| /*===-- clang-c/Index.h - Indexing Public C Interface -------------*- C -*-===*\ |
| |* *| |
| |* The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure *| |
| |* *| |
| |* This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source *| |
| |* License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. *| |
| |* *| |
| |*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*| |
| |* *| |
| |* This header provides a public inferface to a Clang library for extracting *| |
| |* high-level symbol information from source files without exposing the full *| |
| |* Clang C++ API. *| |
| |* *| |
| \*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*/ |
| |
| #ifndef CLANG_C_INDEX_H |
| #define CLANG_C_INDEX_H |
| |
| #include <sys/stat.h> |
| #include <time.h> |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| extern "C" { |
| #endif |
| |
| /* MSVC DLL import/export. */ |
| #ifdef _MSC_VER |
| #ifdef _CINDEX_LIB_ |
| #define CINDEX_LINKAGE __declspec(dllexport) |
| #else |
| #define CINDEX_LINKAGE __declspec(dllimport) |
| #endif |
| #else |
| #define CINDEX_LINKAGE |
| #endif |
| |
| /** \defgroup CINDEX C Interface to Clang |
| * |
| * The C Interface to Clang provides a relatively small API that exposes |
| * facilities for parsing source code into an abstract syntax tree (AST), |
| * loading already-parsed ASTs, traversing the AST, associating |
| * physical source locations with elements within the AST, and other |
| * facilities that support Clang-based development tools. |
| * |
| * This C interface to Clang will never provide all of the information |
| * representation stored in Clang's C++ AST, nor should it: the intent is to |
| * maintain an API that is relatively stable from one release to the next, |
| * providing only the basic functionality needed to support development tools. |
| * |
| * To avoid namespace pollution, data types are prefixed with "CX" and |
| * functions are prefixed with "clang_". |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief An "index" that consists of a set of translation units that would |
| * typically be linked together into an executable or library. |
| */ |
| typedef void *CXIndex; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A single translation unit, which resides in an index. |
| */ |
| typedef void *CXTranslationUnit; /* A translation unit instance. */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Opaque pointer representing client data that will be passed through |
| * to various callbacks and visitors. |
| */ |
| typedef void *CXClientData; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Provides the contents of a file that has not yet been saved to disk. |
| * |
| * Each CXUnsavedFile instance provides the name of a file on the |
| * system along with the current contents of that file that have not |
| * yet been saved to disk. |
| */ |
| struct CXUnsavedFile { |
| /** |
| * \brief The file whose contents have not yet been saved. |
| * |
| * This file must already exist in the file system. |
| */ |
| const char *Filename; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A buffer containing the unsaved contents of this file. |
| */ |
| const char *Contents; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief The length of the unsaved contents of this buffer. |
| */ |
| unsigned long Length; |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_STRING String manipulation routines |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A character string. |
| * |
| * The \c CXString type is used to return strings from the interface when |
| * the ownership of that string might different from one call to the next. |
| * Use \c clang_getCString() to retrieve the string data and, once finished |
| * with the string data, call \c clang_disposeString() to free the string. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| const char *Spelling; |
| /* A 1 value indicates the clang_ indexing API needed to allocate the string |
| (and it must be freed by clang_disposeString()). */ |
| int MustFreeString; |
| } CXString; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the character data associated with the given string. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE const char *clang_getCString(CXString string); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Free the given string, |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeString(CXString string); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief clang_createIndex() provides a shared context for creating |
| * translation units. It provides two options: |
| * |
| * - excludeDeclarationsFromPCH: When non-zero, allows enumeration of "local" |
| * declarations (when loading any new translation units). A "local" declaration |
| * is one that belongs in the translation unit itself and not in a precompiled |
| * header that was used by the translation unit. If zero, all declarations |
| * will be enumerated. |
| * |
| * Here is an example: |
| * |
| * // excludeDeclsFromPCH = 1, displayDiagnostics=1 |
| * Idx = clang_createIndex(1, 1); |
| * |
| * // IndexTest.pch was produced with the following command: |
| * // "clang -x c IndexTest.h -emit-ast -o IndexTest.pch" |
| * TU = clang_createTranslationUnit(Idx, "IndexTest.pch"); |
| * |
| * // This will load all the symbols from 'IndexTest.pch' |
| * clang_visitChildren(clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(TU), |
| * TranslationUnitVisitor, 0); |
| * clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU); |
| * |
| * // This will load all the symbols from 'IndexTest.c', excluding symbols |
| * // from 'IndexTest.pch'. |
| * char *args[] = { "-Xclang", "-include-pch=IndexTest.pch" }; |
| * TU = clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(Idx, "IndexTest.c", 2, args, |
| * 0, 0); |
| * clang_visitChildren(clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(TU), |
| * TranslationUnitVisitor, 0); |
| * clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU); |
| * |
| * This process of creating the 'pch', loading it separately, and using it (via |
| * -include-pch) allows 'excludeDeclsFromPCH' to remove redundant callbacks |
| * (which gives the indexer the same performance benefit as the compiler). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXIndex clang_createIndex(int excludeDeclarationsFromPCH, |
| int displayDiagnostics); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Destroy the given index. |
| * |
| * The index must not be destroyed until all of the translation units created |
| * within that index have been destroyed. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeIndex(CXIndex index); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Request that AST's be generated externally for API calls which parse |
| * source code on the fly, e.g. \see createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile. |
| * |
| * Note: This is for debugging purposes only, and may be removed at a later |
| * date. |
| * |
| * \param index - The index to update. |
| * \param value - The new flag value. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_setUseExternalASTGeneration(CXIndex index, |
| int value); |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_FILES File manipulation routines |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A particular source file that is part of a translation unit. |
| */ |
| typedef void *CXFile; |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the complete file and path name of the given file. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getFileName(CXFile SFile); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the last modification time of the given file. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE time_t clang_getFileTime(CXFile SFile); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a file handle within the given translation unit. |
| * |
| * \param tu the translation unit |
| * |
| * \param file_name the name of the file. |
| * |
| * \returns the file handle for the named file in the translation unit \p tu, |
| * or a NULL file handle if the file was not a part of this translation unit. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXFile clang_getFile(CXTranslationUnit tu, |
| const char *file_name); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_LOCATIONS Physical source locations |
| * |
| * Clang represents physical source locations in its abstract syntax tree in |
| * great detail, with file, line, and column information for the majority of |
| * the tokens parsed in the source code. These data types and functions are |
| * used to represent source location information, either for a particular |
| * point in the program or for a range of points in the program, and extract |
| * specific location information from those data types. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Identifies a specific source location within a translation |
| * unit. |
| * |
| * Use clang_getInstantiationLocation() to map a source location to a |
| * particular file, line, and column. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| void *ptr_data[2]; |
| unsigned int_data; |
| } CXSourceLocation; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Identifies a half-open character range in the source code. |
| * |
| * Use clang_getRangeStart() and clang_getRangeEnd() to retrieve the |
| * starting and end locations from a source range, respectively. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| void *ptr_data[2]; |
| unsigned begin_int_data; |
| unsigned end_int_data; |
| } CXSourceRange; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a NULL (invalid) source location. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getNullLocation(); |
| |
| /** |
| * \determine Determine whether two source locations, which must refer into |
| * the same translation unit, refer to exactly the same point in the source |
| * code. |
| * |
| * \returns non-zero if the source locations refer to the same location, zero |
| * if they refer to different locations. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalLocations(CXSourceLocation loc1, |
| CXSourceLocation loc2); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieves the source location associated with a given file/line/column |
| * in a particular translation unit. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getLocation(CXTranslationUnit tu, |
| CXFile file, |
| unsigned line, |
| unsigned column); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a NULL (invalid) source range. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getNullRange(); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a source range given the beginning and ending source |
| * locations. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getRange(CXSourceLocation begin, |
| CXSourceLocation end); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented by |
| * the given source location. |
| * |
| * \param location the location within a source file that will be decomposed |
| * into its parts. |
| * |
| * \param file [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the file to which the given |
| * source location points. |
| * |
| * \param line [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the line to which the given |
| * source location points. |
| * |
| * \param column [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the column to which the given |
| * source location points. |
| * |
| * \param offset [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the offset into the |
| * buffer to which the given source location points. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getInstantiationLocation(CXSourceLocation location, |
| CXFile *file, |
| unsigned *line, |
| unsigned *column, |
| unsigned *offset); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a source location representing the first character within a |
| * source range. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getRangeStart(CXSourceRange range); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a source location representing the last character within a |
| * source range. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getRangeEnd(CXSourceRange range); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine if the source location occurs within the main file |
| * of the translation unit (as opposed to an included header). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isFromMainFile(CXSourceLocation loc); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_DIAG Diagnostic reporting |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes the severity of a particular diagnostic. |
| */ |
| enum CXDiagnosticSeverity { |
| /** |
| * \brief A diagnostic that has been suppressed, e.g., by a command-line |
| * option. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_Ignored = 0, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief This diagnostic is a note that should be attached to the |
| * previous (non-note) diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_Note = 1, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief This diagnostic indicates suspicious code that may not be |
| * wrong. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_Warning = 2, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief This diagnostic indicates that the code is ill-formed. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_Error = 3, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief This diagnostic indicates that the code is ill-formed such |
| * that future parser recovery is unlikely to produce useful |
| * results. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_Fatal = 4 |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A single diagnostic, containing the diagnostic's severity, |
| * location, text, source ranges, and fix-it hints. |
| */ |
| typedef void *CXDiagnostic; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the number of diagnostics produced for the given |
| * translation unit. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getNumDiagnostics(CXTranslationUnit Unit); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a diagnostic associated with the given translation unit. |
| * |
| * \param Unit the translation unit to query. |
| * \param Index the zero-based diagnostic number to retrieve. |
| * |
| * \returns the requested diagnostic. This diagnostic must be freed |
| * via a call to \c clang_disposeDiagnostic(). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXDiagnostic clang_getDiagnostic(CXTranslationUnit Unit, |
| unsigned Index); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Destroy a diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeDiagnostic(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Options to control the display of diagnostics. |
| * |
| * The values in this enum are meant to be combined to customize the |
| * behavior of \c clang_displayDiagnostic(). |
| */ |
| enum CXDiagnosticDisplayOptions { |
| /** |
| * \brief Display the source-location information where the |
| * diagnostic was located. |
| * |
| * When set, diagnostics will be prefixed by the file, line, and |
| * (optionally) column to which the diagnostic refers. For example, |
| * |
| * \code |
| * test.c:28: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * This option corresponds to the clang flag \c -fshow-source-location. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_DisplaySourceLocation = 0x01, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief If displaying the source-location information of the |
| * diagnostic, also include the column number. |
| * |
| * This option corresponds to the clang flag \c -fshow-column. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_DisplayColumn = 0x02, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief If displaying the source-location information of the |
| * diagnostic, also include information about source ranges in a |
| * machine-parsable format. |
| * |
| * This option corresponds to the clang flag |
| * \c -fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info. |
| */ |
| CXDiagnostic_DisplaySourceRanges = 0x04 |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Format the given diagnostic in a manner that is suitable for display. |
| * |
| * This routine will format the given diagnostic to a string, rendering |
| * the diagnostic according to the various options given. The |
| * \c clang_defaultDiagnosticDisplayOptions() function returns the set of |
| * options that most closely mimics the behavior of the clang compiler. |
| * |
| * \param Diagnostic The diagnostic to print. |
| * |
| * \param Options A set of options that control the diagnostic display, |
| * created by combining \c CXDiagnosticDisplayOptions values. |
| * |
| * \returns A new string containing for formatted diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_formatDiagnostic(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic, |
| unsigned Options); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the set of display options most similar to the |
| * default behavior of the clang compiler. |
| * |
| * \returns A set of display options suitable for use with \c |
| * clang_displayDiagnostic(). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultDiagnosticDisplayOptions(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Print a diagnostic to the given file. |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the severity of the given diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXDiagnosticSeverity |
| clang_getDiagnosticSeverity(CXDiagnostic); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the source location of the given diagnostic. |
| * |
| * This location is where Clang would print the caret ('^') when |
| * displaying the diagnostic on the command line. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getDiagnosticLocation(CXDiagnostic); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the text of the given diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticSpelling(CXDiagnostic); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the number of source ranges associated with the given |
| * diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticNumRanges(CXDiagnostic); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a source range associated with the diagnostic. |
| * |
| * A diagnostic's source ranges highlight important elements in the source |
| * code. On the command line, Clang displays source ranges by |
| * underlining them with '~' characters. |
| * |
| * \param Diagnostic the diagnostic whose range is being extracted. |
| * |
| * \param Range the zero-based index specifying which range to |
| * |
| * \returns the requested source range. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getDiagnosticRange(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic, |
| unsigned Range); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the number of fix-it hints associated with the |
| * given diagnostic. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticNumFixIts(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the replacement information for a given fix-it. |
| * |
| * Fix-its are described in terms of a source range whose contents |
| * should be replaced by a string. This approach generalizes over |
| * three kinds of operations: removal of source code (the range covers |
| * the code to be removed and the replacement string is empty), |
| * replacement of source code (the range covers the code to be |
| * replaced and the replacement string provides the new code), and |
| * insertion (both the start and end of the range point at the |
| * insertion location, and the replacement string provides the text to |
| * insert). |
| * |
| * \param Diagnostic The diagnostic whose fix-its are being queried. |
| * |
| * \param FixIt The zero-based index of the fix-it. |
| * |
| * \param ReplacementRange The source range whose contents will be |
| * replaced with the returned replacement string. Note that source |
| * ranges are half-open ranges [a, b), so the source code should be |
| * replaced from a and up to (but not including) b. |
| * |
| * \returns A string containing text that should be replace the source |
| * code indicated by the \c ReplacementRange. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticFixIt(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic, |
| unsigned FixIt, |
| CXSourceRange *ReplacementRange); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_TRANSLATION_UNIT Translation unit manipulation |
| * |
| * The routines in this group provide the ability to create and destroy |
| * translation units from files, either by parsing the contents of the files or |
| * by reading in a serialized representation of a translation unit. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Get the original translation unit source file name. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString |
| clang_getTranslationUnitSpelling(CXTranslationUnit CTUnit); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Return the CXTranslationUnit for a given source file and the provided |
| * command line arguments one would pass to the compiler. |
| * |
| * Note: The 'source_filename' argument is optional. If the caller provides a |
| * NULL pointer, the name of the source file is expected to reside in the |
| * specified command line arguments. |
| * |
| * Note: When encountered in 'clang_command_line_args', the following options |
| * are ignored: |
| * |
| * '-c' |
| * '-emit-ast' |
| * '-fsyntax-only' |
| * '-o <output file>' (both '-o' and '<output file>' are ignored) |
| * |
| * |
| * \param source_filename - The name of the source file to load, or NULL if the |
| * source file is included in clang_command_line_args. |
| * |
| * \param num_unsaved_files the number of unsaved file entries in \p |
| * unsaved_files. |
| * |
| * \param unsaved_files the files that have not yet been saved to disk |
| * but may be required for code completion, including the contents of |
| * those files. The contents and name of these files (as specified by |
| * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to |
| * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns. |
| * |
| * \param diag_callback callback function that will receive any diagnostics |
| * emitted while processing this source file. If NULL, diagnostics will be |
| * suppressed. |
| * |
| * \param diag_client_data client data that will be passed to the diagnostic |
| * callback function. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile( |
| CXIndex CIdx, |
| const char *source_filename, |
| int num_clang_command_line_args, |
| const char **clang_command_line_args, |
| unsigned num_unsaved_files, |
| struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Create a translation unit from an AST file (-emit-ast). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_createTranslationUnit(CXIndex, |
| const char *ast_filename); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Destroy the specified CXTranslationUnit object. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes the kind of entity that a cursor refers to. |
| */ |
| enum CXCursorKind { |
| /* Declarations */ |
| /** |
| * \brief A declaration whose specific kind is not exposed via this |
| * interface. |
| * |
| * Unexposed declarations have the same operations as any other kind |
| * of declaration; one can extract their location information, |
| * spelling, find their definitions, etc. However, the specific kind |
| * of the declaration is not reported. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_UnexposedDecl = 1, |
| /** \brief A C or C++ struct. */ |
| CXCursor_StructDecl = 2, |
| /** \brief A C or C++ union. */ |
| CXCursor_UnionDecl = 3, |
| /** \brief A C++ class. */ |
| CXCursor_ClassDecl = 4, |
| /** \brief An enumeration. */ |
| CXCursor_EnumDecl = 5, |
| /** |
| * \brief A field (in C) or non-static data member (in C++) in a |
| * struct, union, or C++ class. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_FieldDecl = 6, |
| /** \brief An enumerator constant. */ |
| CXCursor_EnumConstantDecl = 7, |
| /** \brief A function. */ |
| CXCursor_FunctionDecl = 8, |
| /** \brief A variable. */ |
| CXCursor_VarDecl = 9, |
| /** \brief A function or method parameter. */ |
| CXCursor_ParmDecl = 10, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C @interface. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCInterfaceDecl = 11, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C @interface for a category. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCCategoryDecl = 12, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C @protocol declaration. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCProtocolDecl = 13, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C @property declaration. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCPropertyDecl = 14, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C instance variable. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCIvarDecl = 15, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C instance method. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCInstanceMethodDecl = 16, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C class method. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCClassMethodDecl = 17, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C @implementation. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCImplementationDecl = 18, |
| /** \brief An Objective-C @implementation for a category. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCCategoryImplDecl = 19, |
| /** \brief A typedef */ |
| CXCursor_TypedefDecl = 20, |
| /** \brief A C++ class method. */ |
| CXCursor_CXXMethod = 21, |
| /** \brief A C++ namespace. */ |
| CXCursor_Namespace = 22, |
| /** \brief A linkage specification, e.g. 'extern "C"'. */ |
| CXCursor_LinkageSpec = 23, |
| |
| CXCursor_FirstDecl = CXCursor_UnexposedDecl, |
| CXCursor_LastDecl = CXCursor_LinkageSpec, |
| |
| /* References */ |
| CXCursor_FirstRef = 40, /* Decl references */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCSuperClassRef = 40, |
| CXCursor_ObjCProtocolRef = 41, |
| CXCursor_ObjCClassRef = 42, |
| /** |
| * \brief A reference to a type declaration. |
| * |
| * A type reference occurs anywhere where a type is named but not |
| * declared. For example, given: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * typedef unsigned size_type; |
| * size_type size; |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * The typedef is a declaration of size_type (CXCursor_TypedefDecl), |
| * while the type of the variable "size" is referenced. The cursor |
| * referenced by the type of size is the typedef for size_type. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_TypeRef = 43, |
| CXCursor_LastRef = 43, |
| |
| /* Error conditions */ |
| CXCursor_FirstInvalid = 70, |
| CXCursor_InvalidFile = 70, |
| CXCursor_NoDeclFound = 71, |
| CXCursor_NotImplemented = 72, |
| CXCursor_InvalidCode = 73, |
| CXCursor_LastInvalid = CXCursor_InvalidCode, |
| |
| /* Expressions */ |
| CXCursor_FirstExpr = 100, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief An expression whose specific kind is not exposed via this |
| * interface. |
| * |
| * Unexposed expressions have the same operations as any other kind |
| * of expression; one can extract their location information, |
| * spelling, children, etc. However, the specific kind of the |
| * expression is not reported. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_UnexposedExpr = 100, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief An expression that refers to some value declaration, such |
| * as a function, varible, or enumerator. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_DeclRefExpr = 101, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief An expression that refers to a member of a struct, union, |
| * class, Objective-C class, etc. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_MemberRefExpr = 102, |
| |
| /** \brief An expression that calls a function. */ |
| CXCursor_CallExpr = 103, |
| |
| /** \brief An expression that sends a message to an Objective-C |
| object or class. */ |
| CXCursor_ObjCMessageExpr = 104, |
| |
| /** \brief An expression that represents a block literal. */ |
| CXCursor_BlockExpr = 105, |
| |
| CXCursor_LastExpr = 105, |
| |
| /* Statements */ |
| CXCursor_FirstStmt = 200, |
| /** |
| * \brief A statement whose specific kind is not exposed via this |
| * interface. |
| * |
| * Unexposed statements have the same operations as any other kind of |
| * statement; one can extract their location information, spelling, |
| * children, etc. However, the specific kind of the statement is not |
| * reported. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_UnexposedStmt = 200, |
| CXCursor_LastStmt = 200, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Cursor that represents the translation unit itself. |
| * |
| * The translation unit cursor exists primarily to act as the root |
| * cursor for traversing the contents of a translation unit. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_TranslationUnit = 300, |
| |
| /* Attributes */ |
| CXCursor_FirstAttr = 400, |
| /** |
| * \brief An attribute whose specific kind is not exposed via this |
| * interface. |
| */ |
| CXCursor_UnexposedAttr = 400, |
| |
| CXCursor_IBActionAttr = 401, |
| CXCursor_IBOutletAttr = 402, |
| CXCursor_IBOutletCollectionAttr = 403, |
| CXCursor_LastAttr = CXCursor_IBOutletCollectionAttr, |
| |
| /* Preprocessing */ |
| CXCursor_PreprocessingDirective = 500, |
| CXCursor_MacroDefinition = 501, |
| CXCursor_MacroInstantiation = 502, |
| CXCursor_FirstPreprocessing = CXCursor_PreprocessingDirective, |
| CXCursor_LastPreprocessing = CXCursor_MacroInstantiation |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A cursor representing some element in the abstract syntax tree for |
| * a translation unit. |
| * |
| * The cursor abstraction unifies the different kinds of entities in a |
| * program--declaration, statements, expressions, references to declarations, |
| * etc.--under a single "cursor" abstraction with a common set of operations. |
| * Common operation for a cursor include: getting the physical location in |
| * a source file where the cursor points, getting the name associated with a |
| * cursor, and retrieving cursors for any child nodes of a particular cursor. |
| * |
| * Cursors can be produced in two specific ways. |
| * clang_getTranslationUnitCursor() produces a cursor for a translation unit, |
| * from which one can use clang_visitChildren() to explore the rest of the |
| * translation unit. clang_getCursor() maps from a physical source location |
| * to the entity that resides at that location, allowing one to map from the |
| * source code into the AST. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| enum CXCursorKind kind; |
| void *data[3]; |
| } CXCursor; |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_MANIP Cursor manipulations |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the NULL cursor, which represents no entity. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getNullCursor(void); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the cursor that represents the given translation unit. |
| * |
| * The translation unit cursor can be used to start traversing the |
| * various declarations within the given translation unit. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(CXTranslationUnit); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether two cursors are equivalent. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalCursors(CXCursor, CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the kind of the given cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCursorKind clang_getCursorKind(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a declaration. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isDeclaration(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a simple |
| * reference. |
| * |
| * Note that other kinds of cursors (such as expressions) can also refer to |
| * other cursors. Use clang_getCursorReferenced() to determine whether a |
| * particular cursor refers to another entity. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isReference(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an expression. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isExpression(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a statement. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isStatement(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an invalid |
| * cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isInvalid(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a translation |
| * unit. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isTranslationUnit(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /*** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor represents a preprocessing |
| * element, such as a preprocessor directive or macro instantiation. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isPreprocessing(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /*** |
| * \brief Determine whether the given cursor represents a currently |
| * unexposed piece of the AST (e.g., CXCursor_UnexposedStmt). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isUnexposed(enum CXCursorKind); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describe the linkage of the entity referred to by a cursor. |
| */ |
| enum CXLinkageKind { |
| /** \brief This value indicates that no linkage information is available |
| * for a provided CXCursor. */ |
| CXLinkage_Invalid, |
| /** |
| * \brief This is the linkage for variables, parameters, and so on that |
| * have automatic storage. This covers normal (non-extern) local variables. |
| */ |
| CXLinkage_NoLinkage, |
| /** \brief This is the linkage for static variables and static functions. */ |
| CXLinkage_Internal, |
| /** \brief This is the linkage for entities with external linkage that live |
| * in C++ anonymous namespaces.*/ |
| CXLinkage_UniqueExternal, |
| /** \brief This is the linkage for entities with true, external linkage. */ |
| CXLinkage_External |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the linkage of the entity referred to by a given cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLinkageKind clang_getCursorLinkage(CXCursor cursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describe the "language" of the entity referred to by a cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLanguageKind { |
| CXLanguage_Invalid = 0, |
| CXLanguage_C, |
| CXLanguage_ObjC, |
| CXLanguage_CPlusPlus |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the "language" of the entity referred to by a given cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLanguageKind clang_getCursorLanguage(CXCursor cursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_SOURCE Mapping between cursors and source code |
| * |
| * Cursors represent a location within the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). These |
| * routines help map between cursors and the physical locations where the |
| * described entities occur in the source code. The mapping is provided in |
| * both directions, so one can map from source code to the AST and back. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Map a source location to the cursor that describes the entity at that |
| * location in the source code. |
| * |
| * clang_getCursor() maps an arbitrary source location within a translation |
| * unit down to the most specific cursor that describes the entity at that |
| * location. For example, given an expression \c x + y, invoking |
| * clang_getCursor() with a source location pointing to "x" will return the |
| * cursor for "x"; similarly for "y". If the cursor points anywhere between |
| * "x" or "y" (e.g., on the + or the whitespace around it), clang_getCursor() |
| * will return a cursor referring to the "+" expression. |
| * |
| * \returns a cursor representing the entity at the given source location, or |
| * a NULL cursor if no such entity can be found. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursor(CXTranslationUnit, CXSourceLocation); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the physical location of the source constructor referenced |
| * by the given cursor. |
| * |
| * The location of a declaration is typically the location of the name of that |
| * declaration, where the name of that declaration would occur if it is |
| * unnamed, or some keyword that introduces that particular declaration. |
| * The location of a reference is where that reference occurs within the |
| * source code. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getCursorLocation(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the physical extent of the source construct referenced by |
| * the given cursor. |
| * |
| * The extent of a cursor starts with the file/line/column pointing at the |
| * first character within the source construct that the cursor refers to and |
| * ends with the last character withinin that source construct. For a |
| * declaration, the extent covers the declaration itself. For a reference, |
| * the extent covers the location of the reference (e.g., where the referenced |
| * entity was actually used). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getCursorExtent(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_TYPES Type information for CXCursors |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes the kind of type |
| */ |
| enum CXTypeKind { |
| /** |
| * \brief Reprents an invalid type (e.g., where no type is available). |
| */ |
| CXType_Invalid = 0, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A type whose specific kind is not exposed via this |
| * interface. |
| */ |
| CXType_Unexposed = 1, |
| |
| /* Builtin types */ |
| CXType_Void = 2, |
| CXType_Bool = 3, |
| CXType_Char_U = 4, |
| CXType_UChar = 5, |
| CXType_Char16 = 6, |
| CXType_Char32 = 7, |
| CXType_UShort = 8, |
| CXType_UInt = 9, |
| CXType_ULong = 10, |
| CXType_ULongLong = 11, |
| CXType_UInt128 = 12, |
| CXType_Char_S = 13, |
| CXType_SChar = 14, |
| CXType_WChar = 15, |
| CXType_Short = 16, |
| CXType_Int = 17, |
| CXType_Long = 18, |
| CXType_LongLong = 19, |
| CXType_Int128 = 20, |
| CXType_Float = 21, |
| CXType_Double = 22, |
| CXType_LongDouble = 23, |
| CXType_NullPtr = 24, |
| CXType_Overload = 25, |
| CXType_Dependent = 26, |
| CXType_ObjCId = 27, |
| CXType_ObjCClass = 28, |
| CXType_ObjCSel = 29, |
| CXType_FirstBuiltin = CXType_Void, |
| CXType_LastBuiltin = CXType_ObjCSel, |
| |
| CXType_Complex = 100, |
| CXType_Pointer = 101, |
| CXType_BlockPointer = 102, |
| CXType_LValueReference = 103, |
| CXType_RValueReference = 104, |
| CXType_Record = 105, |
| CXType_Enum = 106, |
| CXType_Typedef = 107, |
| CXType_ObjCInterface = 108, |
| CXType_ObjCObjectPointer = 109 |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief The type of an element in the abstract syntax tree. |
| * |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| enum CXTypeKind kind; |
| void *data[2]; |
| } CXType; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the type of a CXCursor (if any). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCursorType(CXCursor C); |
| |
| /** |
| * \determine Determine whether two CXTypes represent the same type. |
| * |
| * \returns non-zero if the CXTypes represent the same type and |
| zero otherwise. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalTypes(CXType A, CXType B); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Return the canonical type for a CXType. |
| * |
| * Clang's type system explicitly models typedefs and all the ways |
| * a specific type can be represented. The canonical type is the underlying |
| * type with all the "sugar" removed. For example, if 'T' is a typedef |
| * for 'int', the canonical type for 'T' would be 'int'. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCanonicalType(CXType T); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief For pointer types, returns the type of the pointee. |
| * |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getPointeeType(CXType T); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Return the cursor for the declaration of the given type. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getTypeDeclaration(CXType T); |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the spelling of a given CXTypeKind. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getTypeKindSpelling(enum CXTypeKind K); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_TRAVERSAL Traversing the AST with cursors |
| * |
| * These routines provide the ability to traverse the abstract syntax tree |
| * using cursors. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes how the traversal of the children of a particular |
| * cursor should proceed after visiting a particular child cursor. |
| * |
| * A value of this enumeration type should be returned by each |
| * \c CXCursorVisitor to indicate how clang_visitChildren() proceed. |
| */ |
| enum CXChildVisitResult { |
| /** |
| * \brief Terminates the cursor traversal. |
| */ |
| CXChildVisit_Break, |
| /** |
| * \brief Continues the cursor traversal with the next sibling of |
| * the cursor just visited, without visiting its children. |
| */ |
| CXChildVisit_Continue, |
| /** |
| * \brief Recursively traverse the children of this cursor, using |
| * the same visitor and client data. |
| */ |
| CXChildVisit_Recurse |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Visitor invoked for each cursor found by a traversal. |
| * |
| * This visitor function will be invoked for each cursor found by |
| * clang_visitCursorChildren(). Its first argument is the cursor being |
| * visited, its second argument is the parent visitor for that cursor, |
| * and its third argument is the client data provided to |
| * clang_visitCursorChildren(). |
| * |
| * The visitor should return one of the \c CXChildVisitResult values |
| * to direct clang_visitCursorChildren(). |
| */ |
| typedef enum CXChildVisitResult (*CXCursorVisitor)(CXCursor cursor, |
| CXCursor parent, |
| CXClientData client_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Visit the children of a particular cursor. |
| * |
| * This function visits all the direct children of the given cursor, |
| * invoking the given \p visitor function with the cursors of each |
| * visited child. The traversal may be recursive, if the visitor returns |
| * \c CXChildVisit_Recurse. The traversal may also be ended prematurely, if |
| * the visitor returns \c CXChildVisit_Break. |
| * |
| * \param parent the cursor whose child may be visited. All kinds of |
| * cursors can be visited, including invalid cursors (which, by |
| * definition, have no children). |
| * |
| * \param visitor the visitor function that will be invoked for each |
| * child of \p parent. |
| * |
| * \param client_data pointer data supplied by the client, which will |
| * be passed to the visitor each time it is invoked. |
| * |
| * \returns a non-zero value if the traversal was terminated |
| * prematurely by the visitor returning \c CXChildVisit_Break. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_visitChildren(CXCursor parent, |
| CXCursorVisitor visitor, |
| CXClientData client_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_XREF Cross-referencing in the AST |
| * |
| * These routines provide the ability to determine references within and |
| * across translation units, by providing the names of the entities referenced |
| * by cursors, follow reference cursors to the declarations they reference, |
| * and associate declarations with their definitions. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) for the entity referenced |
| * by the given cursor. |
| * |
| * A Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) is a string that identifies a particular |
| * entity (function, class, variable, etc.) within a program. USRs can be |
| * compared across translation units to determine, e.g., when references in |
| * one translation refer to an entity defined in another translation unit. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorUSR(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C class. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCClass(const char *class_name); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C category. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString |
| clang_constructUSR_ObjCCategory(const char *class_name, |
| const char *category_name); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C protocol. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString |
| clang_constructUSR_ObjCProtocol(const char *protocol_name); |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C instance variable and |
| * the USR for its containing class. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCIvar(const char *name, |
| CXString classUSR); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C method and |
| * the USR for its containing class. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCMethod(const char *name, |
| unsigned isInstanceMethod, |
| CXString classUSR); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C property and the USR |
| * for its containing class. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCProperty(const char *property, |
| CXString classUSR); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a name for the entity referenced by this cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorSpelling(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** \brief For a cursor that is a reference, retrieve a cursor representing the |
| * entity that it references. |
| * |
| * Reference cursors refer to other entities in the AST. For example, an |
| * Objective-C superclass reference cursor refers to an Objective-C class. |
| * This function produces the cursor for the Objective-C class from the |
| * cursor for the superclass reference. If the input cursor is a declaration or |
| * definition, it returns that declaration or definition unchanged. |
| * Otherwise, returns the NULL cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorReferenced(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief For a cursor that is either a reference to or a declaration |
| * of some entity, retrieve a cursor that describes the definition of |
| * that entity. |
| * |
| * Some entities can be declared multiple times within a translation |
| * unit, but only one of those declarations can also be a |
| * definition. For example, given: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * int f(int, int); |
| * int g(int x, int y) { return f(x, y); } |
| * int f(int a, int b) { return a + b; } |
| * int f(int, int); |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * there are three declarations of the function "f", but only the |
| * second one is a definition. The clang_getCursorDefinition() |
| * function will take any cursor pointing to a declaration of "f" |
| * (the first or fourth lines of the example) or a cursor referenced |
| * that uses "f" (the call to "f' inside "g") and will return a |
| * declaration cursor pointing to the definition (the second "f" |
| * declaration). |
| * |
| * If given a cursor for which there is no corresponding definition, |
| * e.g., because there is no definition of that entity within this |
| * translation unit, returns a NULL cursor. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorDefinition(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine whether the declaration pointed to by this cursor |
| * is also a definition of that entity. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isCursorDefinition(CXCursor); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_CPP C++ AST introspection |
| * |
| * The routines in this group provide access information in the ASTs specific |
| * to C++ language features. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine if a C++ member function is declared 'static'. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXXMethod_isStatic(CXCursor C); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_LEX Token extraction and manipulation |
| * |
| * The routines in this group provide access to the tokens within a |
| * translation unit, along with a semantic mapping of those tokens to |
| * their corresponding cursors. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes a kind of token. |
| */ |
| typedef enum CXTokenKind { |
| /** |
| * \brief A token that contains some kind of punctuation. |
| */ |
| CXToken_Punctuation, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A language keyword. |
| */ |
| CXToken_Keyword, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief An identifier (that is not a keyword). |
| */ |
| CXToken_Identifier, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A numeric, string, or character literal. |
| */ |
| CXToken_Literal, |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A comment. |
| */ |
| CXToken_Comment |
| } CXTokenKind; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes a single preprocessing token. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| unsigned int_data[4]; |
| void *ptr_data; |
| } CXToken; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the kind of the given token. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTokenKind clang_getTokenKind(CXToken); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the spelling of the given token. |
| * |
| * The spelling of a token is the textual representation of that token, e.g., |
| * the text of an identifier or keyword. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getTokenSpelling(CXTranslationUnit, CXToken); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the source location of the given token. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getTokenLocation(CXTranslationUnit, |
| CXToken); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a source range that covers the given token. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getTokenExtent(CXTranslationUnit, CXToken); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Tokenize the source code described by the given range into raw |
| * lexical tokens. |
| * |
| * \param TU the translation unit whose text is being tokenized. |
| * |
| * \param Range the source range in which text should be tokenized. All of the |
| * tokens produced by tokenization will fall within this source range, |
| * |
| * \param Tokens this pointer will be set to point to the array of tokens |
| * that occur within the given source range. The returned pointer must be |
| * freed with clang_disposeTokens() before the translation unit is destroyed. |
| * |
| * \param NumTokens will be set to the number of tokens in the \c *Tokens |
| * array. |
| * |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_tokenize(CXTranslationUnit TU, CXSourceRange Range, |
| CXToken **Tokens, unsigned *NumTokens); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Annotate the given set of tokens by providing cursors for each token |
| * that can be mapped to a specific entity within the abstract syntax tree. |
| * |
| * This token-annotation routine is equivalent to invoking |
| * clang_getCursor() for the source locations of each of the |
| * tokens. The cursors provided are filtered, so that only those |
| * cursors that have a direct correspondence to the token are |
| * accepted. For example, given a function call \c f(x), |
| * clang_getCursor() would provide the following cursors: |
| * |
| * * when the cursor is over the 'f', a DeclRefExpr cursor referring to 'f'. |
| * * when the cursor is over the '(' or the ')', a CallExpr referring to 'f'. |
| * * when the cursor is over the 'x', a DeclRefExpr cursor referring to 'x'. |
| * |
| * Only the first and last of these cursors will occur within the |
| * annotate, since the tokens "f" and "x' directly refer to a function |
| * and a variable, respectively, but the parentheses are just a small |
| * part of the full syntax of the function call expression, which is |
| * not provided as an annotation. |
| * |
| * \param TU the translation unit that owns the given tokens. |
| * |
| * \param Tokens the set of tokens to annotate. |
| * |
| * \param NumTokens the number of tokens in \p Tokens. |
| * |
| * \param Cursors an array of \p NumTokens cursors, whose contents will be |
| * replaced with the cursors corresponding to each token. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_annotateTokens(CXTranslationUnit TU, |
| CXToken *Tokens, unsigned NumTokens, |
| CXCursor *Cursors); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Free the given set of tokens. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeTokens(CXTranslationUnit TU, |
| CXToken *Tokens, unsigned NumTokens); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_DEBUG Debugging facilities |
| * |
| * These routines are used for testing and debugging, only, and should not |
| * be relied upon. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /* for debug/testing */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorKindSpelling(enum CXCursorKind Kind); |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getDefinitionSpellingAndExtent(CXCursor, |
| const char **startBuf, |
| const char **endBuf, |
| unsigned *startLine, |
| unsigned *startColumn, |
| unsigned *endLine, |
| unsigned *endColumn); |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_enableStackTraces(void); |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_CODE_COMPLET Code completion |
| * |
| * Code completion involves taking an (incomplete) source file, along with |
| * knowledge of where the user is actively editing that file, and suggesting |
| * syntactically- and semantically-valid constructs that the user might want to |
| * use at that particular point in the source code. These data structures and |
| * routines provide support for code completion. |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A semantic string that describes a code-completion result. |
| * |
| * A semantic string that describes the formatting of a code-completion |
| * result as a single "template" of text that should be inserted into the |
| * source buffer when a particular code-completion result is selected. |
| * Each semantic string is made up of some number of "chunks", each of which |
| * contains some text along with a description of what that text means, e.g., |
| * the name of the entity being referenced, whether the text chunk is part of |
| * the template, or whether it is a "placeholder" that the user should replace |
| * with actual code,of a specific kind. See \c CXCompletionChunkKind for a |
| * description of the different kinds of chunks. |
| */ |
| typedef void *CXCompletionString; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief A single result of code completion. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| /** |
| * \brief The kind of entity that this completion refers to. |
| * |
| * The cursor kind will be a macro, keyword, or a declaration (one of the |
| * *Decl cursor kinds), describing the entity that the completion is |
| * referring to. |
| * |
| * \todo In the future, we would like to provide a full cursor, to allow |
| * the client to extract additional information from declaration. |
| */ |
| enum CXCursorKind CursorKind; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief The code-completion string that describes how to insert this |
| * code-completion result into the editing buffer. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionString CompletionString; |
| } CXCompletionResult; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Describes a single piece of text within a code-completion string. |
| * |
| * Each "chunk" within a code-completion string (\c CXCompletionString) is |
| * either a piece of text with a specific "kind" that describes how that text |
| * should be interpreted by the client or is another completion string. |
| */ |
| enum CXCompletionChunkKind { |
| /** |
| * \brief A code-completion string that describes "optional" text that |
| * could be a part of the template (but is not required). |
| * |
| * The Optional chunk is the only kind of chunk that has a code-completion |
| * string for its representation, which is accessible via |
| * \c clang_getCompletionChunkCompletionString(). The code-completion string |
| * describes an additional part of the template that is completely optional. |
| * For example, optional chunks can be used to describe the placeholders for |
| * arguments that match up with defaulted function parameters, e.g. given: |
| * |
| * \code |
| * void f(int x, float y = 3.14, double z = 2.71828); |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * The code-completion string for this function would contain: |
| * - a TypedText chunk for "f". |
| * - a LeftParen chunk for "(". |
| * - a Placeholder chunk for "int x" |
| * - an Optional chunk containing the remaining defaulted arguments, e.g., |
| * - a Comma chunk for "," |
| * - a Placeholder chunk for "float y" |
| * - an Optional chunk containing the last defaulted argument: |
| * - a Comma chunk for "," |
| * - a Placeholder chunk for "double z" |
| * - a RightParen chunk for ")" |
| * |
| * There are many ways to handle Optional chunks. Two simple approaches are: |
| * - Completely ignore optional chunks, in which case the template for the |
| * function "f" would only include the first parameter ("int x"). |
| * - Fully expand all optional chunks, in which case the template for the |
| * function "f" would have all of the parameters. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Optional, |
| /** |
| * \brief Text that a user would be expected to type to get this |
| * code-completion result. |
| * |
| * There will be exactly one "typed text" chunk in a semantic string, which |
| * will typically provide the spelling of a keyword or the name of a |
| * declaration that could be used at the current code point. Clients are |
| * expected to filter the code-completion results based on the text in this |
| * chunk. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_TypedText, |
| /** |
| * \brief Text that should be inserted as part of a code-completion result. |
| * |
| * A "text" chunk represents text that is part of the template to be |
| * inserted into user code should this particular code-completion result |
| * be selected. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Text, |
| /** |
| * \brief Placeholder text that should be replaced by the user. |
| * |
| * A "placeholder" chunk marks a place where the user should insert text |
| * into the code-completion template. For example, placeholders might mark |
| * the function parameters for a function declaration, to indicate that the |
| * user should provide arguments for each of those parameters. The actual |
| * text in a placeholder is a suggestion for the text to display before |
| * the user replaces the placeholder with real code. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Placeholder, |
| /** |
| * \brief Informative text that should be displayed but never inserted as |
| * part of the template. |
| * |
| * An "informative" chunk contains annotations that can be displayed to |
| * help the user decide whether a particular code-completion result is the |
| * right option, but which is not part of the actual template to be inserted |
| * by code completion. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Informative, |
| /** |
| * \brief Text that describes the current parameter when code-completion is |
| * referring to function call, message send, or template specialization. |
| * |
| * A "current parameter" chunk occurs when code-completion is providing |
| * information about a parameter corresponding to the argument at the |
| * code-completion point. For example, given a function |
| * |
| * \code |
| * int add(int x, int y); |
| * \endcode |
| * |
| * and the source code \c add(, where the code-completion point is after the |
| * "(", the code-completion string will contain a "current parameter" chunk |
| * for "int x", indicating that the current argument will initialize that |
| * parameter. After typing further, to \c add(17, (where the code-completion |
| * point is after the ","), the code-completion string will contain a |
| * "current paremeter" chunk to "int y". |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_CurrentParameter, |
| /** |
| * \brief A left parenthesis ('('), used to initiate a function call or |
| * signal the beginning of a function parameter list. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_LeftParen, |
| /** |
| * \brief A right parenthesis (')'), used to finish a function call or |
| * signal the end of a function parameter list. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_RightParen, |
| /** |
| * \brief A left bracket ('['). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_LeftBracket, |
| /** |
| * \brief A right bracket (']'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_RightBracket, |
| /** |
| * \brief A left brace ('{'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_LeftBrace, |
| /** |
| * \brief A right brace ('}'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_RightBrace, |
| /** |
| * \brief A left angle bracket ('<'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_LeftAngle, |
| /** |
| * \brief A right angle bracket ('>'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_RightAngle, |
| /** |
| * \brief A comma separator (','). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Comma, |
| /** |
| * \brief Text that specifies the result type of a given result. |
| * |
| * This special kind of informative chunk is not meant to be inserted into |
| * the text buffer. Rather, it is meant to illustrate the type that an |
| * expression using the given completion string would have. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_ResultType, |
| /** |
| * \brief A colon (':'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Colon, |
| /** |
| * \brief A semicolon (';'). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_SemiColon, |
| /** |
| * \brief An '=' sign. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_Equal, |
| /** |
| * Horizontal space (' '). |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_HorizontalSpace, |
| /** |
| * Vertical space ('\n'), after which it is generally a good idea to |
| * perform indentation. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionChunk_VerticalSpace |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the kind of a particular chunk within a completion string. |
| * |
| * \param completion_string the completion string to query. |
| * |
| * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string. |
| * |
| * \returns the kind of the chunk at the index \c chunk_number. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCompletionChunkKind |
| clang_getCompletionChunkKind(CXCompletionString completion_string, |
| unsigned chunk_number); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the text associated with a particular chunk within a |
| * completion string. |
| * |
| * \param completion_string the completion string to query. |
| * |
| * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string. |
| * |
| * \returns the text associated with the chunk at index \c chunk_number. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString |
| clang_getCompletionChunkText(CXCompletionString completion_string, |
| unsigned chunk_number); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the completion string associated with a particular chunk |
| * within a completion string. |
| * |
| * \param completion_string the completion string to query. |
| * |
| * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string. |
| * |
| * \returns the completion string associated with the chunk at index |
| * \c chunk_number, or NULL if that chunk is not represented by a completion |
| * string. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCompletionString |
| clang_getCompletionChunkCompletionString(CXCompletionString completion_string, |
| unsigned chunk_number); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve the number of chunks in the given code-completion string. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned |
| clang_getNumCompletionChunks(CXCompletionString completion_string); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Contains the results of code-completion. |
| * |
| * This data structure contains the results of code completion, as |
| * produced by \c clang_codeComplete. Its contents must be freed by |
| * \c clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults. |
| */ |
| typedef struct { |
| /** |
| * \brief The code-completion results. |
| */ |
| CXCompletionResult *Results; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief The number of code-completion results stored in the |
| * \c Results array. |
| */ |
| unsigned NumResults; |
| } CXCodeCompleteResults; |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Perform code completion at a given location in a source file. |
| * |
| * This function performs code completion at a particular file, line, and |
| * column within source code, providing results that suggest potential |
| * code snippets based on the context of the completion. The basic model |
| * for code completion is that Clang will parse a complete source file, |
| * performing syntax checking up to the location where code-completion has |
| * been requested. At that point, a special code-completion token is passed |
| * to the parser, which recognizes this token and determines, based on the |
| * current location in the C/Objective-C/C++ grammar and the state of |
| * semantic analysis, what completions to provide. These completions are |
| * returned via a new \c CXCodeCompleteResults structure. |
| * |
| * Code completion itself is meant to be triggered by the client when the |
| * user types punctuation characters or whitespace, at which point the |
| * code-completion location will coincide with the cursor. For example, if \c p |
| * is a pointer, code-completion might be triggered after the "-" and then |
| * after the ">" in \c p->. When the code-completion location is afer the ">", |
| * the completion results will provide, e.g., the members of the struct that |
| * "p" points to. The client is responsible for placing the cursor at the |
| * beginning of the token currently being typed, then filtering the results |
| * based on the contents of the token. For example, when code-completing for |
| * the expression \c p->get, the client should provide the location just after |
| * the ">" (e.g., pointing at the "g") to this code-completion hook. Then, the |
| * client can filter the results based on the current token text ("get"), only |
| * showing those results that start with "get". The intent of this interface |
| * is to separate the relatively high-latency acquisition of code-completion |
| * results from the filtering of results on a per-character basis, which must |
| * have a lower latency. |
| * |
| * \param CIdx the \c CXIndex instance that will be used to perform code |
| * completion. |
| * |
| * \param source_filename the name of the source file that should be parsed to |
| * perform code-completion. This source file must be the same as or include the |
| * filename described by \p complete_filename, or no code-completion results |
| * will be produced. NOTE: One can also specify NULL for this argument if the |
| * source file is included in command_line_args. |
| * |
| * \param num_command_line_args the number of command-line arguments stored in |
| * \p command_line_args. |
| * |
| * \param command_line_args the command-line arguments to pass to the Clang |
| * compiler to build the given source file. This should include all of the |
| * necessary include paths, language-dialect switches, precompiled header |
| * includes, etc., but should not include any information specific to |
| * code completion. |
| * |
| * \param num_unsaved_files the number of unsaved file entries in \p |
| * unsaved_files. |
| * |
| * \param unsaved_files the files that have not yet been saved to disk |
| * but may be required for code completion, including the contents of |
| * those files. The contents and name of these files (as specified by |
| * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to |
| * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns. |
| * |
| * \param complete_filename the name of the source file where code completion |
| * should be performed. In many cases, this name will be the same as the |
| * source filename. However, the completion filename may also be a file |
| * included by the source file, which is required when producing |
| * code-completion results for a header. |
| * |
| * \param complete_line the line at which code-completion should occur. |
| * |
| * \param complete_column the column at which code-completion should occur. |
| * Note that the column should point just after the syntactic construct that |
| * initiated code completion, and not in the middle of a lexical token. |
| * |
| * \param diag_callback callback function that will receive any diagnostics |
| * emitted while processing this source file. If NULL, diagnostics will be |
| * suppressed. |
| * |
| * \param diag_client_data client data that will be passed to the diagnostic |
| * callback function. |
| * |
| * \returns if successful, a new CXCodeCompleteResults structure |
| * containing code-completion results, which should eventually be |
| * freed with \c clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults(). If code |
| * completion fails, returns NULL. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE |
| CXCodeCompleteResults *clang_codeComplete(CXIndex CIdx, |
| const char *source_filename, |
| int num_command_line_args, |
| const char **command_line_args, |
| unsigned num_unsaved_files, |
| struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files, |
| const char *complete_filename, |
| unsigned complete_line, |
| unsigned complete_column); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Free the given set of code-completion results. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE |
| void clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Determine the number of diagnostics produced prior to the |
| * location where code completion was performed. |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE |
| unsigned clang_codeCompleteGetNumDiagnostics(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Retrieve a diagnostic associated with the given code completion. |
| * |
| * \param Result the code completion results to query. |
| * \param Index the zero-based diagnostic number to retrieve. |
| * |
| * \returns the requested diagnostic. This diagnostic must be freed |
| * via a call to \c clang_disposeDiagnostic(). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE |
| CXDiagnostic clang_codeCompleteGetDiagnostic(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results, |
| unsigned Index); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * \defgroup CINDEX_MISC Miscellaneous utility functions |
| * |
| * @{ |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Return a version string, suitable for showing to a user, but not |
| * intended to be parsed (the format is not guaranteed to be stable). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getClangVersion(); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Return a version string, suitable for showing to a user, but not |
| * intended to be parsed (the format is not guaranteed to be stable). |
| */ |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Visitor invoked for each file in a translation unit |
| * (used with clang_getInclusions()). |
| * |
| * This visitor function will be invoked by clang_getInclusions() for each |
| * file included (either at the top-level or by #include directives) within |
| * a translation unit. The first argument is the file being included, and |
| * the second and third arguments provide the inclusion stack. The |
| * array is sorted in order of immediate inclusion. For example, |
| * the first element refers to the location that included 'included_file'. |
| */ |
| typedef void (*CXInclusionVisitor)(CXFile included_file, |
| CXSourceLocation* inclusion_stack, |
| unsigned include_len, |
| CXClientData client_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * \brief Visit the set of preprocessor inclusions in a translation unit. |
| * The visitor function is called with the provided data for every included |
| * file. This does not include headers included by the PCH file (unless one |
| * is inspecting the inclusions in the PCH file itself). |
| */ |
| CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getInclusions(CXTranslationUnit tu, |
| CXInclusionVisitor visitor, |
| CXClientData client_data); |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| /** |
| * @} |
| */ |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| } |
| #endif |
| #endif |
| |