| ======== |
| Overview |
| ======== |
| |
| Clang Tools are standalone command line (and potentially GUI) tools |
| designed for use by C++ developers who are already using and enjoying |
| Clang as their compiler. These tools provide developer-oriented |
| functionality such as fast syntax checking, automatic formatting, |
| refactoring, etc. |
| |
| Only a couple of the most basic and fundamental tools are kept in the |
| primary Clang Subversion project. The rest of the tools are kept in a |
| side-project so that developers who don't want or need to build them |
| don't. If you want to get access to the extra Clang Tools repository, |
| simply check it out into the tools tree of your Clang checkout and |
| follow the usual process for building and working with a combined |
| LLVM/Clang checkout: |
| |
| - With Subversion: |
| |
| - ``cd llvm/tools/clang/tools`` |
| - ``svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/clang-tools-extra/trunk extra`` |
| |
| - Or with Git: |
| |
| - ``cd llvm/tools/clang/tools`` |
| - ``git clone http://llvm.org/git/clang-tools-extra.git extra`` |
| |
| This document describes a high-level overview of the organization of |
| Clang Tools within the project as well as giving an introduction to some |
| of the more important tools. However, it should be noted that this |
| document is currently focused on Clang and Clang Tool developers, not on |
| end users of these tools. |
| |
| Clang Tools Organization |
| ======================== |
| |
| Clang Tools are CLI or GUI programs that are intended to be directly |
| used by C++ developers. That is they are *not* primarily for use by |
| Clang developers, although they are hopefully useful to C++ developers |
| who happen to work on Clang, and we try to actively dogfood their |
| functionality. They are developed in three components: the underlying |
| infrastructure for building a standalone tool based on Clang, core |
| shared logic used by many different tools in the form of refactoring and |
| rewriting libraries, and the tools themselves. |
| |
| The underlying infrastructure for Clang Tools is the |
| :doc:`LibTooling <LibTooling>` platform. See its documentation for much |
| more detailed information about how this infrastructure works. The |
| common refactoring and rewriting toolkit-style library is also part of |
| LibTooling organizationally. |
| |
| A few Clang Tools are developed along side the core Clang libraries as |
| examples and test cases of fundamental functionality. However, most of |
| the tools are developed in a side repository to provide easy separation |
| from the core libraries. We intentionally do not support public |
| libraries in the side repository, as we want to carefully review and |
| find good APIs for libraries as they are lifted out of a few tools and |
| into the core Clang library set. |
| |
| Regardless of which repository Clang Tools' code resides in, the |
| development process and practices for all Clang Tools are exactly those |
| of Clang itself. They are entirely within the Clang *project*, |
| regardless of the version control scheme. |
| |
| Core Clang Tools |
| ================ |
| |
| The core set of Clang tools that are within the main repository are |
| tools that very specifically compliment, and allow use and testing of |
| *Clang* specific functionality. |
| |
| ``clang-check`` |
| --------------- |
| |
| :doc:`ClangCheck` combines the LibTooling framework for running a |
| Clang tool with the basic Clang diagnostics by syntax checking specific files |
| in a fast, command line interface. It can also accept flags to re-display the |
| diagnostics in different formats with different flags, suitable for use driving |
| an IDE or editor. Furthermore, it can be used in fixit-mode to directly apply |
| fixit-hints offered by clang. See :doc:`HowToSetupToolingForLLVM` for |
| instructions on how to setup and used `clang-check`. |
| |
| ``clang-format`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Clang-format is both a :doc:`library <LibFormat>` and a :doc:`stand-alone tool |
| <ClangFormat>` with the goal of automatically reformatting C++ sources files |
| according to configurable style guides. To do so, clang-format uses Clang's |
| ``Lexer`` to transform an input file into a token stream and then changes all |
| the whitespace around those tokens. The goal is for clang-format to both serve |
| both as a user tool (ideally with powerful IDE integrations) and part of other |
| refactoring tools, e.g. to do a reformatting of all the lines changed during a |
| renaming. |
| |
| ``cpp11-migrate`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| ``cpp11-migrate`` migrates C++ code to use C++11 features where appropriate. |
| Currently it can: |
| |
| * convert loops to range-based for loops; |
| |
| * convert null pointer constants (like ``NULL`` or ``0``) to C++11 ``nullptr``. |
| |
| Extra Clang Tools |
| ================= |
| |
| As various categories of Clang Tools are added to the extra repository, |
| they'll be tracked here. The focus of this documentation is on the scope |
| and features of the tools for other tool developers; each tool should |
| provide its own user-focused documentation. |
| |
| Ideas for new Tools |
| =================== |
| |
| * C++ cast conversion tool. Will convert C-style casts (``(type) value``) to |
| appropriate C++ cast (``static_cast``, ``const_cast`` or |
| ``reinterpret_cast``). |
| * Non-member ``begin()`` and ``end()`` conversion tool. Will convert |
| ``foo.begin()`` into ``begin(foo)`` and similarly for ``end()``, where |
| ``foo`` is a standard container. We could also detect similar patterns for |
| arrays. |
| * A tool to remove ``auto``. Will convert ``auto`` to an explicit type or add |
| comments with deduced types. The motivation is that there are developers |
| that don't want to use ``auto`` because they are afraid that they might lose |
| control over their code. |
| |