Usually we have two needs when reading codes:
- Find out the definition (or declaration) of
foo
.foo
may be a class, method or a function. - Find out all places which use
foo
.
grep -R foo .
is good for the second case since it won't miss any direct use. However, grep
is not
fast enough for large projects and it's somewhat inconvent for the first case. This is why gj is created.
The goals of gj from high to low are:
- Low miss: it's bad to miss a caller when you refactor codes or want to find out who modifies the target variable.
- Speed: list possible targets instantly.
- Less reading time: interactively narrow down to your target.
gj is used in two ways:
- Run as an interactive command line tool to edit and filter candidate files interactively.
- As a plugin in Vim to find files which contain the word under the cursor.
gj -i
: build the index.gj main argc argv
: find out the main functions. C/C++ main() typically has these three keywords.example
: keep files with the substring example in the file name.!test
: remove files with the substring test in the file name.1
: Use Vim to edit the first file and jump to the corresponding line.- Exit Vim and back to gj.
2
: Edit the second one.- In Vim,
<leader>G
under DoLogin: list possible definitions or declarations of DoLogin. - In Vim,
<leader>g
under DoLogin: list all callers, definitions or declarations of DoLogin.
gj is based on ID Utils which finds patterns instantly. Install ID Utils by:
$ sudo apt-get install id-utils # Debian / Ubuntu
$ sudo port install idutils # OS X with MacPorts
$ brew install idutils # OS X with Homebrew
Install gj.vim via Vundle. Please refer documents in Vundle: a highly recommended tool to manage Vim plugins.
Add these to your .vimrc
:
Plugin 'fcamel/gj'
Then launch vim
and run :VundleInstall
.
In order to use the command line tool, add this to your $HOME/.bashrc
(or other shell config file):
export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/.vim/bundle/gj/bin"
$ cd /path/to/somewhere/
$ git clone https://github.com/fcamel/gj
$ export PATH="$PATH:`pwd`/bin"
$ cd /path/to/project/
$ gj -i # Build the index.
$ gj PATTERN # Find out PATTERN
$ gj -p BASE PATTERN # Find out PATTERN which under BASE folder
Then follow the instructions in terminal.
If you don't use Vim as your main editor, please set the environment variable EDITOR
to your favorite editor.
However, currently only Vim supports "jump to the line" and "highlight the searched pattern" when opening
the file.
Other useful arguments:
$ gj -s LITERAL # Show all symbols which contain LITERAL (case-insensitive)
$ gj -sv LITERAL # Same as above, but also display file lists for each symbol.
$ gj -d PATTERN # Try to find out PATTERN's definition or declaration. Work for C++ or Python.
Examples of using gj for special scenarios:
$ gj TYPE typedef # Find the declaration of typedef TYPE.
$ gj CLASS public # Find all classes which inherit from CLASS
$ gj CLASS METHOD # Find definition of a C++ method.
$ gj FILE include # Find all files which include FILE.
# You can enter "1-N" to select all files. This is useful to
# refactor include paths after moving a header to a different path.
- forget method name: gj -s SUBSTRING
- need to filter by file name: gj -s -v SUBSTRING
- find assignment via "=": gj SYMBOL =
gj supports two kinds of indexes.
- text index: Index the source codes via ID Utils.
- binary index: Index the debug info of the ELF binaries (DWARF) via
readelf
andnm
.
To use the binary index, you need to build the binaries with the debug info (e.g., g++ -g
) and tell gj the path of binaries:
$ gj -c # Generate the config file ".gjconfig"
( edit .giconfig and fill the paths of binaries. )
$ gj -i # Now gj index both the source codes and the binaries.
Then use gj -D SYMBOL
to search the definitions. The result is much faster and more accurately. For example, to find main
, we need the keywords "argc" and "argv" to filter the candidates previously. Now just gj -D main
is enough.
NOTE I only test this feature on Linux and haven't tested it on other platforms.
In Normal mode:
<leader>g
: Find all matched files of the word under the cursor.<leader>G
: Find all possible declarations or definitions of the word under the cursor.<leader>d
: Find all possible definitions of the word under the cursor based on the index of DWARF.
Then use the following commands in quickfix window:
o
: open file (same as enter).go
: open file (but maintain focus in quickfix window).t
: open in a new tab.T
: open in new tab silently.h
: open in horizontal split.H
: open in horizontal split silently.v
: open in vertical split.gv
: open in vertical split silently.q
: close the quickfix window.
Take libgdbm as an example. Here is how:
$ apt-get source libgdbm3:amd64 # Get the source codes.
$ cd gdbm-1.8.3/
$ ./configure && make
$ make --dry-run install | grep libtool # Find out how to build the shared library.
/bin/bash ./libtool --mode=install /usr/bin/install -c -T libgdbm.la /usr/local/lib/libgdbm.la
$ mkdir local
$ /bin/bash ./libtool --mode=install /usr/bin/install -c -T libgdbm.la `pwd`/local/libgdbm.la # Create libgdbm.so in local/.
(...)
$ /bin/bash ./libtool --mode=install /usr/bin/install -c -T libgdbm_compat.la `pwd`/local/libgdbm_compat.la
(...)
$ gj_index.py local/*.so
Index local/libgdbm_compat.so ...
Index local/libgdbm.so ...
Save the index to gj.index
$ gj -D gdbm_close -b
./gdbmclose.c:42:0:gdbm_close
$ gj -D dbm_delete -b
./dbmdelete.c:45:0:dbm_delete
- Improve
-d
's speed. - Improve
-d
's accuracy. - Support Emacs as well.
- Add more screenshots.