnecessary function declarations |
| * Undeclared function definitions |
| * (planned) Find unnecessary header files #included |
| - No direct reference to anything in the header |
| - Header is unnecessary if classes were forward declared instead |
| * (planned) Source files that reference headers not directly #included, |
| ie, files that rely on a transitive #include from another header |
| * (planned) Unused members (private, protected, & public) methods and data |
| * (planned) Store AST in a SQL database so relationships can be queried |
| |
| AST is Abstract Syntax Tree, a representation of parsed source code. |
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree |
| |
| |
| System Requirements: |
| -------------------- |
| * Python 2.4 or later (2.3 probably works too) |
| * Works on Windows (untested), Mac OS X, and Unix |
| |
| |
| How to Run: |
| ----------- |
| For all examples, it is assumed that cppclean resides in a directory called |
| /cppclean. |
| |
| To print warnings for classes with virtual methods, no virtual destructor and |
| no base classes: |
| |
| /cppclean/run.sh nonvirtual_dtors.py file1.h file2.h file3.cc ... |
| |
| To print all the functions defined in header file(s): |
| |
| /cppclean/run.sh functions.py file1.h file2.h ... |
| |
| All the commands take multiple files on the command line. Other programs |
| include: find_warnings, headers, methods, and types. Some other programs |
| are available, but used primarily for debugging. |
| |
| run.sh is a simple wrapper that sets PYTHONPATH to /cppclean and then |
| runs the program in /cppclean/cpp/PROGRAM.py. There is currently |
| no equivalent for Windows. Contributions for a run.bat file |
| would be greatly appreciated. |
| |
| |
| How to Configure: |
| ----------------- |
| You can add a siteheaders.py file in /cppclean/cpp to configure where |
| to look for other headers (typically -I options passed to a compiler). |
| Currently two values are supported: _TRANSITIVE and GetIncludeDirs. |
| _TRANSITIVE should be set to a boolean value (True or False) indicating |
| whether to transitively process all header files. The default is False. |
| |
| GetIncludeDirs is a function that takes a single argument and returns |
| a sequence of directories to include. This can be a generator or |
| return a static list. |
| |
| def GetIncludeDirs(filename): |
| return ['/some/path/with/other/headers'] |
| |
| # Here is a more complicated example. |
| def GetIncludeDirs(filename): |
| yield '/path1' |
| yield os.path.join('/path2', os.path.dirname(filename)) |
| yield '/path3' |
| |
| |
| How to Test: |
| ------------ |
| For all examples, it is assumed that cppclean resides in a directory called |
| /cppclean. The tests require |
| |
| cd /cppclean |
| make test |
| # To generate expected results after a change: |
| make expected |
| |
| |
| Current Status: |
| --------------- |
| The parser works pretty well for header files, parsing about 99% of Google's |
| header files. Anything which inspects structure of C++ source files should |
| work reasonably well. Function bodies are not transformed to an AST, |
| but left as tokens. Much work is still needed on finding unused header files |
| and storing an AST in a database. |
| |
| |
| Non-goals: |
| ---------- |
| * Parsing all valid C++ source |
| * Handling invalid C++ source gracefully |
| * Compiling to machine code (or anything beyond an AST) |
| |
| |
| Contact: |
| -------- |
| If you used cppclean, I would love to hear about your experiences |
| cppclean@googlegroups.com. Even if you don't use cppclean, I'd like to |
| hear from you. :-) (You can contact me directly at: nnorwitz@gmail.com) |