This is the generator for the woboq code browser.
See http://code.woboq.org for an example See http://woboq.com/codebrowser.html for license information See also the announcement http://woboq.com/blog/codebrowser-introduction.html
Browse the source code of the generator using the code browser itself: http://code.woboq.org/userspace/codebrowser/
There is a pre-processing step on your code that generates static html and reference database. The output of this phase is just a set of static files that can be uploaded on any web hoster. No software is required on the server other than the most basic web server that can serve files.
While generating the code, you will give to the generator an output directory. The files reference themselves using relative path. The layout in the output directory will look like this: (Assuming the output directory is ~/public_html/mycode)
$OUTPUTDIR/../data/ or ~/public_html/data/ is where all javascript and css files are located.
$OUTPUTDIR/projectname or ~/public_html/mycode/projectname contains the generated html files for your project
$OUTPUTDIR/refs or ~/public_html/mycode/refs contains the "database" used for the tooltips
$OUTPUTDIR/include or ~/public_html/mycode/include contains the generated files for the files in /usr/include
The idea is that you can have several project sharing the same output directory. In that case they will also share references and use searches will work between them.
You need:
- The clang libraries version 3.3 or later
Example:
cmake . -DLLVM_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE=/opt/llvm/bin/llvm-config -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/opt/llvm/bin/clang++ -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
If you have errors related to exceptions, edit generator/CMakeLists.txt and replace -fno-rtti by -fexceptions
You need:
- The clang libraries, for example in version 3.3
- XCode 5.x and the command line tools and includes
Install XCode and then the command line tools:
xcode-select --install
Install the clang libraries via homebrew ( http://brew.sh/ ):
brew tap homebrew/versions
brew install -vd llvm33 --with-libcxx --with-clang --rtti
Then compile the generator:
cmake . -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON -DLLVM_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE=/usr/local//bin/llvm-config-3.3 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
Step 1: Generate the compile_commands.json for your project
The code browser is built around the clang tooling infrastructure that uses compile_commands.json http://clang.llvm.org/docs/JSONCompilationDatabase.html If your build system is cmake, just pass -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON to cmake to generate the script. For other build systems (e.g. qmake, make) you can use scripts/fake_compiler.sh as compiler (see comments in that file)
Step 2: Create code HTML using codebrowser_generator
Before generating, make sure the output directory is empty or does not contains stale files from a previous generation.
Call the codebrowser_generator. See later for argument specification
Step 3: Generate the index HTML files using codebrowser_indexer
By running the codebrowser_indexer with the output directory as an argument
Step 4: Copy the data/ directory one level above the generated html
Example: To generate the code for this project itself:
cmake . -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON
./generator/codebrowser_generator -b $PWD -a -o ~/public_html/codebrowser -p codebrowser:$PWD:`git describe --always --tags`
./indexgenerator/codebrowser_indexgenerator ~/public_html/codebrowser
ln -s ./data ~/public_html/
Step 5: Open it in a browser or upload it to your webserver
Note: By default, browsers do not allow AJAX on file://
for security reasons.
You need to upload the output directory on a web server, or serve your files with a local apache or nginx server.
Alternatively, you can disable that security in Firefox by setting security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy to false in about:config (http://kb.mozillazine.org/Security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy) or start Chrome with the --allow-file-access-from-files option.
codebrowser_generator -a -o <output_dir> -b <buld_dir> -p <projectname>:<source_dir>[:<revision>] [-d <data_url>] [-e <remote_path>:<source_dir>:<remote_url>]
-a process all files from the compile_commands.json. If this argument is not passed, the list of files to process need to be passed
-o with the output directory where the generated files will be put
-b the "build directory" containing the compile_commands.json
-p (one or more) with project specification. That is the name of the project, the absolute path of the source code, and the revision separated by colons example: -p projectname:/path/to/source/code:0.3beta
-d specify the data url where all the javascript and css files are found. default to ../data relative to the output dir example: -d http://code.woboq.org/data
-e reference to an external project. example:-e llvm/tools/clang/include/clang:/opt/llvm/include/clang/:http://code.woboq.org/userspace
Licensees holding valid commercial licenses provided by Woboq may use this software in accordance with the terms contained in a written agreement between the licensee and Woboq. For further information see http://woboq.com/codebrowser.html
Alternatively, this work may be used under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 (CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0) License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/deed.en_US This license does not allow you to use the code browser to assist the development of your commercial software. If you intent to do so, consider purchasing a commercial licence.