CodeTools

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Revision as of 11:51, 25 February 2020 by Roneil (talk | contribs) (→‎Introduction)
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Introduction

A couple of 'clang' tools are now available for the standardisation of code style and to sniff out bug-prone behaviour: clang-format and clang-tidy.

To use these tools on SLF7, please set them up like this:

source /cvmfs/fermilab.opensciencegrid.org/products/common/etc/setups
setup mu2e
setup clang v5_0_1

clang and its tools can be installed on many systems:

# Debian, Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install clang-format clang-tidy

# MacOS (Homebrew)
brew install clang-format # smaller package, just clang-format
# or:
# includes clang-format and clang-tidy - but takes up a lot more space
brew install llvm 
ln -s "$(brew --prefix llvm)/bin/clang-format" "/usr/local/bin/clang-format"
ln -s "$(brew --prefix llvm)/bin/clang-tidy" "/usr/local/bin/clang-tidy"

# Arch Linux
sudo pacman -S clang

# Fedora
sudo dnf install clang

Please note that as of the current HEAD of Mu2e/Offline, there are no .clang-format or .clang-tidy configuration files.

clang-format

Clang-format re-formats code according to a configuration file. Having a consistent code style and format yields numerous benefits:

  • Cleaner diffs
  • Code is much easier to read
  • Pesky trailing whitespace is removed

Basic Usage

To re-format a file in place:

clang-format -i <file(s)>

Glob patterns are also supported e.g. Analyses/src/*.cc

To see what it changed:

git diff

IDE Integration

Clang-format is widely supported:

clang-tidy

Clang-tidy is a static code analyzer which can perform a number of checks, including but not limited to:

  • Enforce variable naming conventions
  • Enforce C++ core guidelines
  • Sniff out bug-prone code

What clang-tidy looks for will depend on the enabled checks. A list of available checks can be found at [4]

Basic Usage

Clang-tidy requires a compile_commands.json to run correctly, as it needs to know the compile flags for each build target. This can be generated by a script which scrapes these from SCons output [5]

To analyse <files>, and apply properly-formatted fixes in place:

cd <Offline directory>
curl https://gist.githubusercontent.com/ryuwd/47418eacdadf5369ab4e99492d583f19/raw/e7e0c4559f2af3196c665b0ab9c3aa2bd8878215/generate_compile_commands.py > generate_compile_commands.py
setup mu2e
source setup.sh
python generate_compile_commands.py

# only works for SL7 (CVMFS product)
# other systems: set CLANG_FQ_DIR to where clang include, share, and bin directories are installed
CLANG_TIDY_ARGS="-extra-arg=-isystem$CLANG_FQ_DIR/include/c++/v1 -p . -fix -format"
CLANG_TIDY_RUNNER="${CLANG_FQ_DIR}/share/clang/run-clang-tidy.py"

${CLANG_TIDY_RUNNER} ${CLANG_TIDY_ARGS} <files>

As you can probably see, the set-up required here is non-trivial, requiring the use of an external script. This may motivate adding Compilation DB support into SConstruct.

N.B. Not all checks will provide fixes. Some warning messages will require manual review.

IDE Integration

Some editors will have support for clang-tidy and display warning messages as you update code.

To get this to work, you will need to copy over an up-to-date version of compile_commands.json for your editor to correctly run clang-tidy. If your editor environment is not SLF7, you may need to generate this with the above steps on a SLF7 machine that can set up and compile the Offline software. You do not need to fully compile Offline to generate a compile_commands.json.

In the editor environment you copy this to, you will need the correct CVMFS mounts (mu2e.opensciencegrid.org, fermilab.opensciencegrid.org) for clang-tidy to access the external headers.

Include What You Use (IWYU)