1 /*===-- clang-c/Index.h - Indexing Public C Interface -------------*- C -*-===*\ 2 |* *| 3 |* The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure *| 4 |* *| 5 |* This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source *| 6 |* License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. *| 7 |* *| 8 |*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*| 9 |* *| 10 |* This header provides a public inferface to a Clang library for extracting *| 11 |* high-level symbol information from source files without exposing the full *| 12 |* Clang C++ API. *| 13 |* *| 14 \*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*/ 15 16 #ifndef CLANG_C_INDEX_H 17 #define CLANG_C_INDEX_H 18 19 #include <sys/stat.h> 20 #include <time.h> 21 #include <stdio.h> 22 23 #ifdef __cplusplus 24 extern "C" { 25 #endif 26 27 /* MSVC DLL import/export. */ 28 #ifdef _MSC_VER 29 #ifdef _CINDEX_LIB_ 30 #define CINDEX_LINKAGE __declspec(dllexport) 31 #else 32 #define CINDEX_LINKAGE __declspec(dllimport) 33 #endif 34 #else 35 #define CINDEX_LINKAGE 36 #endif 37 38 /** \defgroup CINDEX libclang: C Interface to Clang 39 * 40 * The C Interface to Clang provides a relatively small API that exposes 41 * facilities for parsing source code into an abstract syntax tree (AST), 42 * loading already-parsed ASTs, traversing the AST, associating 43 * physical source locations with elements within the AST, and other 44 * facilities that support Clang-based development tools. 45 * 46 * This C interface to Clang will never provide all of the information 47 * representation stored in Clang's C++ AST, nor should it: the intent is to 48 * maintain an API that is relatively stable from one release to the next, 49 * providing only the basic functionality needed to support development tools. 50 * 51 * To avoid namespace pollution, data types are prefixed with "CX" and 52 * functions are prefixed with "clang_". 53 * 54 * @{ 55 */ 56 57 /** 58 * \brief An "index" that consists of a set of translation units that would 59 * typically be linked together into an executable or library. 60 */ 61 typedef void *CXIndex; 62 63 /** 64 * \brief A single translation unit, which resides in an index. 65 */ 66 typedef struct CXTranslationUnitImpl *CXTranslationUnit; 67 68 /** 69 * \brief Opaque pointer representing client data that will be passed through 70 * to various callbacks and visitors. 71 */ 72 typedef void *CXClientData; 73 74 /** 75 * \brief Provides the contents of a file that has not yet been saved to disk. 76 * 77 * Each CXUnsavedFile instance provides the name of a file on the 78 * system along with the current contents of that file that have not 79 * yet been saved to disk. 80 */ 81 struct CXUnsavedFile { 82 /** 83 * \brief The file whose contents have not yet been saved. 84 * 85 * This file must already exist in the file system. 86 */ 87 const char *Filename; 88 89 /** 90 * \brief A buffer containing the unsaved contents of this file. 91 */ 92 const char *Contents; 93 94 /** 95 * \brief The length of the unsaved contents of this buffer. 96 */ 97 unsigned long Length; 98 }; 99 100 /** 101 * \brief Describes the availability of a particular entity, which indicates 102 * whether the use of this entity will result in a warning or error due to 103 * it being deprecated or unavailable. 104 */ 105 enum CXAvailabilityKind { 106 /** 107 * \brief The entity is available. 108 */ 109 CXAvailability_Available, 110 /** 111 * \brief The entity is available, but has been deprecated (and its use is 112 * not recommended). 113 */ 114 CXAvailability_Deprecated, 115 /** 116 * \brief The entity is not available; any use of it will be an error. 117 */ 118 CXAvailability_NotAvailable 119 }; 120 121 /** 122 * \defgroup CINDEX_STRING String manipulation routines 123 * 124 * @{ 125 */ 126 127 /** 128 * \brief A character string. 129 * 130 * The \c CXString type is used to return strings from the interface when 131 * the ownership of that string might different from one call to the next. 132 * Use \c clang_getCString() to retrieve the string data and, once finished 133 * with the string data, call \c clang_disposeString() to free the string. 134 */ 135 typedef struct { 136 void *data; 137 unsigned private_flags; 138 } CXString; 139 140 /** 141 * \brief Retrieve the character data associated with the given string. 142 */ 143 CINDEX_LINKAGE const char *clang_getCString(CXString string); 144 145 /** 146 * \brief Free the given string, 147 */ 148 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeString(CXString string); 149 150 /** 151 * @} 152 */ 153 154 /** 155 * \brief clang_createIndex() provides a shared context for creating 156 * translation units. It provides two options: 157 * 158 * - excludeDeclarationsFromPCH: When non-zero, allows enumeration of "local" 159 * declarations (when loading any new translation units). A "local" declaration 160 * is one that belongs in the translation unit itself and not in a precompiled 161 * header that was used by the translation unit. If zero, all declarations 162 * will be enumerated. 163 * 164 * Here is an example: 165 * 166 * // excludeDeclsFromPCH = 1, displayDiagnostics=1 167 * Idx = clang_createIndex(1, 1); 168 * 169 * // IndexTest.pch was produced with the following command: 170 * // "clang -x c IndexTest.h -emit-ast -o IndexTest.pch" 171 * TU = clang_createTranslationUnit(Idx, "IndexTest.pch"); 172 * 173 * // This will load all the symbols from 'IndexTest.pch' 174 * clang_visitChildren(clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(TU), 175 * TranslationUnitVisitor, 0); 176 * clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU); 177 * 178 * // This will load all the symbols from 'IndexTest.c', excluding symbols 179 * // from 'IndexTest.pch'. 180 * char *args[] = { "-Xclang", "-include-pch=IndexTest.pch" }; 181 * TU = clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(Idx, "IndexTest.c", 2, args, 182 * 0, 0); 183 * clang_visitChildren(clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(TU), 184 * TranslationUnitVisitor, 0); 185 * clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU); 186 * 187 * This process of creating the 'pch', loading it separately, and using it (via 188 * -include-pch) allows 'excludeDeclsFromPCH' to remove redundant callbacks 189 * (which gives the indexer the same performance benefit as the compiler). 190 */ 191 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXIndex clang_createIndex(int excludeDeclarationsFromPCH, 192 int displayDiagnostics); 193 194 /** 195 * \brief Destroy the given index. 196 * 197 * The index must not be destroyed until all of the translation units created 198 * within that index have been destroyed. 199 */ 200 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeIndex(CXIndex index); 201 202 /** 203 * \defgroup CINDEX_FILES File manipulation routines 204 * 205 * @{ 206 */ 207 208 /** 209 * \brief A particular source file that is part of a translation unit. 210 */ 211 typedef void *CXFile; 212 213 214 /** 215 * \brief Retrieve the complete file and path name of the given file. 216 */ 217 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getFileName(CXFile SFile); 218 219 /** 220 * \brief Retrieve the last modification time of the given file. 221 */ 222 CINDEX_LINKAGE time_t clang_getFileTime(CXFile SFile); 223 224 /** 225 * \brief Determine whether the given header is guarded against 226 * multiple inclusions, either with the conventional 227 * #ifndef/#define/#endif macro guards or with #pragma once. 228 */ 229 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned 230 clang_isFileMultipleIncludeGuarded(CXTranslationUnit tu, CXFile file); 231 232 /** 233 * \brief Retrieve a file handle within the given translation unit. 234 * 235 * \param tu the translation unit 236 * 237 * \param file_name the name of the file. 238 * 239 * \returns the file handle for the named file in the translation unit \p tu, 240 * or a NULL file handle if the file was not a part of this translation unit. 241 */ 242 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXFile clang_getFile(CXTranslationUnit tu, 243 const char *file_name); 244 245 /** 246 * @} 247 */ 248 249 /** 250 * \defgroup CINDEX_LOCATIONS Physical source locations 251 * 252 * Clang represents physical source locations in its abstract syntax tree in 253 * great detail, with file, line, and column information for the majority of 254 * the tokens parsed in the source code. These data types and functions are 255 * used to represent source location information, either for a particular 256 * point in the program or for a range of points in the program, and extract 257 * specific location information from those data types. 258 * 259 * @{ 260 */ 261 262 /** 263 * \brief Identifies a specific source location within a translation 264 * unit. 265 * 266 * Use clang_getInstantiationLocation() or clang_getSpellingLocation() 267 * to map a source location to a particular file, line, and column. 268 */ 269 typedef struct { 270 void *ptr_data[2]; 271 unsigned int_data; 272 } CXSourceLocation; 273 274 /** 275 * \brief Identifies a half-open character range in the source code. 276 * 277 * Use clang_getRangeStart() and clang_getRangeEnd() to retrieve the 278 * starting and end locations from a source range, respectively. 279 */ 280 typedef struct { 281 void *ptr_data[2]; 282 unsigned begin_int_data; 283 unsigned end_int_data; 284 } CXSourceRange; 285 286 /** 287 * \brief Retrieve a NULL (invalid) source location. 288 */ 289 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getNullLocation(); 290 291 /** 292 * \determine Determine whether two source locations, which must refer into 293 * the same translation unit, refer to exactly the same point in the source 294 * code. 295 * 296 * \returns non-zero if the source locations refer to the same location, zero 297 * if they refer to different locations. 298 */ 299 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalLocations(CXSourceLocation loc1, 300 CXSourceLocation loc2); 301 302 /** 303 * \brief Retrieves the source location associated with a given file/line/column 304 * in a particular translation unit. 305 */ 306 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getLocation(CXTranslationUnit tu, 307 CXFile file, 308 unsigned line, 309 unsigned column); 310 /** 311 * \brief Retrieves the source location associated with a given character offset 312 * in a particular translation unit. 313 */ 314 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getLocationForOffset(CXTranslationUnit tu, 315 CXFile file, 316 unsigned offset); 317 318 /** 319 * \brief Retrieve a NULL (invalid) source range. 320 */ 321 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getNullRange(); 322 323 /** 324 * \brief Retrieve a source range given the beginning and ending source 325 * locations. 326 */ 327 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getRange(CXSourceLocation begin, 328 CXSourceLocation end); 329 330 /** 331 * \brief Retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented by 332 * the given source location. 333 * 334 * If the location refers into a macro instantiation, retrieves the 335 * location of the macro instantiation. 336 * 337 * \param location the location within a source file that will be decomposed 338 * into its parts. 339 * 340 * \param file [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the file to which the given 341 * source location points. 342 * 343 * \param line [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the line to which the given 344 * source location points. 345 * 346 * \param column [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the column to which the given 347 * source location points. 348 * 349 * \param offset [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the offset into the 350 * buffer to which the given source location points. 351 */ 352 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getInstantiationLocation(CXSourceLocation location, 353 CXFile *file, 354 unsigned *line, 355 unsigned *column, 356 unsigned *offset); 357 358 /** 359 * \brief Retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented by 360 * the given source location. 361 * 362 * If the location refers into a macro instantiation, return where the 363 * location was originally spelled in the source file. 364 * 365 * \param location the location within a source file that will be decomposed 366 * into its parts. 367 * 368 * \param file [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the file to which the given 369 * source location points. 370 * 371 * \param line [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the line to which the given 372 * source location points. 373 * 374 * \param column [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the column to which the given 375 * source location points. 376 * 377 * \param offset [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the offset into the 378 * buffer to which the given source location points. 379 */ 380 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getSpellingLocation(CXSourceLocation location, 381 CXFile *file, 382 unsigned *line, 383 unsigned *column, 384 unsigned *offset); 385 386 /** 387 * \brief Retrieve a source location representing the first character within a 388 * source range. 389 */ 390 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getRangeStart(CXSourceRange range); 391 392 /** 393 * \brief Retrieve a source location representing the last character within a 394 * source range. 395 */ 396 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getRangeEnd(CXSourceRange range); 397 398 /** 399 * @} 400 */ 401 402 /** 403 * \defgroup CINDEX_DIAG Diagnostic reporting 404 * 405 * @{ 406 */ 407 408 /** 409 * \brief Describes the severity of a particular diagnostic. 410 */ 411 enum CXDiagnosticSeverity { 412 /** 413 * \brief A diagnostic that has been suppressed, e.g., by a command-line 414 * option. 415 */ 416 CXDiagnostic_Ignored = 0, 417 418 /** 419 * \brief This diagnostic is a note that should be attached to the 420 * previous (non-note) diagnostic. 421 */ 422 CXDiagnostic_Note = 1, 423 424 /** 425 * \brief This diagnostic indicates suspicious code that may not be 426 * wrong. 427 */ 428 CXDiagnostic_Warning = 2, 429 430 /** 431 * \brief This diagnostic indicates that the code is ill-formed. 432 */ 433 CXDiagnostic_Error = 3, 434 435 /** 436 * \brief This diagnostic indicates that the code is ill-formed such 437 * that future parser recovery is unlikely to produce useful 438 * results. 439 */ 440 CXDiagnostic_Fatal = 4 441 }; 442 443 /** 444 * \brief A single diagnostic, containing the diagnostic's severity, 445 * location, text, source ranges, and fix-it hints. 446 */ 447 typedef void *CXDiagnostic; 448 449 /** 450 * \brief Determine the number of diagnostics produced for the given 451 * translation unit. 452 */ 453 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getNumDiagnostics(CXTranslationUnit Unit); 454 455 /** 456 * \brief Retrieve a diagnostic associated with the given translation unit. 457 * 458 * \param Unit the translation unit to query. 459 * \param Index the zero-based diagnostic number to retrieve. 460 * 461 * \returns the requested diagnostic. This diagnostic must be freed 462 * via a call to \c clang_disposeDiagnostic(). 463 */ 464 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXDiagnostic clang_getDiagnostic(CXTranslationUnit Unit, 465 unsigned Index); 466 467 /** 468 * \brief Destroy a diagnostic. 469 */ 470 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeDiagnostic(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic); 471 472 /** 473 * \brief Options to control the display of diagnostics. 474 * 475 * The values in this enum are meant to be combined to customize the 476 * behavior of \c clang_displayDiagnostic(). 477 */ 478 enum CXDiagnosticDisplayOptions { 479 /** 480 * \brief Display the source-location information where the 481 * diagnostic was located. 482 * 483 * When set, diagnostics will be prefixed by the file, line, and 484 * (optionally) column to which the diagnostic refers. For example, 485 * 486 * \code 487 * test.c:28: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive 488 * \endcode 489 * 490 * This option corresponds to the clang flag \c -fshow-source-location. 491 */ 492 CXDiagnostic_DisplaySourceLocation = 0x01, 493 494 /** 495 * \brief If displaying the source-location information of the 496 * diagnostic, also include the column number. 497 * 498 * This option corresponds to the clang flag \c -fshow-column. 499 */ 500 CXDiagnostic_DisplayColumn = 0x02, 501 502 /** 503 * \brief If displaying the source-location information of the 504 * diagnostic, also include information about source ranges in a 505 * machine-parsable format. 506 * 507 * This option corresponds to the clang flag 508 * \c -fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info. 509 */ 510 CXDiagnostic_DisplaySourceRanges = 0x04, 511 512 /** 513 * \brief Display the option name associated with this diagnostic, if any. 514 * 515 * The option name displayed (e.g., -Wconversion) will be placed in brackets 516 * after the diagnostic text. This option corresponds to the clang flag 517 * \c -fdiagnostics-show-option. 518 */ 519 CXDiagnostic_DisplayOption = 0x08, 520 521 /** 522 * \brief Display the category number associated with this diagnostic, if any. 523 * 524 * The category number is displayed within brackets after the diagnostic text. 525 * This option corresponds to the clang flag 526 * \c -fdiagnostics-show-category=id. 527 */ 528 CXDiagnostic_DisplayCategoryId = 0x10, 529 530 /** 531 * \brief Display the category name associated with this diagnostic, if any. 532 * 533 * The category name is displayed within brackets after the diagnostic text. 534 * This option corresponds to the clang flag 535 * \c -fdiagnostics-show-category=name. 536 */ 537 CXDiagnostic_DisplayCategoryName = 0x20 538 }; 539 540 /** 541 * \brief Format the given diagnostic in a manner that is suitable for display. 542 * 543 * This routine will format the given diagnostic to a string, rendering 544 * the diagnostic according to the various options given. The 545 * \c clang_defaultDiagnosticDisplayOptions() function returns the set of 546 * options that most closely mimics the behavior of the clang compiler. 547 * 548 * \param Diagnostic The diagnostic to print. 549 * 550 * \param Options A set of options that control the diagnostic display, 551 * created by combining \c CXDiagnosticDisplayOptions values. 552 * 553 * \returns A new string containing for formatted diagnostic. 554 */ 555 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_formatDiagnostic(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic, 556 unsigned Options); 557 558 /** 559 * \brief Retrieve the set of display options most similar to the 560 * default behavior of the clang compiler. 561 * 562 * \returns A set of display options suitable for use with \c 563 * clang_displayDiagnostic(). 564 */ 565 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultDiagnosticDisplayOptions(void); 566 567 /** 568 * \brief Determine the severity of the given diagnostic. 569 */ 570 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXDiagnosticSeverity 571 clang_getDiagnosticSeverity(CXDiagnostic); 572 573 /** 574 * \brief Retrieve the source location of the given diagnostic. 575 * 576 * This location is where Clang would print the caret ('^') when 577 * displaying the diagnostic on the command line. 578 */ 579 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getDiagnosticLocation(CXDiagnostic); 580 581 /** 582 * \brief Retrieve the text of the given diagnostic. 583 */ 584 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticSpelling(CXDiagnostic); 585 586 /** 587 * \brief Retrieve the name of the command-line option that enabled this 588 * diagnostic. 589 * 590 * \param Diag The diagnostic to be queried. 591 * 592 * \param Disable If non-NULL, will be set to the option that disables this 593 * diagnostic (if any). 594 * 595 * \returns A string that contains the command-line option used to enable this 596 * warning, such as "-Wconversion" or "-pedantic". 597 */ 598 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticOption(CXDiagnostic Diag, 599 CXString *Disable); 600 601 /** 602 * \brief Retrieve the category number for this diagnostic. 603 * 604 * Diagnostics can be categorized into groups along with other, related 605 * diagnostics (e.g., diagnostics under the same warning flag). This routine 606 * retrieves the category number for the given diagnostic. 607 * 608 * \returns The number of the category that contains this diagnostic, or zero 609 * if this diagnostic is uncategorized. 610 */ 611 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticCategory(CXDiagnostic); 612 613 /** 614 * \brief Retrieve the name of a particular diagnostic category. 615 * 616 * \param Category A diagnostic category number, as returned by 617 * \c clang_getDiagnosticCategory(). 618 * 619 * \returns The name of the given diagnostic category. 620 */ 621 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticCategoryName(unsigned Category); 622 623 /** 624 * \brief Determine the number of source ranges associated with the given 625 * diagnostic. 626 */ 627 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticNumRanges(CXDiagnostic); 628 629 /** 630 * \brief Retrieve a source range associated with the diagnostic. 631 * 632 * A diagnostic's source ranges highlight important elements in the source 633 * code. On the command line, Clang displays source ranges by 634 * underlining them with '~' characters. 635 * 636 * \param Diagnostic the diagnostic whose range is being extracted. 637 * 638 * \param Range the zero-based index specifying which range to 639 * 640 * \returns the requested source range. 641 */ 642 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getDiagnosticRange(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic, 643 unsigned Range); 644 645 /** 646 * \brief Determine the number of fix-it hints associated with the 647 * given diagnostic. 648 */ 649 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticNumFixIts(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic); 650 651 /** 652 * \brief Retrieve the replacement information for a given fix-it. 653 * 654 * Fix-its are described in terms of a source range whose contents 655 * should be replaced by a string. This approach generalizes over 656 * three kinds of operations: removal of source code (the range covers 657 * the code to be removed and the replacement string is empty), 658 * replacement of source code (the range covers the code to be 659 * replaced and the replacement string provides the new code), and 660 * insertion (both the start and end of the range point at the 661 * insertion location, and the replacement string provides the text to 662 * insert). 663 * 664 * \param Diagnostic The diagnostic whose fix-its are being queried. 665 * 666 * \param FixIt The zero-based index of the fix-it. 667 * 668 * \param ReplacementRange The source range whose contents will be 669 * replaced with the returned replacement string. Note that source 670 * ranges are half-open ranges [a, b), so the source code should be 671 * replaced from a and up to (but not including) b. 672 * 673 * \returns A string containing text that should be replace the source 674 * code indicated by the \c ReplacementRange. 675 */ 676 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticFixIt(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic, 677 unsigned FixIt, 678 CXSourceRange *ReplacementRange); 679 680 /** 681 * @} 682 */ 683 684 /** 685 * \defgroup CINDEX_TRANSLATION_UNIT Translation unit manipulation 686 * 687 * The routines in this group provide the ability to create and destroy 688 * translation units from files, either by parsing the contents of the files or 689 * by reading in a serialized representation of a translation unit. 690 * 691 * @{ 692 */ 693 694 /** 695 * \brief Get the original translation unit source file name. 696 */ 697 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString 698 clang_getTranslationUnitSpelling(CXTranslationUnit CTUnit); 699 700 /** 701 * \brief Return the CXTranslationUnit for a given source file and the provided 702 * command line arguments one would pass to the compiler. 703 * 704 * Note: The 'source_filename' argument is optional. If the caller provides a 705 * NULL pointer, the name of the source file is expected to reside in the 706 * specified command line arguments. 707 * 708 * Note: When encountered in 'clang_command_line_args', the following options 709 * are ignored: 710 * 711 * '-c' 712 * '-emit-ast' 713 * '-fsyntax-only' 714 * '-o <output file>' (both '-o' and '<output file>' are ignored) 715 * 716 * \param CIdx The index object with which the translation unit will be 717 * associated. 718 * 719 * \param source_filename - The name of the source file to load, or NULL if the 720 * source file is included in \p clang_command_line_args. 721 * 722 * \param num_clang_command_line_args The number of command-line arguments in 723 * \p clang_command_line_args. 724 * 725 * \param clang_command_line_args The command-line arguments that would be 726 * passed to the \c clang executable if it were being invoked out-of-process. 727 * These command-line options will be parsed and will affect how the translation 728 * unit is parsed. Note that the following options are ignored: '-c', 729 * '-emit-ast', '-fsyntex-only' (which is the default), and '-o <output file>'. 730 * 731 * \param num_unsaved_files the number of unsaved file entries in \p 732 * unsaved_files. 733 * 734 * \param unsaved_files the files that have not yet been saved to disk 735 * but may be required for code completion, including the contents of 736 * those files. The contents and name of these files (as specified by 737 * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to 738 * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns. 739 */ 740 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile( 741 CXIndex CIdx, 742 const char *source_filename, 743 int num_clang_command_line_args, 744 const char * const *clang_command_line_args, 745 unsigned num_unsaved_files, 746 struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files); 747 748 /** 749 * \brief Create a translation unit from an AST file (-emit-ast). 750 */ 751 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_createTranslationUnit(CXIndex, 752 const char *ast_filename); 753 754 /** 755 * \brief Flags that control the creation of translation units. 756 * 757 * The enumerators in this enumeration type are meant to be bitwise 758 * ORed together to specify which options should be used when 759 * constructing the translation unit. 760 */ 761 enum CXTranslationUnit_Flags { 762 /** 763 * \brief Used to indicate that no special translation-unit options are 764 * needed. 765 */ 766 CXTranslationUnit_None = 0x0, 767 768 /** 769 * \brief Used to indicate that the parser should construct a "detailed" 770 * preprocessing record, including all macro definitions and instantiations. 771 * 772 * Constructing a detailed preprocessing record requires more memory 773 * and time to parse, since the information contained in the record 774 * is usually not retained. However, it can be useful for 775 * applications that require more detailed information about the 776 * behavior of the preprocessor. 777 */ 778 CXTranslationUnit_DetailedPreprocessingRecord = 0x01, 779 780 /** 781 * \brief Used to indicate that the translation unit is incomplete. 782 * 783 * When a translation unit is considered "incomplete", semantic 784 * analysis that is typically performed at the end of the 785 * translation unit will be suppressed. For example, this suppresses 786 * the completion of tentative declarations in C and of 787 * instantiation of implicitly-instantiation function templates in 788 * C++. This option is typically used when parsing a header with the 789 * intent of producing a precompiled header. 790 */ 791 CXTranslationUnit_Incomplete = 0x02, 792 793 /** 794 * \brief Used to indicate that the translation unit should be built with an 795 * implicit precompiled header for the preamble. 796 * 797 * An implicit precompiled header is used as an optimization when a 798 * particular translation unit is likely to be reparsed many times 799 * when the sources aren't changing that often. In this case, an 800 * implicit precompiled header will be built containing all of the 801 * initial includes at the top of the main file (what we refer to as 802 * the "preamble" of the file). In subsequent parses, if the 803 * preamble or the files in it have not changed, \c 804 * clang_reparseTranslationUnit() will re-use the implicit 805 * precompiled header to improve parsing performance. 806 */ 807 CXTranslationUnit_PrecompiledPreamble = 0x04, 808 809 /** 810 * \brief Used to indicate that the translation unit should cache some 811 * code-completion results with each reparse of the source file. 812 * 813 * Caching of code-completion results is a performance optimization that 814 * introduces some overhead to reparsing but improves the performance of 815 * code-completion operations. 816 */ 817 CXTranslationUnit_CacheCompletionResults = 0x08, 818 /** 819 * \brief Enable precompiled preambles in C++. 820 * 821 * Note: this is a *temporary* option that is available only while 822 * we are testing C++ precompiled preamble support. 823 */ 824 CXTranslationUnit_CXXPrecompiledPreamble = 0x10, 825 826 /** 827 * \brief Enabled chained precompiled preambles in C++. 828 * 829 * Note: this is a *temporary* option that is available only while 830 * we are testing C++ precompiled preamble support. 831 */ 832 CXTranslationUnit_CXXChainedPCH = 0x20, 833 834 /** 835 * \brief Used to indicate that the "detailed" preprocessing record, 836 * if requested, should also contain nested macro expansions. 837 * 838 * Nested macro expansions (i.e., macro expansions that occur 839 * inside another macro expansion) can, in some code bases, require 840 * a large amount of storage to due preprocessor metaprogramming. Moreover, 841 * its fairly rare that this information is useful for libclang clients. 842 */ 843 CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroExpansions = 0x40, 844 845 /** 846 * \brief Legacy name to indicate that the "detailed" preprocessing record, 847 * if requested, should contain nested macro expansions. 848 * 849 * \see CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroExpansions for the current name for this 850 * value, and its semantics. This is just an alias. 851 */ 852 CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroInstantiations = 853 CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroExpansions 854 }; 855 856 /** 857 * \brief Returns the set of flags that is suitable for parsing a translation 858 * unit that is being edited. 859 * 860 * The set of flags returned provide options for \c clang_parseTranslationUnit() 861 * to indicate that the translation unit is likely to be reparsed many times, 862 * either explicitly (via \c clang_reparseTranslationUnit()) or implicitly 863 * (e.g., by code completion (\c clang_codeCompletionAt())). The returned flag 864 * set contains an unspecified set of optimizations (e.g., the precompiled 865 * preamble) geared toward improving the performance of these routines. The 866 * set of optimizations enabled may change from one version to the next. 867 */ 868 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultEditingTranslationUnitOptions(void); 869 870 /** 871 * \brief Parse the given source file and the translation unit corresponding 872 * to that file. 873 * 874 * This routine is the main entry point for the Clang C API, providing the 875 * ability to parse a source file into a translation unit that can then be 876 * queried by other functions in the API. This routine accepts a set of 877 * command-line arguments so that the compilation can be configured in the same 878 * way that the compiler is configured on the command line. 879 * 880 * \param CIdx The index object with which the translation unit will be 881 * associated. 882 * 883 * \param source_filename The name of the source file to load, or NULL if the 884 * source file is included in \p command_line_args. 885 * 886 * \param command_line_args The command-line arguments that would be 887 * passed to the \c clang executable if it were being invoked out-of-process. 888 * These command-line options will be parsed and will affect how the translation 889 * unit is parsed. Note that the following options are ignored: '-c', 890 * '-emit-ast', '-fsyntex-only' (which is the default), and '-o <output file>'. 891 * 892 * \param num_command_line_args The number of command-line arguments in 893 * \p command_line_args. 894 * 895 * \param unsaved_files the files that have not yet been saved to disk 896 * but may be required for parsing, including the contents of 897 * those files. The contents and name of these files (as specified by 898 * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to 899 * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns. 900 * 901 * \param num_unsaved_files the number of unsaved file entries in \p 902 * unsaved_files. 903 * 904 * \param options A bitmask of options that affects how the translation unit 905 * is managed but not its compilation. This should be a bitwise OR of the 906 * CXTranslationUnit_XXX flags. 907 * 908 * \returns A new translation unit describing the parsed code and containing 909 * any diagnostics produced by the compiler. If there is a failure from which 910 * the compiler cannot recover, returns NULL. 911 */ 912 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_parseTranslationUnit(CXIndex CIdx, 913 const char *source_filename, 914 const char * const *command_line_args, 915 int num_command_line_args, 916 struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files, 917 unsigned num_unsaved_files, 918 unsigned options); 919 920 /** 921 * \brief Flags that control how translation units are saved. 922 * 923 * The enumerators in this enumeration type are meant to be bitwise 924 * ORed together to specify which options should be used when 925 * saving the translation unit. 926 */ 927 enum CXSaveTranslationUnit_Flags { 928 /** 929 * \brief Used to indicate that no special saving options are needed. 930 */ 931 CXSaveTranslationUnit_None = 0x0 932 }; 933 934 /** 935 * \brief Returns the set of flags that is suitable for saving a translation 936 * unit. 937 * 938 * The set of flags returned provide options for 939 * \c clang_saveTranslationUnit() by default. The returned flag 940 * set contains an unspecified set of options that save translation units with 941 * the most commonly-requested data. 942 */ 943 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultSaveOptions(CXTranslationUnit TU); 944 945 /** 946 * \brief Describes the kind of error that occurred (if any) in a call to 947 * \c clang_saveTranslationUnit(). 948 */ 949 enum CXSaveError { 950 /** 951 * \brief Indicates that no error occurred while saving a translation unit. 952 */ 953 CXSaveError_None = 0, 954 955 /** 956 * \brief Indicates that an unknown error occurred while attempting to save 957 * the file. 958 * 959 * This error typically indicates that file I/O failed when attempting to 960 * write the file. 961 */ 962 CXSaveError_Unknown = 1, 963 964 /** 965 * \brief Indicates that errors during translation prevented this attempt 966 * to save the translation unit. 967 * 968 * Errors that prevent the translation unit from being saved can be 969 * extracted using \c clang_getNumDiagnostics() and \c clang_getDiagnostic(). 970 */ 971 CXSaveError_TranslationErrors = 2, 972 973 /** 974 * \brief Indicates that the translation unit to be saved was somehow 975 * invalid (e.g., NULL). 976 */ 977 CXSaveError_InvalidTU = 3 978 }; 979 980 /** 981 * \brief Saves a translation unit into a serialized representation of 982 * that translation unit on disk. 983 * 984 * Any translation unit that was parsed without error can be saved 985 * into a file. The translation unit can then be deserialized into a 986 * new \c CXTranslationUnit with \c clang_createTranslationUnit() or, 987 * if it is an incomplete translation unit that corresponds to a 988 * header, used as a precompiled header when parsing other translation 989 * units. 990 * 991 * \param TU The translation unit to save. 992 * 993 * \param FileName The file to which the translation unit will be saved. 994 * 995 * \param options A bitmask of options that affects how the translation unit 996 * is saved. This should be a bitwise OR of the 997 * CXSaveTranslationUnit_XXX flags. 998 * 999 * \returns A value that will match one of the enumerators of the CXSaveError 1000 * enumeration. Zero (CXSaveError_None) indicates that the translation unit was 1001 * saved successfully, while a non-zero value indicates that a problem occurred. 1002 */ 1003 CINDEX_LINKAGE int clang_saveTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit TU, 1004 const char *FileName, 1005 unsigned options); 1006 1007 /** 1008 * \brief Destroy the specified CXTranslationUnit object. 1009 */ 1010 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit); 1011 1012 /** 1013 * \brief Flags that control the reparsing of translation units. 1014 * 1015 * The enumerators in this enumeration type are meant to be bitwise 1016 * ORed together to specify which options should be used when 1017 * reparsing the translation unit. 1018 */ 1019 enum CXReparse_Flags { 1020 /** 1021 * \brief Used to indicate that no special reparsing options are needed. 1022 */ 1023 CXReparse_None = 0x0 1024 }; 1025 1026 /** 1027 * \brief Returns the set of flags that is suitable for reparsing a translation 1028 * unit. 1029 * 1030 * The set of flags returned provide options for 1031 * \c clang_reparseTranslationUnit() by default. The returned flag 1032 * set contains an unspecified set of optimizations geared toward common uses 1033 * of reparsing. The set of optimizations enabled may change from one version 1034 * to the next. 1035 */ 1036 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultReparseOptions(CXTranslationUnit TU); 1037 1038 /** 1039 * \brief Reparse the source files that produced this translation unit. 1040 * 1041 * This routine can be used to re-parse the source files that originally 1042 * created the given translation unit, for example because those source files 1043 * have changed (either on disk or as passed via \p unsaved_files). The 1044 * source code will be reparsed with the same command-line options as it 1045 * was originally parsed. 1046 * 1047 * Reparsing a translation unit invalidates all cursors and source locations 1048 * that refer into that translation unit. This makes reparsing a translation 1049 * unit semantically equivalent to destroying the translation unit and then 1050 * creating a new translation unit with the same command-line arguments. 1051 * However, it may be more efficient to reparse a translation 1052 * unit using this routine. 1053 * 1054 * \param TU The translation unit whose contents will be re-parsed. The 1055 * translation unit must originally have been built with 1056 * \c clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(). 1057 * 1058 * \param num_unsaved_files The number of unsaved file entries in \p 1059 * unsaved_files. 1060 * 1061 * \param unsaved_files The files that have not yet been saved to disk 1062 * but may be required for parsing, including the contents of 1063 * those files. The contents and name of these files (as specified by 1064 * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to 1065 * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns. 1066 * 1067 * \param options A bitset of options composed of the flags in CXReparse_Flags. 1068 * The function \c clang_defaultReparseOptions() produces a default set of 1069 * options recommended for most uses, based on the translation unit. 1070 * 1071 * \returns 0 if the sources could be reparsed. A non-zero value will be 1072 * returned if reparsing was impossible, such that the translation unit is 1073 * invalid. In such cases, the only valid call for \p TU is 1074 * \c clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU). 1075 */ 1076 CINDEX_LINKAGE int clang_reparseTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit TU, 1077 unsigned num_unsaved_files, 1078 struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files, 1079 unsigned options); 1080 1081 /** 1082 * \brief Categorizes how memory is being used by a translation unit. 1083 */ 1084 enum CXTUResourceUsageKind { 1085 CXTUResourceUsage_AST = 1, 1086 CXTUResourceUsage_Identifiers = 2, 1087 CXTUResourceUsage_Selectors = 3, 1088 CXTUResourceUsage_GlobalCompletionResults = 4, 1089 CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManagerContentCache = 5, 1090 CXTUResourceUsage_AST_SideTables = 6, 1091 CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManager_Membuffer_Malloc = 7, 1092 CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManager_Membuffer_MMap = 8, 1093 CXTUResourceUsage_ExternalASTSource_Membuffer_Malloc = 9, 1094 CXTUResourceUsage_ExternalASTSource_Membuffer_MMap = 10, 1095 CXTUResourceUsage_Preprocessor = 11, 1096 CXTUResourceUsage_PreprocessingRecord = 12, 1097 CXTUResourceUsage_MEMORY_IN_BYTES_BEGIN = CXTUResourceUsage_AST, 1098 CXTUResourceUsage_MEMORY_IN_BYTES_END = 1099 CXTUResourceUsage_PreprocessingRecord, 1100 1101 CXTUResourceUsage_First = CXTUResourceUsage_AST, 1102 CXTUResourceUsage_Last = CXTUResourceUsage_PreprocessingRecord 1103 }; 1104 1105 /** 1106 * \brief Returns the human-readable null-terminated C string that represents 1107 * the name of the memory category. This string should never be freed. 1108 */ 1109 CINDEX_LINKAGE 1110 const char *clang_getTUResourceUsageName(enum CXTUResourceUsageKind kind); 1111 1112 typedef struct CXTUResourceUsageEntry { 1113 /* \brief The memory usage category. */ 1114 enum CXTUResourceUsageKind kind; 1115 /* \brief Amount of resources used. 1116 The units will depend on the resource kind. */ 1117 unsigned long amount; 1118 } CXTUResourceUsageEntry; 1119 1120 /** 1121 * \brief The memory usage of a CXTranslationUnit, broken into categories. 1122 */ 1123 typedef struct CXTUResourceUsage { 1124 /* \brief Private data member, used for queries. */ 1125 void *data; 1126 1127 /* \brief The number of entries in the 'entries' array. */ 1128 unsigned numEntries; 1129 1130 /* \brief An array of key-value pairs, representing the breakdown of memory 1131 usage. */ 1132 CXTUResourceUsageEntry *entries; 1133 1134 } CXTUResourceUsage; 1135 1136 /** 1137 * \brief Return the memory usage of a translation unit. This object 1138 * should be released with clang_disposeCXTUResourceUsage(). 1139 */ 1140 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTUResourceUsage clang_getCXTUResourceUsage(CXTranslationUnit TU); 1141 1142 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeCXTUResourceUsage(CXTUResourceUsage usage); 1143 1144 /** 1145 * @} 1146 */ 1147 1148 /** 1149 * \brief Describes the kind of entity that a cursor refers to. 1150 */ 1151 enum CXCursorKind { 1152 /* Declarations */ 1153 /** 1154 * \brief A declaration whose specific kind is not exposed via this 1155 * interface. 1156 * 1157 * Unexposed declarations have the same operations as any other kind 1158 * of declaration; one can extract their location information, 1159 * spelling, find their definitions, etc. However, the specific kind 1160 * of the declaration is not reported. 1161 */ 1162 CXCursor_UnexposedDecl = 1, 1163 /** \brief A C or C++ struct. */ 1164 CXCursor_StructDecl = 2, 1165 /** \brief A C or C++ union. */ 1166 CXCursor_UnionDecl = 3, 1167 /** \brief A C++ class. */ 1168 CXCursor_ClassDecl = 4, 1169 /** \brief An enumeration. */ 1170 CXCursor_EnumDecl = 5, 1171 /** 1172 * \brief A field (in C) or non-static data member (in C++) in a 1173 * struct, union, or C++ class. 1174 */ 1175 CXCursor_FieldDecl = 6, 1176 /** \brief An enumerator constant. */ 1177 CXCursor_EnumConstantDecl = 7, 1178 /** \brief A function. */ 1179 CXCursor_FunctionDecl = 8, 1180 /** \brief A variable. */ 1181 CXCursor_VarDecl = 9, 1182 /** \brief A function or method parameter. */ 1183 CXCursor_ParmDecl = 10, 1184 /** \brief An Objective-C @interface. */ 1185 CXCursor_ObjCInterfaceDecl = 11, 1186 /** \brief An Objective-C @interface for a category. */ 1187 CXCursor_ObjCCategoryDecl = 12, 1188 /** \brief An Objective-C @protocol declaration. */ 1189 CXCursor_ObjCProtocolDecl = 13, 1190 /** \brief An Objective-C @property declaration. */ 1191 CXCursor_ObjCPropertyDecl = 14, 1192 /** \brief An Objective-C instance variable. */ 1193 CXCursor_ObjCIvarDecl = 15, 1194 /** \brief An Objective-C instance method. */ 1195 CXCursor_ObjCInstanceMethodDecl = 16, 1196 /** \brief An Objective-C class method. */ 1197 CXCursor_ObjCClassMethodDecl = 17, 1198 /** \brief An Objective-C @implementation. */ 1199 CXCursor_ObjCImplementationDecl = 18, 1200 /** \brief An Objective-C @implementation for a category. */ 1201 CXCursor_ObjCCategoryImplDecl = 19, 1202 /** \brief A typedef */ 1203 CXCursor_TypedefDecl = 20, 1204 /** \brief A C++ class method. */ 1205 CXCursor_CXXMethod = 21, 1206 /** \brief A C++ namespace. */ 1207 CXCursor_Namespace = 22, 1208 /** \brief A linkage specification, e.g. 'extern "C"'. */ 1209 CXCursor_LinkageSpec = 23, 1210 /** \brief A C++ constructor. */ 1211 CXCursor_Constructor = 24, 1212 /** \brief A C++ destructor. */ 1213 CXCursor_Destructor = 25, 1214 /** \brief A C++ conversion function. */ 1215 CXCursor_ConversionFunction = 26, 1216 /** \brief A C++ template type parameter. */ 1217 CXCursor_TemplateTypeParameter = 27, 1218 /** \brief A C++ non-type template parameter. */ 1219 CXCursor_NonTypeTemplateParameter = 28, 1220 /** \brief A C++ template template parameter. */ 1221 CXCursor_TemplateTemplateParameter = 29, 1222 /** \brief A C++ function template. */ 1223 CXCursor_FunctionTemplate = 30, 1224 /** \brief A C++ class template. */ 1225 CXCursor_ClassTemplate = 31, 1226 /** \brief A C++ class template partial specialization. */ 1227 CXCursor_ClassTemplatePartialSpecialization = 32, 1228 /** \brief A C++ namespace alias declaration. */ 1229 CXCursor_NamespaceAlias = 33, 1230 /** \brief A C++ using directive. */ 1231 CXCursor_UsingDirective = 34, 1232 /** \brief A C++ using declaration. */ 1233 CXCursor_UsingDeclaration = 35, 1234 /** \brief A C++ alias declaration */ 1235 CXCursor_TypeAliasDecl = 36, 1236 /** \brief An Objective-C @synthesize definition. */ 1237 CXCursor_ObjCSynthesizeDecl = 37, 1238 /** \brief An Objective-C @dynamic definition. */ 1239 CXCursor_ObjCDynamicDecl = 38, 1240 CXCursor_FirstDecl = CXCursor_UnexposedDecl, 1241 CXCursor_LastDecl = CXCursor_ObjCDynamicDecl, 1242 1243 /* References */ 1244 CXCursor_FirstRef = 40, /* Decl references */ 1245 CXCursor_ObjCSuperClassRef = 40, 1246 CXCursor_ObjCProtocolRef = 41, 1247 CXCursor_ObjCClassRef = 42, 1248 /** 1249 * \brief A reference to a type declaration. 1250 * 1251 * A type reference occurs anywhere where a type is named but not 1252 * declared. For example, given: 1253 * 1254 * \code 1255 * typedef unsigned size_type; 1256 * size_type size; 1257 * \endcode 1258 * 1259 * The typedef is a declaration of size_type (CXCursor_TypedefDecl), 1260 * while the type of the variable "size" is referenced. The cursor 1261 * referenced by the type of size is the typedef for size_type. 1262 */ 1263 CXCursor_TypeRef = 43, 1264 CXCursor_CXXBaseSpecifier = 44, 1265 /** 1266 * \brief A reference to a class template, function template, template 1267 * template parameter, or class template partial specialization. 1268 */ 1269 CXCursor_TemplateRef = 45, 1270 /** 1271 * \brief A reference to a namespace or namespace alias. 1272 */ 1273 CXCursor_NamespaceRef = 46, 1274 /** 1275 * \brief A reference to a member of a struct, union, or class that occurs in 1276 * some non-expression context, e.g., a designated initializer. 1277 */ 1278 CXCursor_MemberRef = 47, 1279 /** 1280 * \brief A reference to a labeled statement. 1281 * 1282 * This cursor kind is used to describe the jump to "start_over" in the 1283 * goto statement in the following example: 1284 * 1285 * \code 1286 * start_over: 1287 * ++counter; 1288 * 1289 * goto start_over; 1290 * \endcode 1291 * 1292 * A label reference cursor refers to a label statement. 1293 */ 1294 CXCursor_LabelRef = 48, 1295 1296 /** 1297 * \brief A reference to a set of overloaded functions or function templates 1298 * that has not yet been resolved to a specific function or function template. 1299 * 1300 * An overloaded declaration reference cursor occurs in C++ templates where 1301 * a dependent name refers to a function. For example: 1302 * 1303 * \code 1304 * template<typename T> void swap(T&, T&); 1305 * 1306 * struct X { ... }; 1307 * void swap(X&, X&); 1308 * 1309 * template<typename T> 1310 * void reverse(T* first, T* last) { 1311 * while (first < last - 1) { 1312 * swap(*first, *--last); 1313 * ++first; 1314 * } 1315 * } 1316 * 1317 * struct Y { }; 1318 * void swap(Y&, Y&); 1319 * \endcode 1320 * 1321 * Here, the identifier "swap" is associated with an overloaded declaration 1322 * reference. In the template definition, "swap" refers to either of the two 1323 * "swap" functions declared above, so both results will be available. At 1324 * instantiation time, "swap" may also refer to other functions found via 1325 * argument-dependent lookup (e.g., the "swap" function at the end of the 1326 * example). 1327 * 1328 * The functions \c clang_getNumOverloadedDecls() and 1329 * \c clang_getOverloadedDecl() can be used to retrieve the definitions 1330 * referenced by this cursor. 1331 */ 1332 CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef = 49, 1333 1334 CXCursor_LastRef = CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef, 1335 1336 /* Error conditions */ 1337 CXCursor_FirstInvalid = 70, 1338 CXCursor_InvalidFile = 70, 1339 CXCursor_NoDeclFound = 71, 1340 CXCursor_NotImplemented = 72, 1341 CXCursor_InvalidCode = 73, 1342 CXCursor_LastInvalid = CXCursor_InvalidCode, 1343 1344 /* Expressions */ 1345 CXCursor_FirstExpr = 100, 1346 1347 /** 1348 * \brief An expression whose specific kind is not exposed via this 1349 * interface. 1350 * 1351 * Unexposed expressions have the same operations as any other kind 1352 * of expression; one can extract their location information, 1353 * spelling, children, etc. However, the specific kind of the 1354 * expression is not reported. 1355 */ 1356 CXCursor_UnexposedExpr = 100, 1357 1358 /** 1359 * \brief An expression that refers to some value declaration, such 1360 * as a function, varible, or enumerator. 1361 */ 1362 CXCursor_DeclRefExpr = 101, 1363 1364 /** 1365 * \brief An expression that refers to a member of a struct, union, 1366 * class, Objective-C class, etc. 1367 */ 1368 CXCursor_MemberRefExpr = 102, 1369 1370 /** \brief An expression that calls a function. */ 1371 CXCursor_CallExpr = 103, 1372 1373 /** \brief An expression that sends a message to an Objective-C 1374 object or class. */ 1375 CXCursor_ObjCMessageExpr = 104, 1376 1377 /** \brief An expression that represents a block literal. */ 1378 CXCursor_BlockExpr = 105, 1379 1380 CXCursor_LastExpr = 105, 1381 1382 /* Statements */ 1383 CXCursor_FirstStmt = 200, 1384 /** 1385 * \brief A statement whose specific kind is not exposed via this 1386 * interface. 1387 * 1388 * Unexposed statements have the same operations as any other kind of 1389 * statement; one can extract their location information, spelling, 1390 * children, etc. However, the specific kind of the statement is not 1391 * reported. 1392 */ 1393 CXCursor_UnexposedStmt = 200, 1394 1395 /** \brief A labelled statement in a function. 1396 * 1397 * This cursor kind is used to describe the "start_over:" label statement in 1398 * the following example: 1399 * 1400 * \code 1401 * start_over: 1402 * ++counter; 1403 * \endcode 1404 * 1405 */ 1406 CXCursor_LabelStmt = 201, 1407 1408 CXCursor_LastStmt = CXCursor_LabelStmt, 1409 1410 /** 1411 * \brief Cursor that represents the translation unit itself. 1412 * 1413 * The translation unit cursor exists primarily to act as the root 1414 * cursor for traversing the contents of a translation unit. 1415 */ 1416 CXCursor_TranslationUnit = 300, 1417 1418 /* Attributes */ 1419 CXCursor_FirstAttr = 400, 1420 /** 1421 * \brief An attribute whose specific kind is not exposed via this 1422 * interface. 1423 */ 1424 CXCursor_UnexposedAttr = 400, 1425 1426 CXCursor_IBActionAttr = 401, 1427 CXCursor_IBOutletAttr = 402, 1428 CXCursor_IBOutletCollectionAttr = 403, 1429 CXCursor_LastAttr = CXCursor_IBOutletCollectionAttr, 1430 1431 /* Preprocessing */ 1432 CXCursor_PreprocessingDirective = 500, 1433 CXCursor_MacroDefinition = 501, 1434 CXCursor_MacroExpansion = 502, 1435 CXCursor_MacroInstantiation = CXCursor_MacroExpansion, 1436 CXCursor_InclusionDirective = 503, 1437 CXCursor_FirstPreprocessing = CXCursor_PreprocessingDirective, 1438 CXCursor_LastPreprocessing = CXCursor_InclusionDirective 1439 }; 1440 1441 /** 1442 * \brief A cursor representing some element in the abstract syntax tree for 1443 * a translation unit. 1444 * 1445 * The cursor abstraction unifies the different kinds of entities in a 1446 * program--declaration, statements, expressions, references to declarations, 1447 * etc.--under a single "cursor" abstraction with a common set of operations. 1448 * Common operation for a cursor include: getting the physical location in 1449 * a source file where the cursor points, getting the name associated with a 1450 * cursor, and retrieving cursors for any child nodes of a particular cursor. 1451 * 1452 * Cursors can be produced in two specific ways. 1453 * clang_getTranslationUnitCursor() produces a cursor for a translation unit, 1454 * from which one can use clang_visitChildren() to explore the rest of the 1455 * translation unit. clang_getCursor() maps from a physical source location 1456 * to the entity that resides at that location, allowing one to map from the 1457 * source code into the AST. 1458 */ 1459 typedef struct { 1460 enum CXCursorKind kind; 1461 void *data[3]; 1462 } CXCursor; 1463 1464 /** 1465 * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_MANIP Cursor manipulations 1466 * 1467 * @{ 1468 */ 1469 1470 /** 1471 * \brief Retrieve the NULL cursor, which represents no entity. 1472 */ 1473 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getNullCursor(void); 1474 1475 /** 1476 * \brief Retrieve the cursor that represents the given translation unit. 1477 * 1478 * The translation unit cursor can be used to start traversing the 1479 * various declarations within the given translation unit. 1480 */ 1481 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(CXTranslationUnit); 1482 1483 /** 1484 * \brief Determine whether two cursors are equivalent. 1485 */ 1486 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalCursors(CXCursor, CXCursor); 1487 1488 /** 1489 * \brief Compute a hash value for the given cursor. 1490 */ 1491 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_hashCursor(CXCursor); 1492 1493 /** 1494 * \brief Retrieve the kind of the given cursor. 1495 */ 1496 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCursorKind clang_getCursorKind(CXCursor); 1497 1498 /** 1499 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a declaration. 1500 */ 1501 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isDeclaration(enum CXCursorKind); 1502 1503 /** 1504 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a simple 1505 * reference. 1506 * 1507 * Note that other kinds of cursors (such as expressions) can also refer to 1508 * other cursors. Use clang_getCursorReferenced() to determine whether a 1509 * particular cursor refers to another entity. 1510 */ 1511 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isReference(enum CXCursorKind); 1512 1513 /** 1514 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an expression. 1515 */ 1516 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isExpression(enum CXCursorKind); 1517 1518 /** 1519 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a statement. 1520 */ 1521 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isStatement(enum CXCursorKind); 1522 1523 /** 1524 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an attribute. 1525 */ 1526 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isAttribute(enum CXCursorKind); 1527 1528 /** 1529 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an invalid 1530 * cursor. 1531 */ 1532 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isInvalid(enum CXCursorKind); 1533 1534 /** 1535 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a translation 1536 * unit. 1537 */ 1538 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isTranslationUnit(enum CXCursorKind); 1539 1540 /*** 1541 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor represents a preprocessing 1542 * element, such as a preprocessor directive or macro instantiation. 1543 */ 1544 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isPreprocessing(enum CXCursorKind); 1545 1546 /*** 1547 * \brief Determine whether the given cursor represents a currently 1548 * unexposed piece of the AST (e.g., CXCursor_UnexposedStmt). 1549 */ 1550 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isUnexposed(enum CXCursorKind); 1551 1552 /** 1553 * \brief Describe the linkage of the entity referred to by a cursor. 1554 */ 1555 enum CXLinkageKind { 1556 /** \brief This value indicates that no linkage information is available 1557 * for a provided CXCursor. */ 1558 CXLinkage_Invalid, 1559 /** 1560 * \brief This is the linkage for variables, parameters, and so on that 1561 * have automatic storage. This covers normal (non-extern) local variables. 1562 */ 1563 CXLinkage_NoLinkage, 1564 /** \brief This is the linkage for static variables and static functions. */ 1565 CXLinkage_Internal, 1566 /** \brief This is the linkage for entities with external linkage that live 1567 * in C++ anonymous namespaces.*/ 1568 CXLinkage_UniqueExternal, 1569 /** \brief This is the linkage for entities with true, external linkage. */ 1570 CXLinkage_External 1571 }; 1572 1573 /** 1574 * \brief Determine the linkage of the entity referred to by a given cursor. 1575 */ 1576 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLinkageKind clang_getCursorLinkage(CXCursor cursor); 1577 1578 /** 1579 * \brief Determine the availability of the entity that this cursor refers to. 1580 * 1581 * \param cursor The cursor to query. 1582 * 1583 * \returns The availability of the cursor. 1584 */ 1585 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXAvailabilityKind 1586 clang_getCursorAvailability(CXCursor cursor); 1587 1588 /** 1589 * \brief Describe the "language" of the entity referred to by a cursor. 1590 */ 1591 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLanguageKind { 1592 CXLanguage_Invalid = 0, 1593 CXLanguage_C, 1594 CXLanguage_ObjC, 1595 CXLanguage_CPlusPlus 1596 }; 1597 1598 /** 1599 * \brief Determine the "language" of the entity referred to by a given cursor. 1600 */ 1601 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLanguageKind clang_getCursorLanguage(CXCursor cursor); 1602 1603 1604 /** 1605 * \brief A fast container representing a set of CXCursors. 1606 */ 1607 typedef struct CXCursorSetImpl *CXCursorSet; 1608 1609 /** 1610 * \brief Creates an empty CXCursorSet. 1611 */ 1612 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursorSet clang_createCXCursorSet(); 1613 1614 /** 1615 * \brief Disposes a CXCursorSet and releases its associated memory. 1616 */ 1617 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeCXCursorSet(CXCursorSet cset); 1618 1619 /** 1620 * \brief Queries a CXCursorSet to see if it contains a specific CXCursor. 1621 * 1622 * \returns non-zero if the set contains the specified cursor. 1623 */ 1624 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXCursorSet_contains(CXCursorSet cset, 1625 CXCursor cursor); 1626 1627 /** 1628 * \brief Inserts a CXCursor into a CXCursorSet. 1629 * 1630 * \returns zero if the CXCursor was already in the set, and non-zero otherwise. 1631 */ 1632 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXCursorSet_insert(CXCursorSet cset, 1633 CXCursor cursor); 1634 1635 /** 1636 * \brief Determine the semantic parent of the given cursor. 1637 * 1638 * The semantic parent of a cursor is the cursor that semantically contains 1639 * the given \p cursor. For many declarations, the lexical and semantic parents 1640 * are equivalent (the lexical parent is returned by 1641 * \c clang_getCursorLexicalParent()). They diverge when declarations or 1642 * definitions are provided out-of-line. For example: 1643 * 1644 * \code 1645 * class C { 1646 * void f(); 1647 * }; 1648 * 1649 * void C::f() { } 1650 * \endcode 1651 * 1652 * In the out-of-line definition of \c C::f, the semantic parent is the 1653 * the class \c C, of which this function is a member. The lexical parent is 1654 * the place where the declaration actually occurs in the source code; in this 1655 * case, the definition occurs in the translation unit. In general, the 1656 * lexical parent for a given entity can change without affecting the semantics 1657 * of the program, and the lexical parent of different declarations of the 1658 * same entity may be different. Changing the semantic parent of a declaration, 1659 * on the other hand, can have a major impact on semantics, and redeclarations 1660 * of a particular entity should all have the same semantic context. 1661 * 1662 * In the example above, both declarations of \c C::f have \c C as their 1663 * semantic context, while the lexical context of the first \c C::f is \c C 1664 * and the lexical context of the second \c C::f is the translation unit. 1665 * 1666 * For global declarations, the semantic parent is the translation unit. 1667 */ 1668 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorSemanticParent(CXCursor cursor); 1669 1670 /** 1671 * \brief Determine the lexical parent of the given cursor. 1672 * 1673 * The lexical parent of a cursor is the cursor in which the given \p cursor 1674 * was actually written. For many declarations, the lexical and semantic parents 1675 * are equivalent (the semantic parent is returned by 1676 * \c clang_getCursorSemanticParent()). They diverge when declarations or 1677 * definitions are provided out-of-line. For example: 1678 * 1679 * \code 1680 * class C { 1681 * void f(); 1682 * }; 1683 * 1684 * void C::f() { } 1685 * \endcode 1686 * 1687 * In the out-of-line definition of \c C::f, the semantic parent is the 1688 * the class \c C, of which this function is a member. The lexical parent is 1689 * the place where the declaration actually occurs in the source code; in this 1690 * case, the definition occurs in the translation unit. In general, the 1691 * lexical parent for a given entity can change without affecting the semantics 1692 * of the program, and the lexical parent of different declarations of the 1693 * same entity may be different. Changing the semantic parent of a declaration, 1694 * on the other hand, can have a major impact on semantics, and redeclarations 1695 * of a particular entity should all have the same semantic context. 1696 * 1697 * In the example above, both declarations of \c C::f have \c C as their 1698 * semantic context, while the lexical context of the first \c C::f is \c C 1699 * and the lexical context of the second \c C::f is the translation unit. 1700 * 1701 * For declarations written in the global scope, the lexical parent is 1702 * the translation unit. 1703 */ 1704 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorLexicalParent(CXCursor cursor); 1705 1706 /** 1707 * \brief Determine the set of methods that are overridden by the given 1708 * method. 1709 * 1710 * In both Objective-C and C++, a method (aka virtual member function, 1711 * in C++) can override a virtual method in a base class. For 1712 * Objective-C, a method is said to override any method in the class's 1713 * interface (if we're coming from an implementation), its protocols, 1714 * or its categories, that has the same selector and is of the same 1715 * kind (class or instance). If no such method exists, the search 1716 * continues to the class's superclass, its protocols, and its 1717 * categories, and so on. 1718 * 1719 * For C++, a virtual member function overrides any virtual member 1720 * function with the same signature that occurs in its base 1721 * classes. With multiple inheritance, a virtual member function can 1722 * override several virtual member functions coming from different 1723 * base classes. 1724 * 1725 * In all cases, this function determines the immediate overridden 1726 * method, rather than all of the overridden methods. For example, if 1727 * a method is originally declared in a class A, then overridden in B 1728 * (which in inherits from A) and also in C (which inherited from B), 1729 * then the only overridden method returned from this function when 1730 * invoked on C's method will be B's method. The client may then 1731 * invoke this function again, given the previously-found overridden 1732 * methods, to map out the complete method-override set. 1733 * 1734 * \param cursor A cursor representing an Objective-C or C++ 1735 * method. This routine will compute the set of methods that this 1736 * method overrides. 1737 * 1738 * \param overridden A pointer whose pointee will be replaced with a 1739 * pointer to an array of cursors, representing the set of overridden 1740 * methods. If there are no overridden methods, the pointee will be 1741 * set to NULL. The pointee must be freed via a call to 1742 * \c clang_disposeOverriddenCursors(). 1743 * 1744 * \param num_overridden A pointer to the number of overridden 1745 * functions, will be set to the number of overridden functions in the 1746 * array pointed to by \p overridden. 1747 */ 1748 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getOverriddenCursors(CXCursor cursor, 1749 CXCursor **overridden, 1750 unsigned *num_overridden); 1751 1752 /** 1753 * \brief Free the set of overridden cursors returned by \c 1754 * clang_getOverriddenCursors(). 1755 */ 1756 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeOverriddenCursors(CXCursor *overridden); 1757 1758 /** 1759 * \brief Retrieve the file that is included by the given inclusion directive 1760 * cursor. 1761 */ 1762 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXFile clang_getIncludedFile(CXCursor cursor); 1763 1764 /** 1765 * @} 1766 */ 1767 1768 /** 1769 * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_SOURCE Mapping between cursors and source code 1770 * 1771 * Cursors represent a location within the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). These 1772 * routines help map between cursors and the physical locations where the 1773 * described entities occur in the source code. The mapping is provided in 1774 * both directions, so one can map from source code to the AST and back. 1775 * 1776 * @{ 1777 */ 1778 1779 /** 1780 * \brief Map a source location to the cursor that describes the entity at that 1781 * location in the source code. 1782 * 1783 * clang_getCursor() maps an arbitrary source location within a translation 1784 * unit down to the most specific cursor that describes the entity at that 1785 * location. For example, given an expression \c x + y, invoking 1786 * clang_getCursor() with a source location pointing to "x" will return the 1787 * cursor for "x"; similarly for "y". If the cursor points anywhere between 1788 * "x" or "y" (e.g., on the + or the whitespace around it), clang_getCursor() 1789 * will return a cursor referring to the "+" expression. 1790 * 1791 * \returns a cursor representing the entity at the given source location, or 1792 * a NULL cursor if no such entity can be found. 1793 */ 1794 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursor(CXTranslationUnit, CXSourceLocation); 1795 1796 /** 1797 * \brief Retrieve the physical location of the source constructor referenced 1798 * by the given cursor. 1799 * 1800 * The location of a declaration is typically the location of the name of that 1801 * declaration, where the name of that declaration would occur if it is 1802 * unnamed, or some keyword that introduces that particular declaration. 1803 * The location of a reference is where that reference occurs within the 1804 * source code. 1805 */ 1806 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getCursorLocation(CXCursor); 1807 1808 /** 1809 * \brief Retrieve the physical extent of the source construct referenced by 1810 * the given cursor. 1811 * 1812 * The extent of a cursor starts with the file/line/column pointing at the 1813 * first character within the source construct that the cursor refers to and 1814 * ends with the last character withinin that source construct. For a 1815 * declaration, the extent covers the declaration itself. For a reference, 1816 * the extent covers the location of the reference (e.g., where the referenced 1817 * entity was actually used). 1818 */ 1819 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getCursorExtent(CXCursor); 1820 1821 /** 1822 * @} 1823 */ 1824 1825 /** 1826 * \defgroup CINDEX_TYPES Type information for CXCursors 1827 * 1828 * @{ 1829 */ 1830 1831 /** 1832 * \brief Describes the kind of type 1833 */ 1834 enum CXTypeKind { 1835 /** 1836 * \brief Reprents an invalid type (e.g., where no type is available). 1837 */ 1838 CXType_Invalid = 0, 1839 1840 /** 1841 * \brief A type whose specific kind is not exposed via this 1842 * interface. 1843 */ 1844 CXType_Unexposed = 1, 1845 1846 /* Builtin types */ 1847 CXType_Void = 2, 1848 CXType_Bool = 3, 1849 CXType_Char_U = 4, 1850 CXType_UChar = 5, 1851 CXType_Char16 = 6, 1852 CXType_Char32 = 7, 1853 CXType_UShort = 8, 1854 CXType_UInt = 9, 1855 CXType_ULong = 10, 1856 CXType_ULongLong = 11, 1857 CXType_UInt128 = 12, 1858 CXType_Char_S = 13, 1859 CXType_SChar = 14, 1860 CXType_WChar = 15, 1861 CXType_Short = 16, 1862 CXType_Int = 17, 1863 CXType_Long = 18, 1864 CXType_LongLong = 19, 1865 CXType_Int128 = 20, 1866 CXType_Float = 21, 1867 CXType_Double = 22, 1868 CXType_LongDouble = 23, 1869 CXType_NullPtr = 24, 1870 CXType_Overload = 25, 1871 CXType_Dependent = 26, 1872 CXType_ObjCId = 27, 1873 CXType_ObjCClass = 28, 1874 CXType_ObjCSel = 29, 1875 CXType_FirstBuiltin = CXType_Void, 1876 CXType_LastBuiltin = CXType_ObjCSel, 1877 1878 CXType_Complex = 100, 1879 CXType_Pointer = 101, 1880 CXType_BlockPointer = 102, 1881 CXType_LValueReference = 103, 1882 CXType_RValueReference = 104, 1883 CXType_Record = 105, 1884 CXType_Enum = 106, 1885 CXType_Typedef = 107, 1886 CXType_ObjCInterface = 108, 1887 CXType_ObjCObjectPointer = 109, 1888 CXType_FunctionNoProto = 110, 1889 CXType_FunctionProto = 111 1890 }; 1891 1892 /** 1893 * \brief The type of an element in the abstract syntax tree. 1894 * 1895 */ 1896 typedef struct { 1897 enum CXTypeKind kind; 1898 void *data[2]; 1899 } CXType; 1900 1901 /** 1902 * \brief Retrieve the type of a CXCursor (if any). 1903 */ 1904 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCursorType(CXCursor C); 1905 1906 /** 1907 * \determine Determine whether two CXTypes represent the same type. 1908 * 1909 * \returns non-zero if the CXTypes represent the same type and 1910 zero otherwise. 1911 */ 1912 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalTypes(CXType A, CXType B); 1913 1914 /** 1915 * \brief Return the canonical type for a CXType. 1916 * 1917 * Clang's type system explicitly models typedefs and all the ways 1918 * a specific type can be represented. The canonical type is the underlying 1919 * type with all the "sugar" removed. For example, if 'T' is a typedef 1920 * for 'int', the canonical type for 'T' would be 'int'. 1921 */ 1922 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCanonicalType(CXType T); 1923 1924 /** 1925 * \determine Determine whether a CXType has the "const" qualifier set, 1926 * without looking through typedefs that may have added "const" at a different level. 1927 */ 1928 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isConstQualifiedType(CXType T); 1929 1930 /** 1931 * \determine Determine whether a CXType has the "volatile" qualifier set, 1932 * without looking through typedefs that may have added "volatile" at a different level. 1933 */ 1934 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isVolatileQualifiedType(CXType T); 1935 1936 /** 1937 * \determine Determine whether a CXType has the "restrict" qualifier set, 1938 * without looking through typedefs that may have added "restrict" at a different level. 1939 */ 1940 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isRestrictQualifiedType(CXType T); 1941 1942 /** 1943 * \brief For pointer types, returns the type of the pointee. 1944 * 1945 */ 1946 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getPointeeType(CXType T); 1947 1948 /** 1949 * \brief Return the cursor for the declaration of the given type. 1950 */ 1951 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getTypeDeclaration(CXType T); 1952 1953 /** 1954 * Returns the Objective-C type encoding for the specified declaration. 1955 */ 1956 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDeclObjCTypeEncoding(CXCursor C); 1957 1958 /** 1959 * \brief Retrieve the spelling of a given CXTypeKind. 1960 */ 1961 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getTypeKindSpelling(enum CXTypeKind K); 1962 1963 /** 1964 * \brief Retrieve the result type associated with a function type. 1965 */ 1966 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getResultType(CXType T); 1967 1968 /** 1969 * \brief Retrieve the result type associated with a given cursor. This only 1970 * returns a valid type of the cursor refers to a function or method. 1971 */ 1972 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCursorResultType(CXCursor C); 1973 1974 /** 1975 * \brief Return 1 if the CXType is a POD (plain old data) type, and 0 1976 * otherwise. 1977 */ 1978 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isPODType(CXType T); 1979 1980 /** 1981 * \brief Returns 1 if the base class specified by the cursor with kind 1982 * CX_CXXBaseSpecifier is virtual. 1983 */ 1984 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isVirtualBase(CXCursor); 1985 1986 /** 1987 * \brief Represents the C++ access control level to a base class for a 1988 * cursor with kind CX_CXXBaseSpecifier. 1989 */ 1990 enum CX_CXXAccessSpecifier { 1991 CX_CXXInvalidAccessSpecifier, 1992 CX_CXXPublic, 1993 CX_CXXProtected, 1994 CX_CXXPrivate 1995 }; 1996 1997 /** 1998 * \brief Returns the access control level for the C++ base specifier 1999 * represented by a cursor with kind CX_CXXBaseSpecifier. 2000 */ 2001 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CX_CXXAccessSpecifier clang_getCXXAccessSpecifier(CXCursor); 2002 2003 /** 2004 * \brief Determine the number of overloaded declarations referenced by a 2005 * \c CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef cursor. 2006 * 2007 * \param cursor The cursor whose overloaded declarations are being queried. 2008 * 2009 * \returns The number of overloaded declarations referenced by \c cursor. If it 2010 * is not a \c CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef cursor, returns 0. 2011 */ 2012 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getNumOverloadedDecls(CXCursor cursor); 2013 2014 /** 2015 * \brief Retrieve a cursor for one of the overloaded declarations referenced 2016 * by a \c CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef cursor. 2017 * 2018 * \param cursor The cursor whose overloaded declarations are being queried. 2019 * 2020 * \param index The zero-based index into the set of overloaded declarations in 2021 * the cursor. 2022 * 2023 * \returns A cursor representing the declaration referenced by the given 2024 * \c cursor at the specified \c index. If the cursor does not have an 2025 * associated set of overloaded declarations, or if the index is out of bounds, 2026 * returns \c clang_getNullCursor(); 2027 */ 2028 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getOverloadedDecl(CXCursor cursor, 2029 unsigned index); 2030 2031 /** 2032 * @} 2033 */ 2034 2035 /** 2036 * \defgroup CINDEX_ATTRIBUTES Information for attributes 2037 * 2038 * @{ 2039 */ 2040 2041 2042 /** 2043 * \brief For cursors representing an iboutletcollection attribute, 2044 * this function returns the collection element type. 2045 * 2046 */ 2047 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getIBOutletCollectionType(CXCursor); 2048 2049 /** 2050 * @} 2051 */ 2052 2053 /** 2054 * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_TRAVERSAL Traversing the AST with cursors 2055 * 2056 * These routines provide the ability to traverse the abstract syntax tree 2057 * using cursors. 2058 * 2059 * @{ 2060 */ 2061 2062 /** 2063 * \brief Describes how the traversal of the children of a particular 2064 * cursor should proceed after visiting a particular child cursor. 2065 * 2066 * A value of this enumeration type should be returned by each 2067 * \c CXCursorVisitor to indicate how clang_visitChildren() proceed. 2068 */ 2069 enum CXChildVisitResult { 2070 /** 2071 * \brief Terminates the cursor traversal. 2072 */ 2073 CXChildVisit_Break, 2074 /** 2075 * \brief Continues the cursor traversal with the next sibling of 2076 * the cursor just visited, without visiting its children. 2077 */ 2078 CXChildVisit_Continue, 2079 /** 2080 * \brief Recursively traverse the children of this cursor, using 2081 * the same visitor and client data. 2082 */ 2083 CXChildVisit_Recurse 2084 }; 2085 2086 /** 2087 * \brief Visitor invoked for each cursor found by a traversal. 2088 * 2089 * This visitor function will be invoked for each cursor found by 2090 * clang_visitCursorChildren(). Its first argument is the cursor being 2091 * visited, its second argument is the parent visitor for that cursor, 2092 * and its third argument is the client data provided to 2093 * clang_visitCursorChildren(). 2094 * 2095 * The visitor should return one of the \c CXChildVisitResult values 2096 * to direct clang_visitCursorChildren(). 2097 */ 2098 typedef enum CXChildVisitResult (*CXCursorVisitor)(CXCursor cursor, 2099 CXCursor parent, 2100 CXClientData client_data); 2101 2102 /** 2103 * \brief Visit the children of a particular cursor. 2104 * 2105 * This function visits all the direct children of the given cursor, 2106 * invoking the given \p visitor function with the cursors of each 2107 * visited child. The traversal may be recursive, if the visitor returns 2108 * \c CXChildVisit_Recurse. The traversal may also be ended prematurely, if 2109 * the visitor returns \c CXChildVisit_Break. 2110 * 2111 * \param parent the cursor whose child may be visited. All kinds of 2112 * cursors can be visited, including invalid cursors (which, by 2113 * definition, have no children). 2114 * 2115 * \param visitor the visitor function that will be invoked for each 2116 * child of \p parent. 2117 * 2118 * \param client_data pointer data supplied by the client, which will 2119 * be passed to the visitor each time it is invoked. 2120 * 2121 * \returns a non-zero value if the traversal was terminated 2122 * prematurely by the visitor returning \c CXChildVisit_Break. 2123 */ 2124 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_visitChildren(CXCursor parent, 2125 CXCursorVisitor visitor, 2126 CXClientData client_data); 2127 #ifdef __has_feature 2128 # if __has_feature(blocks) 2129 /** 2130 * \brief Visitor invoked for each cursor found by a traversal. 2131 * 2132 * This visitor block will be invoked for each cursor found by 2133 * clang_visitChildrenWithBlock(). Its first argument is the cursor being 2134 * visited, its second argument is the parent visitor for that cursor. 2135 * 2136 * The visitor should return one of the \c CXChildVisitResult values 2137 * to direct clang_visitChildrenWithBlock(). 2138 */ 2139 typedef enum CXChildVisitResult 2140 (^CXCursorVisitorBlock)(CXCursor cursor, CXCursor parent); 2141 2142 /** 2143 * Visits the children of a cursor using the specified block. Behaves 2144 * identically to clang_visitChildren() in all other respects. 2145 */ 2146 unsigned clang_visitChildrenWithBlock(CXCursor parent, 2147 CXCursorVisitorBlock block); 2148 # endif 2149 #endif 2150 2151 /** 2152 * @} 2153 */ 2154 2155 /** 2156 * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_XREF Cross-referencing in the AST 2157 * 2158 * These routines provide the ability to determine references within and 2159 * across translation units, by providing the names of the entities referenced 2160 * by cursors, follow reference cursors to the declarations they reference, 2161 * and associate declarations with their definitions. 2162 * 2163 * @{ 2164 */ 2165 2166 /** 2167 * \brief Retrieve a Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) for the entity referenced 2168 * by the given cursor. 2169 * 2170 * A Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) is a string that identifies a particular 2171 * entity (function, class, variable, etc.) within a program. USRs can be 2172 * compared across translation units to determine, e.g., when references in 2173 * one translation refer to an entity defined in another translation unit. 2174 */ 2175 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorUSR(CXCursor); 2176 2177 /** 2178 * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C class. 2179 */ 2180 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCClass(const char *class_name); 2181 2182 /** 2183 * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C category. 2184 */ 2185 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString 2186 clang_constructUSR_ObjCCategory(const char *class_name, 2187 const char *category_name); 2188 2189 /** 2190 * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C protocol. 2191 */ 2192 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString 2193 clang_constructUSR_ObjCProtocol(const char *protocol_name); 2194 2195 2196 /** 2197 * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C instance variable and 2198 * the USR for its containing class. 2199 */ 2200 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCIvar(const char *name, 2201 CXString classUSR); 2202 2203 /** 2204 * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C method and 2205 * the USR for its containing class. 2206 */ 2207 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCMethod(const char *name, 2208 unsigned isInstanceMethod, 2209 CXString classUSR); 2210 2211 /** 2212 * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C property and the USR 2213 * for its containing class. 2214 */ 2215 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCProperty(const char *property, 2216 CXString classUSR); 2217 2218 /** 2219 * \brief Retrieve a name for the entity referenced by this cursor. 2220 */ 2221 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorSpelling(CXCursor); 2222 2223 /** 2224 * \brief Retrieve the display name for the entity referenced by this cursor. 2225 * 2226 * The display name contains extra information that helps identify the cursor, 2227 * such as the parameters of a function or template or the arguments of a 2228 * class template specialization. 2229 */ 2230 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorDisplayName(CXCursor); 2231 2232 /** \brief For a cursor that is a reference, retrieve a cursor representing the 2233 * entity that it references. 2234 * 2235 * Reference cursors refer to other entities in the AST. For example, an 2236 * Objective-C superclass reference cursor refers to an Objective-C class. 2237 * This function produces the cursor for the Objective-C class from the 2238 * cursor for the superclass reference. If the input cursor is a declaration or 2239 * definition, it returns that declaration or definition unchanged. 2240 * Otherwise, returns the NULL cursor. 2241 */ 2242 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorReferenced(CXCursor); 2243 2244 /** 2245 * \brief For a cursor that is either a reference to or a declaration 2246 * of some entity, retrieve a cursor that describes the definition of 2247 * that entity. 2248 * 2249 * Some entities can be declared multiple times within a translation 2250 * unit, but only one of those declarations can also be a 2251 * definition. For example, given: 2252 * 2253 * \code 2254 * int f(int, int); 2255 * int g(int x, int y) { return f(x, y); } 2256 * int f(int a, int b) { return a + b; } 2257 * int f(int, int); 2258 * \endcode 2259 * 2260 * there are three declarations of the function "f", but only the 2261 * second one is a definition. The clang_getCursorDefinition() 2262 * function will take any cursor pointing to a declaration of "f" 2263 * (the first or fourth lines of the example) or a cursor referenced 2264 * that uses "f" (the call to "f' inside "g") and will return a 2265 * declaration cursor pointing to the definition (the second "f" 2266 * declaration). 2267 * 2268 * If given a cursor for which there is no corresponding definition, 2269 * e.g., because there is no definition of that entity within this 2270 * translation unit, returns a NULL cursor. 2271 */ 2272 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorDefinition(CXCursor); 2273 2274 /** 2275 * \brief Determine whether the declaration pointed to by this cursor 2276 * is also a definition of that entity. 2277 */ 2278 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isCursorDefinition(CXCursor); 2279 2280 /** 2281 * \brief Retrieve the canonical cursor corresponding to the given cursor. 2282 * 2283 * In the C family of languages, many kinds of entities can be declared several 2284 * times within a single translation unit. For example, a structure type can 2285 * be forward-declared (possibly multiple times) and later defined: 2286 * 2287 * \code 2288 * struct X; 2289 * struct X; 2290 * struct X { 2291 * int member; 2292 * }; 2293 * \endcode 2294 * 2295 * The declarations and the definition of \c X are represented by three 2296 * different cursors, all of which are declarations of the same underlying 2297 * entity. One of these cursor is considered the "canonical" cursor, which 2298 * is effectively the representative for the underlying entity. One can 2299 * determine if two cursors are declarations of the same underlying entity by 2300 * comparing their canonical cursors. 2301 * 2302 * \returns The canonical cursor for the entity referred to by the given cursor. 2303 */ 2304 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCanonicalCursor(CXCursor); 2305 2306 /** 2307 * @} 2308 */ 2309 2310 /** 2311 * \defgroup CINDEX_CPP C++ AST introspection 2312 * 2313 * The routines in this group provide access information in the ASTs specific 2314 * to C++ language features. 2315 * 2316 * @{ 2317 */ 2318 2319 /** 2320 * \brief Determine if a C++ member function or member function template is 2321 * declared 'static'. 2322 */ 2323 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXXMethod_isStatic(CXCursor C); 2324 2325 /** 2326 * \brief Determine if a C++ member function or member function template is 2327 * explicitly declared 'virtual' or if it overrides a virtual method from 2328 * one of the base classes. 2329 */ 2330 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXXMethod_isVirtual(CXCursor C); 2331 2332 /** 2333 * \brief Given a cursor that represents a template, determine 2334 * the cursor kind of the specializations would be generated by instantiating 2335 * the template. 2336 * 2337 * This routine can be used to determine what flavor of function template, 2338 * class template, or class template partial specialization is stored in the 2339 * cursor. For example, it can describe whether a class template cursor is 2340 * declared with "struct", "class" or "union". 2341 * 2342 * \param C The cursor to query. This cursor should represent a template 2343 * declaration. 2344 * 2345 * \returns The cursor kind of the specializations that would be generated 2346 * by instantiating the template \p C. If \p C is not a template, returns 2347 * \c CXCursor_NoDeclFound. 2348 */ 2349 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCursorKind clang_getTemplateCursorKind(CXCursor C); 2350 2351 /** 2352 * \brief Given a cursor that may represent a specialization or instantiation 2353 * of a template, retrieve the cursor that represents the template that it 2354 * specializes or from which it was instantiated. 2355 * 2356 * This routine determines the template involved both for explicit 2357 * specializations of templates and for implicit instantiations of the template, 2358 * both of which are referred to as "specializations". For a class template 2359 * specialization (e.g., \c std::vector<bool>), this routine will return 2360 * either the primary template (\c std::vector) or, if the specialization was 2361 * instantiated from a class template partial specialization, the class template 2362 * partial specialization. For a class template partial specialization and a 2363 * function template specialization (including instantiations), this 2364 * this routine will return the specialized template. 2365 * 2366 * For members of a class template (e.g., member functions, member classes, or 2367 * static data members), returns the specialized or instantiated member. 2368 * Although not strictly "templates" in the C++ language, members of class 2369 * templates have the same notions of specializations and instantiations that 2370 * templates do, so this routine treats them similarly. 2371 * 2372 * \param C A cursor that may be a specialization of a template or a member 2373 * of a template. 2374 * 2375 * \returns If the given cursor is a specialization or instantiation of a 2376 * template or a member thereof, the template or member that it specializes or 2377 * from which it was instantiated. Otherwise, returns a NULL cursor. 2378 */ 2379 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getSpecializedCursorTemplate(CXCursor C); 2380 2381 /** 2382 * @} 2383 */ 2384 2385 /** 2386 * \defgroup CINDEX_LEX Token extraction and manipulation 2387 * 2388 * The routines in this group provide access to the tokens within a 2389 * translation unit, along with a semantic mapping of those tokens to 2390 * their corresponding cursors. 2391 * 2392 * @{ 2393 */ 2394 2395 /** 2396 * \brief Describes a kind of token. 2397 */ 2398 typedef enum CXTokenKind { 2399 /** 2400 * \brief A token that contains some kind of punctuation. 2401 */ 2402 CXToken_Punctuation, 2403 2404 /** 2405 * \brief A language keyword. 2406 */ 2407 CXToken_Keyword, 2408 2409 /** 2410 * \brief An identifier (that is not a keyword). 2411 */ 2412 CXToken_Identifier, 2413 2414 /** 2415 * \brief A numeric, string, or character literal. 2416 */ 2417 CXToken_Literal, 2418 2419 /** 2420 * \brief A comment. 2421 */ 2422 CXToken_Comment 2423 } CXTokenKind; 2424 2425 /** 2426 * \brief Describes a single preprocessing token. 2427 */ 2428 typedef struct { 2429 unsigned int_data[4]; 2430 void *ptr_data; 2431 } CXToken; 2432 2433 /** 2434 * \brief Determine the kind of the given token. 2435 */ 2436 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTokenKind clang_getTokenKind(CXToken); 2437 2438 /** 2439 * \brief Determine the spelling of the given token. 2440 * 2441 * The spelling of a token is the textual representation of that token, e.g., 2442 * the text of an identifier or keyword. 2443 */ 2444 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getTokenSpelling(CXTranslationUnit, CXToken); 2445 2446 /** 2447 * \brief Retrieve the source location of the given token. 2448 */ 2449 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getTokenLocation(CXTranslationUnit, 2450 CXToken); 2451 2452 /** 2453 * \brief Retrieve a source range that covers the given token. 2454 */ 2455 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getTokenExtent(CXTranslationUnit, CXToken); 2456 2457 /** 2458 * \brief Tokenize the source code described by the given range into raw 2459 * lexical tokens. 2460 * 2461 * \param TU the translation unit whose text is being tokenized. 2462 * 2463 * \param Range the source range in which text should be tokenized. All of the 2464 * tokens produced by tokenization will fall within this source range, 2465 * 2466 * \param Tokens this pointer will be set to point to the array of tokens 2467 * that occur within the given source range. The returned pointer must be 2468 * freed with clang_disposeTokens() before the translation unit is destroyed. 2469 * 2470 * \param NumTokens will be set to the number of tokens in the \c *Tokens 2471 * array. 2472 * 2473 */ 2474 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_tokenize(CXTranslationUnit TU, CXSourceRange Range, 2475 CXToken **Tokens, unsigned *NumTokens); 2476 2477 /** 2478 * \brief Annotate the given set of tokens by providing cursors for each token 2479 * that can be mapped to a specific entity within the abstract syntax tree. 2480 * 2481 * This token-annotation routine is equivalent to invoking 2482 * clang_getCursor() for the source locations of each of the 2483 * tokens. The cursors provided are filtered, so that only those 2484 * cursors that have a direct correspondence to the token are 2485 * accepted. For example, given a function call \c f(x), 2486 * clang_getCursor() would provide the following cursors: 2487 * 2488 * * when the cursor is over the 'f', a DeclRefExpr cursor referring to 'f'. 2489 * * when the cursor is over the '(' or the ')', a CallExpr referring to 'f'. 2490 * * when the cursor is over the 'x', a DeclRefExpr cursor referring to 'x'. 2491 * 2492 * Only the first and last of these cursors will occur within the 2493 * annotate, since the tokens "f" and "x' directly refer to a function 2494 * and a variable, respectively, but the parentheses are just a small 2495 * part of the full syntax of the function call expression, which is 2496 * not provided as an annotation. 2497 * 2498 * \param TU the translation unit that owns the given tokens. 2499 * 2500 * \param Tokens the set of tokens to annotate. 2501 * 2502 * \param NumTokens the number of tokens in \p Tokens. 2503 * 2504 * \param Cursors an array of \p NumTokens cursors, whose contents will be 2505 * replaced with the cursors corresponding to each token. 2506 */ 2507 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_annotateTokens(CXTranslationUnit TU, 2508 CXToken *Tokens, unsigned NumTokens, 2509 CXCursor *Cursors); 2510 2511 /** 2512 * \brief Free the given set of tokens. 2513 */ 2514 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeTokens(CXTranslationUnit TU, 2515 CXToken *Tokens, unsigned NumTokens); 2516 2517 /** 2518 * @} 2519 */ 2520 2521 /** 2522 * \defgroup CINDEX_DEBUG Debugging facilities 2523 * 2524 * These routines are used for testing and debugging, only, and should not 2525 * be relied upon. 2526 * 2527 * @{ 2528 */ 2529 2530 /* for debug/testing */ 2531 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorKindSpelling(enum CXCursorKind Kind); 2532 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getDefinitionSpellingAndExtent(CXCursor, 2533 const char **startBuf, 2534 const char **endBuf, 2535 unsigned *startLine, 2536 unsigned *startColumn, 2537 unsigned *endLine, 2538 unsigned *endColumn); 2539 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_enableStackTraces(void); 2540 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_executeOnThread(void (*fn)(void*), void *user_data, 2541 unsigned stack_size); 2542 2543 /** 2544 * @} 2545 */ 2546 2547 /** 2548 * \defgroup CINDEX_CODE_COMPLET Code completion 2549 * 2550 * Code completion involves taking an (incomplete) source file, along with 2551 * knowledge of where the user is actively editing that file, and suggesting 2552 * syntactically- and semantically-valid constructs that the user might want to 2553 * use at that particular point in the source code. These data structures and 2554 * routines provide support for code completion. 2555 * 2556 * @{ 2557 */ 2558 2559 /** 2560 * \brief A semantic string that describes a code-completion result. 2561 * 2562 * A semantic string that describes the formatting of a code-completion 2563 * result as a single "template" of text that should be inserted into the 2564 * source buffer when a particular code-completion result is selected. 2565 * Each semantic string is made up of some number of "chunks", each of which 2566 * contains some text along with a description of what that text means, e.g., 2567 * the name of the entity being referenced, whether the text chunk is part of 2568 * the template, or whether it is a "placeholder" that the user should replace 2569 * with actual code,of a specific kind. See \c CXCompletionChunkKind for a 2570 * description of the different kinds of chunks. 2571 */ 2572 typedef void *CXCompletionString; 2573 2574 /** 2575 * \brief A single result of code completion. 2576 */ 2577 typedef struct { 2578 /** 2579 * \brief The kind of entity that this completion refers to. 2580 * 2581 * The cursor kind will be a macro, keyword, or a declaration (one of the 2582 * *Decl cursor kinds), describing the entity that the completion is 2583 * referring to. 2584 * 2585 * \todo In the future, we would like to provide a full cursor, to allow 2586 * the client to extract additional information from declaration. 2587 */ 2588 enum CXCursorKind CursorKind; 2589 2590 /** 2591 * \brief The code-completion string that describes how to insert this 2592 * code-completion result into the editing buffer. 2593 */ 2594 CXCompletionString CompletionString; 2595 } CXCompletionResult; 2596 2597 /** 2598 * \brief Describes a single piece of text within a code-completion string. 2599 * 2600 * Each "chunk" within a code-completion string (\c CXCompletionString) is 2601 * either a piece of text with a specific "kind" that describes how that text 2602 * should be interpreted by the client or is another completion string. 2603 */ 2604 enum CXCompletionChunkKind { 2605 /** 2606 * \brief A code-completion string that describes "optional" text that 2607 * could be a part of the template (but is not required). 2608 * 2609 * The Optional chunk is the only kind of chunk that has a code-completion 2610 * string for its representation, which is accessible via 2611 * \c clang_getCompletionChunkCompletionString(). The code-completion string 2612 * describes an additional part of the template that is completely optional. 2613 * For example, optional chunks can be used to describe the placeholders for 2614 * arguments that match up with defaulted function parameters, e.g. given: 2615 * 2616 * \code 2617 * void f(int x, float y = 3.14, double z = 2.71828); 2618 * \endcode 2619 * 2620 * The code-completion string for this function would contain: 2621 * - a TypedText chunk for "f". 2622 * - a LeftParen chunk for "(". 2623 * - a Placeholder chunk for "int x" 2624 * - an Optional chunk containing the remaining defaulted arguments, e.g., 2625 * - a Comma chunk for "," 2626 * - a Placeholder chunk for "float y" 2627 * - an Optional chunk containing the last defaulted argument: 2628 * - a Comma chunk for "," 2629 * - a Placeholder chunk for "double z" 2630 * - a RightParen chunk for ")" 2631 * 2632 * There are many ways to handle Optional chunks. Two simple approaches are: 2633 * - Completely ignore optional chunks, in which case the template for the 2634 * function "f" would only include the first parameter ("int x"). 2635 * - Fully expand all optional chunks, in which case the template for the 2636 * function "f" would have all of the parameters. 2637 */ 2638 CXCompletionChunk_Optional, 2639 /** 2640 * \brief Text that a user would be expected to type to get this 2641 * code-completion result. 2642 * 2643 * There will be exactly one "typed text" chunk in a semantic string, which 2644 * will typically provide the spelling of a keyword or the name of a 2645 * declaration that could be used at the current code point. Clients are 2646 * expected to filter the code-completion results based on the text in this 2647 * chunk. 2648 */ 2649 CXCompletionChunk_TypedText, 2650 /** 2651 * \brief Text that should be inserted as part of a code-completion result. 2652 * 2653 * A "text" chunk represents text that is part of the template to be 2654 * inserted into user code should this particular code-completion result 2655 * be selected. 2656 */ 2657 CXCompletionChunk_Text, 2658 /** 2659 * \brief Placeholder text that should be replaced by the user. 2660 * 2661 * A "placeholder" chunk marks a place where the user should insert text 2662 * into the code-completion template. For example, placeholders might mark 2663 * the function parameters for a function declaration, to indicate that the 2664 * user should provide arguments for each of those parameters. The actual 2665 * text in a placeholder is a suggestion for the text to display before 2666 * the user replaces the placeholder with real code. 2667 */ 2668 CXCompletionChunk_Placeholder, 2669 /** 2670 * \brief Informative text that should be displayed but never inserted as 2671 * part of the template. 2672 * 2673 * An "informative" chunk contains annotations that can be displayed to 2674 * help the user decide whether a particular code-completion result is the 2675 * right option, but which is not part of the actual template to be inserted 2676 * by code completion. 2677 */ 2678 CXCompletionChunk_Informative, 2679 /** 2680 * \brief Text that describes the current parameter when code-completion is 2681 * referring to function call, message send, or template specialization. 2682 * 2683 * A "current parameter" chunk occurs when code-completion is providing 2684 * information about a parameter corresponding to the argument at the 2685 * code-completion point. For example, given a function 2686 * 2687 * \code 2688 * int add(int x, int y); 2689 * \endcode 2690 * 2691 * and the source code \c add(, where the code-completion point is after the 2692 * "(", the code-completion string will contain a "current parameter" chunk 2693 * for "int x", indicating that the current argument will initialize that 2694 * parameter. After typing further, to \c add(17, (where the code-completion 2695 * point is after the ","), the code-completion string will contain a 2696 * "current paremeter" chunk to "int y". 2697 */ 2698 CXCompletionChunk_CurrentParameter, 2699 /** 2700 * \brief A left parenthesis ('('), used to initiate a function call or 2701 * signal the beginning of a function parameter list. 2702 */ 2703 CXCompletionChunk_LeftParen, 2704 /** 2705 * \brief A right parenthesis (')'), used to finish a function call or 2706 * signal the end of a function parameter list. 2707 */ 2708 CXCompletionChunk_RightParen, 2709 /** 2710 * \brief A left bracket ('['). 2711 */ 2712 CXCompletionChunk_LeftBracket, 2713 /** 2714 * \brief A right bracket (']'). 2715 */ 2716 CXCompletionChunk_RightBracket, 2717 /** 2718 * \brief A left brace ('{'). 2719 */ 2720 CXCompletionChunk_LeftBrace, 2721 /** 2722 * \brief A right brace ('}'). 2723 */ 2724 CXCompletionChunk_RightBrace, 2725 /** 2726 * \brief A left angle bracket ('<'). 2727 */ 2728 CXCompletionChunk_LeftAngle, 2729 /** 2730 * \brief A right angle bracket ('>'). 2731 */ 2732 CXCompletionChunk_RightAngle, 2733 /** 2734 * \brief A comma separator (','). 2735 */ 2736 CXCompletionChunk_Comma, 2737 /** 2738 * \brief Text that specifies the result type of a given result. 2739 * 2740 * This special kind of informative chunk is not meant to be inserted into 2741 * the text buffer. Rather, it is meant to illustrate the type that an 2742 * expression using the given completion string would have. 2743 */ 2744 CXCompletionChunk_ResultType, 2745 /** 2746 * \brief A colon (':'). 2747 */ 2748 CXCompletionChunk_Colon, 2749 /** 2750 * \brief A semicolon (';'). 2751 */ 2752 CXCompletionChunk_SemiColon, 2753 /** 2754 * \brief An '=' sign. 2755 */ 2756 CXCompletionChunk_Equal, 2757 /** 2758 * Horizontal space (' '). 2759 */ 2760 CXCompletionChunk_HorizontalSpace, 2761 /** 2762 * Vertical space ('\n'), after which it is generally a good idea to 2763 * perform indentation. 2764 */ 2765 CXCompletionChunk_VerticalSpace 2766 }; 2767 2768 /** 2769 * \brief Determine the kind of a particular chunk within a completion string. 2770 * 2771 * \param completion_string the completion string to query. 2772 * 2773 * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string. 2774 * 2775 * \returns the kind of the chunk at the index \c chunk_number. 2776 */ 2777 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCompletionChunkKind 2778 clang_getCompletionChunkKind(CXCompletionString completion_string, 2779 unsigned chunk_number); 2780 2781 /** 2782 * \brief Retrieve the text associated with a particular chunk within a 2783 * completion string. 2784 * 2785 * \param completion_string the completion string to query. 2786 * 2787 * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string. 2788 * 2789 * \returns the text associated with the chunk at index \c chunk_number. 2790 */ 2791 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString 2792 clang_getCompletionChunkText(CXCompletionString completion_string, 2793 unsigned chunk_number); 2794 2795 /** 2796 * \brief Retrieve the completion string associated with a particular chunk 2797 * within a completion string. 2798 * 2799 * \param completion_string the completion string to query. 2800 * 2801 * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string. 2802 * 2803 * \returns the completion string associated with the chunk at index 2804 * \c chunk_number, or NULL if that chunk is not represented by a completion 2805 * string. 2806 */ 2807 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCompletionString 2808 clang_getCompletionChunkCompletionString(CXCompletionString completion_string, 2809 unsigned chunk_number); 2810 2811 /** 2812 * \brief Retrieve the number of chunks in the given code-completion string. 2813 */ 2814 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned 2815 clang_getNumCompletionChunks(CXCompletionString completion_string); 2816 2817 /** 2818 * \brief Determine the priority of this code completion. 2819 * 2820 * The priority of a code completion indicates how likely it is that this 2821 * particular completion is the completion that the user will select. The 2822 * priority is selected by various internal heuristics. 2823 * 2824 * \param completion_string The completion string to query. 2825 * 2826 * \returns The priority of this completion string. Smaller values indicate 2827 * higher-priority (more likely) completions. 2828 */ 2829 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned 2830 clang_getCompletionPriority(CXCompletionString completion_string); 2831 2832 /** 2833 * \brief Determine the availability of the entity that this code-completion 2834 * string refers to. 2835 * 2836 * \param completion_string The completion string to query. 2837 * 2838 * \returns The availability of the completion string. 2839 */ 2840 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXAvailabilityKind 2841 clang_getCompletionAvailability(CXCompletionString completion_string); 2842 2843 /** 2844 * \brief Contains the results of code-completion. 2845 * 2846 * This data structure contains the results of code completion, as 2847 * produced by \c clang_codeCompleteAt(). Its contents must be freed by 2848 * \c clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults. 2849 */ 2850 typedef struct { 2851 /** 2852 * \brief The code-completion results. 2853 */ 2854 CXCompletionResult *Results; 2855 2856 /** 2857 * \brief The number of code-completion results stored in the 2858 * \c Results array. 2859 */ 2860 unsigned NumResults; 2861 } CXCodeCompleteResults; 2862 2863 /** 2864 * \brief Flags that can be passed to \c clang_codeCompleteAt() to 2865 * modify its behavior. 2866 * 2867 * The enumerators in this enumeration can be bitwise-OR'd together to 2868 * provide multiple options to \c clang_codeCompleteAt(). 2869 */ 2870 enum CXCodeComplete_Flags { 2871 /** 2872 * \brief Whether to include macros within the set of code 2873 * completions returned. 2874 */ 2875 CXCodeComplete_IncludeMacros = 0x01, 2876 2877 /** 2878 * \brief Whether to include code patterns for language constructs 2879 * within the set of code completions, e.g., for loops. 2880 */ 2881 CXCodeComplete_IncludeCodePatterns = 0x02 2882 }; 2883 2884 /** 2885 * \brief Bits that represent the context under which completion is occurring. 2886 * 2887 * The enumerators in this enumeration may be bitwise-OR'd together if multiple 2888 * contexts are occurring simultaneously. 2889 */ 2890 enum CXCompletionContext { 2891 /** 2892 * \brief The context for completions is unexposed, as only Clang results 2893 * should be included. (This is equivalent to having no context bits set.) 2894 */ 2895 CXCompletionContext_Unexposed = 0, 2896 2897 /** 2898 * \brief Completions for any possible type should be included in the results. 2899 */ 2900 CXCompletionContext_AnyType = 1 << 0, 2901 2902 /** 2903 * \brief Completions for any possible value (variables, function calls, etc.) 2904 * should be included in the results. 2905 */ 2906 CXCompletionContext_AnyValue = 1 << 1, 2907 /** 2908 * \brief Completions for values that resolve to an Objective-C object should 2909 * be included in the results. 2910 */ 2911 CXCompletionContext_ObjCObjectValue = 1 << 2, 2912 /** 2913 * \brief Completions for values that resolve to an Objective-C selector 2914 * should be included in the results. 2915 */ 2916 CXCompletionContext_ObjCSelectorValue = 1 << 3, 2917 /** 2918 * \brief Completions for values that resolve to a C++ class type should be 2919 * included in the results. 2920 */ 2921 CXCompletionContext_CXXClassTypeValue = 1 << 4, 2922 2923 /** 2924 * \brief Completions for fields of the member being accessed using the dot 2925 * operator should be included in the results. 2926 */ 2927 CXCompletionContext_DotMemberAccess = 1 << 5, 2928 /** 2929 * \brief Completions for fields of the member being accessed using the arrow 2930 * operator should be included in the results. 2931 */ 2932 CXCompletionContext_ArrowMemberAccess = 1 << 6, 2933 /** 2934 * \brief Completions for properties of the Objective-C object being accessed 2935 * using the dot operator should be included in the results. 2936 */ 2937 CXCompletionContext_ObjCPropertyAccess = 1 << 7, 2938 2939 /** 2940 * \brief Completions for enum tags should be included in the results. 2941 */ 2942 CXCompletionContext_EnumTag = 1 << 8, 2943 /** 2944 * \brief Completions for union tags should be included in the results. 2945 */ 2946 CXCompletionContext_UnionTag = 1 << 9, 2947 /** 2948 * \brief Completions for struct tags should be included in the results. 2949 */ 2950 CXCompletionContext_StructTag = 1 << 10, 2951 2952 /** 2953 * \brief Completions for C++ class names should be included in the results. 2954 */ 2955 CXCompletionContext_ClassTag = 1 << 11, 2956 /** 2957 * \brief Completions for C++ namespaces and namespace aliases should be 2958 * included in the results. 2959 */ 2960 CXCompletionContext_Namespace = 1 << 12, 2961 /** 2962 * \brief Completions for C++ nested name specifiers should be included in 2963 * the results. 2964 */ 2965 CXCompletionContext_NestedNameSpecifier = 1 << 13, 2966 2967 /** 2968 * \brief Completions for Objective-C interfaces (classes) should be included 2969 * in the results. 2970 */ 2971 CXCompletionContext_ObjCInterface = 1 << 14, 2972 /** 2973 * \brief Completions for Objective-C protocols should be included in 2974 * the results. 2975 */ 2976 CXCompletionContext_ObjCProtocol = 1 << 15, 2977 /** 2978 * \brief Completions for Objective-C categories should be included in 2979 * the results. 2980 */ 2981 CXCompletionContext_ObjCCategory = 1 << 16, 2982 /** 2983 * \brief Completions for Objective-C instance messages should be included 2984 * in the results. 2985 */ 2986 CXCompletionContext_ObjCInstanceMessage = 1 << 17, 2987 /** 2988 * \brief Completions for Objective-C class messages should be included in 2989 * the results. 2990 */ 2991 CXCompletionContext_ObjCClassMessage = 1 << 18, 2992 /** 2993 * \brief Completions for Objective-C selector names should be included in 2994 * the results. 2995 */ 2996 CXCompletionContext_ObjCSelectorName = 1 << 19, 2997 2998 /** 2999 * \brief Completions for preprocessor macro names should be included in 3000 * the results. 3001 */ 3002 CXCompletionContext_MacroName = 1 << 20, 3003 3004 /** 3005 * \brief Natural language completions should be included in the results. 3006 */ 3007 CXCompletionContext_NaturalLanguage = 1 << 21, 3008 3009 /** 3010 * \brief The current context is unknown, so set all contexts. 3011 */ 3012 CXCompletionContext_Unknown = ((1 << 22) - 1) 3013 }; 3014 3015 /** 3016 * \brief Returns a default set of code-completion options that can be 3017 * passed to\c clang_codeCompleteAt(). 3018 */ 3019 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultCodeCompleteOptions(void); 3020 3021 /** 3022 * \brief Perform code completion at a given location in a translation unit. 3023 * 3024 * This function performs code completion at a particular file, line, and 3025 * column within source code, providing results that suggest potential 3026 * code snippets based on the context of the completion. The basic model 3027 * for code completion is that Clang will parse a complete source file, 3028 * performing syntax checking up to the location where code-completion has 3029 * been requested. At that point, a special code-completion token is passed 3030 * to the parser, which recognizes this token and determines, based on the 3031 * current location in the C/Objective-C/C++ grammar and the state of 3032 * semantic analysis, what completions to provide. These completions are 3033 * returned via a new \c CXCodeCompleteResults structure. 3034 * 3035 * Code completion itself is meant to be triggered by the client when the 3036 * user types punctuation characters or whitespace, at which point the 3037 * code-completion location will coincide with the cursor. For example, if \c p 3038 * is a pointer, code-completion might be triggered after the "-" and then 3039 * after the ">" in \c p->. When the code-completion location is afer the ">", 3040 * the completion results will provide, e.g., the members of the struct that 3041 * "p" points to. The client is responsible for placing the cursor at the 3042 * beginning of the token currently being typed, then filtering the results 3043 * based on the contents of the token. For example, when code-completing for 3044 * the expression \c p->get, the client should provide the location just after 3045 * the ">" (e.g., pointing at the "g") to this code-completion hook. Then, the 3046 * client can filter the results based on the current token text ("get"), only 3047 * showing those results that start with "get". The intent of this interface 3048 * is to separate the relatively high-latency acquisition of code-completion 3049 * results from the filtering of results on a per-character basis, which must 3050 * have a lower latency. 3051 * 3052 * \param TU The translation unit in which code-completion should 3053 * occur. The source files for this translation unit need not be 3054 * completely up-to-date (and the contents of those source files may 3055 * be overridden via \p unsaved_files). Cursors referring into the 3056 * translation unit may be invalidated by this invocation. 3057 * 3058 * \param complete_filename The name of the source file where code 3059 * completion should be performed. This filename may be any file 3060 * included in the translation unit. 3061 * 3062 * \param complete_line The line at which code-completion should occur. 3063 * 3064 * \param complete_column The column at which code-completion should occur. 3065 * Note that the column should point just after the syntactic construct that 3066 * initiated code completion, and not in the middle of a lexical token. 3067 * 3068 * \param unsaved_files the Tiles that have not yet been saved to disk 3069 * but may be required for parsing or code completion, including the 3070 * contents of those files. The contents and name of these files (as 3071 * specified by CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the 3072 * client only needs to guarantee their validity until the call to 3073 * this function returns. 3074 * 3075 * \param num_unsaved_files The number of unsaved file entries in \p 3076 * unsaved_files. 3077 * 3078 * \param options Extra options that control the behavior of code 3079 * completion, expressed as a bitwise OR of the enumerators of the 3080 * CXCodeComplete_Flags enumeration. The 3081 * \c clang_defaultCodeCompleteOptions() function returns a default set 3082 * of code-completion options. 3083 * 3084 * \returns If successful, a new \c CXCodeCompleteResults structure 3085 * containing code-completion results, which should eventually be 3086 * freed with \c clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults(). If code 3087 * completion fails, returns NULL. 3088 */ 3089 CINDEX_LINKAGE 3090 CXCodeCompleteResults *clang_codeCompleteAt(CXTranslationUnit TU, 3091 const char *complete_filename, 3092 unsigned complete_line, 3093 unsigned complete_column, 3094 struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files, 3095 unsigned num_unsaved_files, 3096 unsigned options); 3097 3098 /** 3099 * \brief Sort the code-completion results in case-insensitive alphabetical 3100 * order. 3101 * 3102 * \param Results The set of results to sort. 3103 * \param NumResults The number of results in \p Results. 3104 */ 3105 CINDEX_LINKAGE 3106 void clang_sortCodeCompletionResults(CXCompletionResult *Results, 3107 unsigned NumResults); 3108 3109 /** 3110 * \brief Free the given set of code-completion results. 3111 */ 3112 CINDEX_LINKAGE 3113 void clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results); 3114 3115 /** 3116 * \brief Determine the number of diagnostics produced prior to the 3117 * location where code completion was performed. 3118 */ 3119 CINDEX_LINKAGE 3120 unsigned clang_codeCompleteGetNumDiagnostics(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results); 3121 3122 /** 3123 * \brief Retrieve a diagnostic associated with the given code completion. 3124 * 3125 * \param Result the code completion results to query. 3126 * \param Index the zero-based diagnostic number to retrieve. 3127 * 3128 * \returns the requested diagnostic. This diagnostic must be freed 3129 * via a call to \c clang_disposeDiagnostic(). 3130 */ 3131 CINDEX_LINKAGE 3132 CXDiagnostic clang_codeCompleteGetDiagnostic(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results, 3133 unsigned Index); 3134 3135 /** 3136 * \brief Determines what compeltions are appropriate for the context 3137 * the given code completion. 3138 * 3139 * \param Results the code completion results to query 3140 * 3141 * \returns the kinds of completions that are appropriate for use 3142 * along with the given code completion results. 3143 */ 3144 CINDEX_LINKAGE 3145 unsigned long long clang_codeCompleteGetContexts( 3146 CXCodeCompleteResults *Results); 3147 3148 /** 3149 * @} 3150 */ 3151 3152 3153 /** 3154 * \defgroup CINDEX_MISC Miscellaneous utility functions 3155 * 3156 * @{ 3157 */ 3158 3159 /** 3160 * \brief Return a version string, suitable for showing to a user, but not 3161 * intended to be parsed (the format is not guaranteed to be stable). 3162 */ 3163 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getClangVersion(); 3164 3165 3166 /** 3167 * \brief Enable/disable crash recovery. 3168 * 3169 * \param Flag to indicate if crash recovery is enabled. A non-zero value 3170 * enables crash recovery, while 0 disables it. 3171 */ 3172 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_toggleCrashRecovery(unsigned isEnabled); 3173 3174 /** 3175 * \brief Visitor invoked for each file in a translation unit 3176 * (used with clang_getInclusions()). 3177 * 3178 * This visitor function will be invoked by clang_getInclusions() for each 3179 * file included (either at the top-level or by #include directives) within 3180 * a translation unit. The first argument is the file being included, and 3181 * the second and third arguments provide the inclusion stack. The 3182 * array is sorted in order of immediate inclusion. For example, 3183 * the first element refers to the location that included 'included_file'. 3184 */ 3185 typedef void (*CXInclusionVisitor)(CXFile included_file, 3186 CXSourceLocation* inclusion_stack, 3187 unsigned include_len, 3188 CXClientData client_data); 3189 3190 /** 3191 * \brief Visit the set of preprocessor inclusions in a translation unit. 3192 * The visitor function is called with the provided data for every included 3193 * file. This does not include headers included by the PCH file (unless one 3194 * is inspecting the inclusions in the PCH file itself). 3195 */ 3196 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getInclusions(CXTranslationUnit tu, 3197 CXInclusionVisitor visitor, 3198 CXClientData client_data); 3199 3200 /** 3201 * @} 3202 */ 3203 3204 /** \defgroup CINDEX_REMAPPING Remapping functions 3205 * 3206 * @{ 3207 */ 3208 3209 /** 3210 * \brief A remapping of original source files and their translated files. 3211 */ 3212 typedef void *CXRemapping; 3213 3214 /** 3215 * \brief Retrieve a remapping. 3216 * 3217 * \param path the path that contains metadata about remappings. 3218 * 3219 * \returns the requested remapping. This remapping must be freed 3220 * via a call to \c clang_remap_dispose(). Can return NULL if an error occurred. 3221 */ 3222 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXRemapping clang_getRemappings(const char *path); 3223 3224 /** 3225 * \brief Determine the number of remappings. 3226 */ 3227 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_remap_getNumFiles(CXRemapping); 3228 3229 /** 3230 * \brief Get the original and the associated filename from the remapping. 3231 * 3232 * \param original If non-NULL, will be set to the original filename. 3233 * 3234 * \param transformed If non-NULL, will be set to the filename that the original 3235 * is associated with. 3236 */ 3237 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_remap_getFilenames(CXRemapping, unsigned index, 3238 CXString *original, CXString *transformed); 3239 3240 /** 3241 * \brief Dispose the remapping. 3242 */ 3243 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_remap_dispose(CXRemapping); 3244 3245 /** 3246 * @} 3247 */ 3248 3249 /** 3250 * @} 3251 */ 3252 3253 #ifdef __cplusplus 3254 } 3255 #endif 3256 #endif 3257 3258