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      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    * \brief The entity is available, but not accessible; any use of it will be
    121    * an error.
    122    */
    123   CXAvailability_NotAccessible
    124 };
    125 
    126 /**
    127  * \defgroup CINDEX_STRING String manipulation routines
    128  *
    129  * @{
    130  */
    131 
    132 /**
    133  * \brief A character string.
    134  *
    135  * The \c CXString type is used to return strings from the interface when
    136  * the ownership of that string might different from one call to the next.
    137  * Use \c clang_getCString() to retrieve the string data and, once finished
    138  * with the string data, call \c clang_disposeString() to free the string.
    139  */
    140 typedef struct {
    141   void *data;
    142   unsigned private_flags;
    143 } CXString;
    144 
    145 /**
    146  * \brief Retrieve the character data associated with the given string.
    147  */
    148 CINDEX_LINKAGE const char *clang_getCString(CXString string);
    149 
    150 /**
    151  * \brief Free the given string,
    152  */
    153 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeString(CXString string);
    154 
    155 /**
    156  * @}
    157  */
    158 
    159 /**
    160  * \brief clang_createIndex() provides a shared context for creating
    161  * translation units. It provides two options:
    162  *
    163  * - excludeDeclarationsFromPCH: When non-zero, allows enumeration of "local"
    164  * declarations (when loading any new translation units). A "local" declaration
    165  * is one that belongs in the translation unit itself and not in a precompiled
    166  * header that was used by the translation unit. If zero, all declarations
    167  * will be enumerated.
    168  *
    169  * Here is an example:
    170  *
    171  *   // excludeDeclsFromPCH = 1, displayDiagnostics=1
    172  *   Idx = clang_createIndex(1, 1);
    173  *
    174  *   // IndexTest.pch was produced with the following command:
    175  *   // "clang -x c IndexTest.h -emit-ast -o IndexTest.pch"
    176  *   TU = clang_createTranslationUnit(Idx, "IndexTest.pch");
    177  *
    178  *   // This will load all the symbols from 'IndexTest.pch'
    179  *   clang_visitChildren(clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(TU),
    180  *                       TranslationUnitVisitor, 0);
    181  *   clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU);
    182  *
    183  *   // This will load all the symbols from 'IndexTest.c', excluding symbols
    184  *   // from 'IndexTest.pch'.
    185  *   char *args[] = { "-Xclang", "-include-pch=IndexTest.pch" };
    186  *   TU = clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(Idx, "IndexTest.c", 2, args,
    187  *                                                  0, 0);
    188  *   clang_visitChildren(clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(TU),
    189  *                       TranslationUnitVisitor, 0);
    190  *   clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU);
    191  *
    192  * This process of creating the 'pch', loading it separately, and using it (via
    193  * -include-pch) allows 'excludeDeclsFromPCH' to remove redundant callbacks
    194  * (which gives the indexer the same performance benefit as the compiler).
    195  */
    196 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXIndex clang_createIndex(int excludeDeclarationsFromPCH,
    197                                          int displayDiagnostics);
    198 
    199 /**
    200  * \brief Destroy the given index.
    201  *
    202  * The index must not be destroyed until all of the translation units created
    203  * within that index have been destroyed.
    204  */
    205 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeIndex(CXIndex index);
    206 
    207 /**
    208  * \defgroup CINDEX_FILES File manipulation routines
    209  *
    210  * @{
    211  */
    212 
    213 /**
    214  * \brief A particular source file that is part of a translation unit.
    215  */
    216 typedef void *CXFile;
    217 
    218 
    219 /**
    220  * \brief Retrieve the complete file and path name of the given file.
    221  */
    222 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getFileName(CXFile SFile);
    223 
    224 /**
    225  * \brief Retrieve the last modification time of the given file.
    226  */
    227 CINDEX_LINKAGE time_t clang_getFileTime(CXFile SFile);
    228 
    229 /**
    230  * \brief Determine whether the given header is guarded against
    231  * multiple inclusions, either with the conventional
    232  * #ifndef/#define/#endif macro guards or with #pragma once.
    233  */
    234 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned
    235 clang_isFileMultipleIncludeGuarded(CXTranslationUnit tu, CXFile file);
    236 
    237 /**
    238  * \brief Retrieve a file handle within the given translation unit.
    239  *
    240  * \param tu the translation unit
    241  *
    242  * \param file_name the name of the file.
    243  *
    244  * \returns the file handle for the named file in the translation unit \p tu,
    245  * or a NULL file handle if the file was not a part of this translation unit.
    246  */
    247 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXFile clang_getFile(CXTranslationUnit tu,
    248                                     const char *file_name);
    249 
    250 /**
    251  * @}
    252  */
    253 
    254 /**
    255  * \defgroup CINDEX_LOCATIONS Physical source locations
    256  *
    257  * Clang represents physical source locations in its abstract syntax tree in
    258  * great detail, with file, line, and column information for the majority of
    259  * the tokens parsed in the source code. These data types and functions are
    260  * used to represent source location information, either for a particular
    261  * point in the program or for a range of points in the program, and extract
    262  * specific location information from those data types.
    263  *
    264  * @{
    265  */
    266 
    267 /**
    268  * \brief Identifies a specific source location within a translation
    269  * unit.
    270  *
    271  * Use clang_getExpansionLocation() or clang_getSpellingLocation()
    272  * to map a source location to a particular file, line, and column.
    273  */
    274 typedef struct {
    275   void *ptr_data[2];
    276   unsigned int_data;
    277 } CXSourceLocation;
    278 
    279 /**
    280  * \brief Identifies a half-open character range in the source code.
    281  *
    282  * Use clang_getRangeStart() and clang_getRangeEnd() to retrieve the
    283  * starting and end locations from a source range, respectively.
    284  */
    285 typedef struct {
    286   void *ptr_data[2];
    287   unsigned begin_int_data;
    288   unsigned end_int_data;
    289 } CXSourceRange;
    290 
    291 /**
    292  * \brief Retrieve a NULL (invalid) source location.
    293  */
    294 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getNullLocation();
    295 
    296 /**
    297  * \determine Determine whether two source locations, which must refer into
    298  * the same translation unit, refer to exactly the same point in the source
    299  * code.
    300  *
    301  * \returns non-zero if the source locations refer to the same location, zero
    302  * if they refer to different locations.
    303  */
    304 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalLocations(CXSourceLocation loc1,
    305                                              CXSourceLocation loc2);
    306 
    307 /**
    308  * \brief Retrieves the source location associated with a given file/line/column
    309  * in a particular translation unit.
    310  */
    311 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getLocation(CXTranslationUnit tu,
    312                                                   CXFile file,
    313                                                   unsigned line,
    314                                                   unsigned column);
    315 /**
    316  * \brief Retrieves the source location associated with a given character offset
    317  * in a particular translation unit.
    318  */
    319 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getLocationForOffset(CXTranslationUnit tu,
    320                                                            CXFile file,
    321                                                            unsigned offset);
    322 
    323 /**
    324  * \brief Retrieve a NULL (invalid) source range.
    325  */
    326 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getNullRange();
    327 
    328 /**
    329  * \brief Retrieve a source range given the beginning and ending source
    330  * locations.
    331  */
    332 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getRange(CXSourceLocation begin,
    333                                             CXSourceLocation end);
    334 
    335 /**
    336  * \brief Determine whether two ranges are equivalent.
    337  *
    338  * \returns non-zero if the ranges are the same, zero if they differ.
    339  */
    340 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalRanges(CXSourceRange range1,
    341                                           CXSourceRange range2);
    342 
    343 /**
    344  * \brief Returns non-zero if \arg range is null.
    345  */
    346 CINDEX_LINKAGE int clang_Range_isNull(CXSourceRange range);
    347 
    348 /**
    349  * \brief Retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented by
    350  * the given source location.
    351  *
    352  * If the location refers into a macro expansion, retrieves the
    353  * location of the macro expansion.
    354  *
    355  * \param location the location within a source file that will be decomposed
    356  * into its parts.
    357  *
    358  * \param file [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the file to which the given
    359  * source location points.
    360  *
    361  * \param line [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the line to which the given
    362  * source location points.
    363  *
    364  * \param column [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the column to which the given
    365  * source location points.
    366  *
    367  * \param offset [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the offset into the
    368  * buffer to which the given source location points.
    369  */
    370 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getExpansionLocation(CXSourceLocation location,
    371                                                CXFile *file,
    372                                                unsigned *line,
    373                                                unsigned *column,
    374                                                unsigned *offset);
    375 
    376 /**
    377  * \brief Retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented by
    378  * the given source location, as specified in a # line directive.
    379  *
    380  * Example: given the following source code in a file somefile.c
    381  *
    382  * #123 "dummy.c" 1
    383  *
    384  * static int func(void)
    385  * {
    386  *     return 0;
    387  * }
    388  *
    389  * the location information returned by this function would be
    390  *
    391  * File: dummy.c Line: 124 Column: 12
    392  *
    393  * whereas clang_getExpansionLocation would have returned
    394  *
    395  * File: somefile.c Line: 3 Column: 12
    396  *
    397  * \param location the location within a source file that will be decomposed
    398  * into its parts.
    399  *
    400  * \param filename [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the filename of the
    401  * source location. Note that filenames returned will be for "virtual" files,
    402  * which don't necessarily exist on the machine running clang - e.g. when
    403  * parsing preprocessed output obtained from a different environment. If
    404  * a non-NULL value is passed in, remember to dispose of the returned value
    405  * using \c clang_disposeString() once you've finished with it. For an invalid
    406  * source location, an empty string is returned.
    407  *
    408  * \param line [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the line number of the
    409  * source location. For an invalid source location, zero is returned.
    410  *
    411  * \param column [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the column number of the
    412  * source location. For an invalid source location, zero is returned.
    413  */
    414 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getPresumedLocation(CXSourceLocation location,
    415                                               CXString *filename,
    416                                               unsigned *line,
    417                                               unsigned *column);
    418 
    419 /**
    420  * \brief Legacy API to retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented
    421  * by the given source location.
    422  *
    423  * This interface has been replaced by the newer interface
    424  * \see clang_getExpansionLocation(). See that interface's documentation for
    425  * details.
    426  */
    427 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getInstantiationLocation(CXSourceLocation location,
    428                                                    CXFile *file,
    429                                                    unsigned *line,
    430                                                    unsigned *column,
    431                                                    unsigned *offset);
    432 
    433 /**
    434  * \brief Retrieve the file, line, column, and offset represented by
    435  * the given source location.
    436  *
    437  * If the location refers into a macro instantiation, return where the
    438  * location was originally spelled in the source file.
    439  *
    440  * \param location the location within a source file that will be decomposed
    441  * into its parts.
    442  *
    443  * \param file [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the file to which the given
    444  * source location points.
    445  *
    446  * \param line [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the line to which the given
    447  * source location points.
    448  *
    449  * \param column [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the column to which the given
    450  * source location points.
    451  *
    452  * \param offset [out] if non-NULL, will be set to the offset into the
    453  * buffer to which the given source location points.
    454  */
    455 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getSpellingLocation(CXSourceLocation location,
    456                                               CXFile *file,
    457                                               unsigned *line,
    458                                               unsigned *column,
    459                                               unsigned *offset);
    460 
    461 /**
    462  * \brief Retrieve a source location representing the first character within a
    463  * source range.
    464  */
    465 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getRangeStart(CXSourceRange range);
    466 
    467 /**
    468  * \brief Retrieve a source location representing the last character within a
    469  * source range.
    470  */
    471 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getRangeEnd(CXSourceRange range);
    472 
    473 /**
    474  * @}
    475  */
    476 
    477 /**
    478  * \defgroup CINDEX_DIAG Diagnostic reporting
    479  *
    480  * @{
    481  */
    482 
    483 /**
    484  * \brief Describes the severity of a particular diagnostic.
    485  */
    486 enum CXDiagnosticSeverity {
    487   /**
    488    * \brief A diagnostic that has been suppressed, e.g., by a command-line
    489    * option.
    490    */
    491   CXDiagnostic_Ignored = 0,
    492 
    493   /**
    494    * \brief This diagnostic is a note that should be attached to the
    495    * previous (non-note) diagnostic.
    496    */
    497   CXDiagnostic_Note    = 1,
    498 
    499   /**
    500    * \brief This diagnostic indicates suspicious code that may not be
    501    * wrong.
    502    */
    503   CXDiagnostic_Warning = 2,
    504 
    505   /**
    506    * \brief This diagnostic indicates that the code is ill-formed.
    507    */
    508   CXDiagnostic_Error   = 3,
    509 
    510   /**
    511    * \brief This diagnostic indicates that the code is ill-formed such
    512    * that future parser recovery is unlikely to produce useful
    513    * results.
    514    */
    515   CXDiagnostic_Fatal   = 4
    516 };
    517 
    518 /**
    519  * \brief A single diagnostic, containing the diagnostic's severity,
    520  * location, text, source ranges, and fix-it hints.
    521  */
    522 typedef void *CXDiagnostic;
    523 
    524 /**
    525  * \brief Determine the number of diagnostics produced for the given
    526  * translation unit.
    527  */
    528 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getNumDiagnostics(CXTranslationUnit Unit);
    529 
    530 /**
    531  * \brief Retrieve a diagnostic associated with the given translation unit.
    532  *
    533  * \param Unit the translation unit to query.
    534  * \param Index the zero-based diagnostic number to retrieve.
    535  *
    536  * \returns the requested diagnostic. This diagnostic must be freed
    537  * via a call to \c clang_disposeDiagnostic().
    538  */
    539 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXDiagnostic clang_getDiagnostic(CXTranslationUnit Unit,
    540                                                 unsigned Index);
    541 
    542 /**
    543  * \brief Destroy a diagnostic.
    544  */
    545 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeDiagnostic(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic);
    546 
    547 /**
    548  * \brief Options to control the display of diagnostics.
    549  *
    550  * The values in this enum are meant to be combined to customize the
    551  * behavior of \c clang_displayDiagnostic().
    552  */
    553 enum CXDiagnosticDisplayOptions {
    554   /**
    555    * \brief Display the source-location information where the
    556    * diagnostic was located.
    557    *
    558    * When set, diagnostics will be prefixed by the file, line, and
    559    * (optionally) column to which the diagnostic refers. For example,
    560    *
    561    * \code
    562    * test.c:28: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive
    563    * \endcode
    564    *
    565    * This option corresponds to the clang flag \c -fshow-source-location.
    566    */
    567   CXDiagnostic_DisplaySourceLocation = 0x01,
    568 
    569   /**
    570    * \brief If displaying the source-location information of the
    571    * diagnostic, also include the column number.
    572    *
    573    * This option corresponds to the clang flag \c -fshow-column.
    574    */
    575   CXDiagnostic_DisplayColumn = 0x02,
    576 
    577   /**
    578    * \brief If displaying the source-location information of the
    579    * diagnostic, also include information about source ranges in a
    580    * machine-parsable format.
    581    *
    582    * This option corresponds to the clang flag
    583    * \c -fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info.
    584    */
    585   CXDiagnostic_DisplaySourceRanges = 0x04,
    586 
    587   /**
    588    * \brief Display the option name associated with this diagnostic, if any.
    589    *
    590    * The option name displayed (e.g., -Wconversion) will be placed in brackets
    591    * after the diagnostic text. This option corresponds to the clang flag
    592    * \c -fdiagnostics-show-option.
    593    */
    594   CXDiagnostic_DisplayOption = 0x08,
    595 
    596   /**
    597    * \brief Display the category number associated with this diagnostic, if any.
    598    *
    599    * The category number is displayed within brackets after the diagnostic text.
    600    * This option corresponds to the clang flag
    601    * \c -fdiagnostics-show-category=id.
    602    */
    603   CXDiagnostic_DisplayCategoryId = 0x10,
    604 
    605   /**
    606    * \brief Display the category name associated with this diagnostic, if any.
    607    *
    608    * The category name is displayed within brackets after the diagnostic text.
    609    * This option corresponds to the clang flag
    610    * \c -fdiagnostics-show-category=name.
    611    */
    612   CXDiagnostic_DisplayCategoryName = 0x20
    613 };
    614 
    615 /**
    616  * \brief Format the given diagnostic in a manner that is suitable for display.
    617  *
    618  * This routine will format the given diagnostic to a string, rendering
    619  * the diagnostic according to the various options given. The
    620  * \c clang_defaultDiagnosticDisplayOptions() function returns the set of
    621  * options that most closely mimics the behavior of the clang compiler.
    622  *
    623  * \param Diagnostic The diagnostic to print.
    624  *
    625  * \param Options A set of options that control the diagnostic display,
    626  * created by combining \c CXDiagnosticDisplayOptions values.
    627  *
    628  * \returns A new string containing for formatted diagnostic.
    629  */
    630 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_formatDiagnostic(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic,
    631                                                unsigned Options);
    632 
    633 /**
    634  * \brief Retrieve the set of display options most similar to the
    635  * default behavior of the clang compiler.
    636  *
    637  * \returns A set of display options suitable for use with \c
    638  * clang_displayDiagnostic().
    639  */
    640 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultDiagnosticDisplayOptions(void);
    641 
    642 /**
    643  * \brief Determine the severity of the given diagnostic.
    644  */
    645 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXDiagnosticSeverity
    646 clang_getDiagnosticSeverity(CXDiagnostic);
    647 
    648 /**
    649  * \brief Retrieve the source location of the given diagnostic.
    650  *
    651  * This location is where Clang would print the caret ('^') when
    652  * displaying the diagnostic on the command line.
    653  */
    654 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getDiagnosticLocation(CXDiagnostic);
    655 
    656 /**
    657  * \brief Retrieve the text of the given diagnostic.
    658  */
    659 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticSpelling(CXDiagnostic);
    660 
    661 /**
    662  * \brief Retrieve the name of the command-line option that enabled this
    663  * diagnostic.
    664  *
    665  * \param Diag The diagnostic to be queried.
    666  *
    667  * \param Disable If non-NULL, will be set to the option that disables this
    668  * diagnostic (if any).
    669  *
    670  * \returns A string that contains the command-line option used to enable this
    671  * warning, such as "-Wconversion" or "-pedantic".
    672  */
    673 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticOption(CXDiagnostic Diag,
    674                                                   CXString *Disable);
    675 
    676 /**
    677  * \brief Retrieve the category number for this diagnostic.
    678  *
    679  * Diagnostics can be categorized into groups along with other, related
    680  * diagnostics (e.g., diagnostics under the same warning flag). This routine
    681  * retrieves the category number for the given diagnostic.
    682  *
    683  * \returns The number of the category that contains this diagnostic, or zero
    684  * if this diagnostic is uncategorized.
    685  */
    686 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticCategory(CXDiagnostic);
    687 
    688 /**
    689  * \brief Retrieve the name of a particular diagnostic category.
    690  *
    691  * \param Category A diagnostic category number, as returned by
    692  * \c clang_getDiagnosticCategory().
    693  *
    694  * \returns The name of the given diagnostic category.
    695  */
    696 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticCategoryName(unsigned Category);
    697 
    698 /**
    699  * \brief Determine the number of source ranges associated with the given
    700  * diagnostic.
    701  */
    702 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticNumRanges(CXDiagnostic);
    703 
    704 /**
    705  * \brief Retrieve a source range associated with the diagnostic.
    706  *
    707  * A diagnostic's source ranges highlight important elements in the source
    708  * code. On the command line, Clang displays source ranges by
    709  * underlining them with '~' characters.
    710  *
    711  * \param Diagnostic the diagnostic whose range is being extracted.
    712  *
    713  * \param Range the zero-based index specifying which range to
    714  *
    715  * \returns the requested source range.
    716  */
    717 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getDiagnosticRange(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic,
    718                                                       unsigned Range);
    719 
    720 /**
    721  * \brief Determine the number of fix-it hints associated with the
    722  * given diagnostic.
    723  */
    724 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getDiagnosticNumFixIts(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic);
    725 
    726 /**
    727  * \brief Retrieve the replacement information for a given fix-it.
    728  *
    729  * Fix-its are described in terms of a source range whose contents
    730  * should be replaced by a string. This approach generalizes over
    731  * three kinds of operations: removal of source code (the range covers
    732  * the code to be removed and the replacement string is empty),
    733  * replacement of source code (the range covers the code to be
    734  * replaced and the replacement string provides the new code), and
    735  * insertion (both the start and end of the range point at the
    736  * insertion location, and the replacement string provides the text to
    737  * insert).
    738  *
    739  * \param Diagnostic The diagnostic whose fix-its are being queried.
    740  *
    741  * \param FixIt The zero-based index of the fix-it.
    742  *
    743  * \param ReplacementRange The source range whose contents will be
    744  * replaced with the returned replacement string. Note that source
    745  * ranges are half-open ranges [a, b), so the source code should be
    746  * replaced from a and up to (but not including) b.
    747  *
    748  * \returns A string containing text that should be replace the source
    749  * code indicated by the \c ReplacementRange.
    750  */
    751 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDiagnosticFixIt(CXDiagnostic Diagnostic,
    752                                                  unsigned FixIt,
    753                                                CXSourceRange *ReplacementRange);
    754 
    755 /**
    756  * @}
    757  */
    758 
    759 /**
    760  * \defgroup CINDEX_TRANSLATION_UNIT Translation unit manipulation
    761  *
    762  * The routines in this group provide the ability to create and destroy
    763  * translation units from files, either by parsing the contents of the files or
    764  * by reading in a serialized representation of a translation unit.
    765  *
    766  * @{
    767  */
    768 
    769 /**
    770  * \brief Get the original translation unit source file name.
    771  */
    772 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString
    773 clang_getTranslationUnitSpelling(CXTranslationUnit CTUnit);
    774 
    775 /**
    776  * \brief Return the CXTranslationUnit for a given source file and the provided
    777  * command line arguments one would pass to the compiler.
    778  *
    779  * Note: The 'source_filename' argument is optional.  If the caller provides a
    780  * NULL pointer, the name of the source file is expected to reside in the
    781  * specified command line arguments.
    782  *
    783  * Note: When encountered in 'clang_command_line_args', the following options
    784  * are ignored:
    785  *
    786  *   '-c'
    787  *   '-emit-ast'
    788  *   '-fsyntax-only'
    789  *   '-o <output file>'  (both '-o' and '<output file>' are ignored)
    790  *
    791  * \param CIdx The index object with which the translation unit will be
    792  * associated.
    793  *
    794  * \param source_filename - The name of the source file to load, or NULL if the
    795  * source file is included in \p clang_command_line_args.
    796  *
    797  * \param num_clang_command_line_args The number of command-line arguments in
    798  * \p clang_command_line_args.
    799  *
    800  * \param clang_command_line_args The command-line arguments that would be
    801  * passed to the \c clang executable if it were being invoked out-of-process.
    802  * These command-line options will be parsed and will affect how the translation
    803  * unit is parsed. Note that the following options are ignored: '-c',
    804  * '-emit-ast', '-fsyntex-only' (which is the default), and '-o <output file>'.
    805  *
    806  * \param num_unsaved_files the number of unsaved file entries in \p
    807  * unsaved_files.
    808  *
    809  * \param unsaved_files the files that have not yet been saved to disk
    810  * but may be required for code completion, including the contents of
    811  * those files.  The contents and name of these files (as specified by
    812  * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to
    813  * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns.
    814  */
    815 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(
    816                                          CXIndex CIdx,
    817                                          const char *source_filename,
    818                                          int num_clang_command_line_args,
    819                                    const char * const *clang_command_line_args,
    820                                          unsigned num_unsaved_files,
    821                                          struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files);
    822 
    823 /**
    824  * \brief Create a translation unit from an AST file (-emit-ast).
    825  */
    826 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_createTranslationUnit(CXIndex,
    827                                              const char *ast_filename);
    828 
    829 /**
    830  * \brief Flags that control the creation of translation units.
    831  *
    832  * The enumerators in this enumeration type are meant to be bitwise
    833  * ORed together to specify which options should be used when
    834  * constructing the translation unit.
    835  */
    836 enum CXTranslationUnit_Flags {
    837   /**
    838    * \brief Used to indicate that no special translation-unit options are
    839    * needed.
    840    */
    841   CXTranslationUnit_None = 0x0,
    842 
    843   /**
    844    * \brief Used to indicate that the parser should construct a "detailed"
    845    * preprocessing record, including all macro definitions and instantiations.
    846    *
    847    * Constructing a detailed preprocessing record requires more memory
    848    * and time to parse, since the information contained in the record
    849    * is usually not retained. However, it can be useful for
    850    * applications that require more detailed information about the
    851    * behavior of the preprocessor.
    852    */
    853   CXTranslationUnit_DetailedPreprocessingRecord = 0x01,
    854 
    855   /**
    856    * \brief Used to indicate that the translation unit is incomplete.
    857    *
    858    * When a translation unit is considered "incomplete", semantic
    859    * analysis that is typically performed at the end of the
    860    * translation unit will be suppressed. For example, this suppresses
    861    * the completion of tentative declarations in C and of
    862    * instantiation of implicitly-instantiation function templates in
    863    * C++. This option is typically used when parsing a header with the
    864    * intent of producing a precompiled header.
    865    */
    866   CXTranslationUnit_Incomplete = 0x02,
    867 
    868   /**
    869    * \brief Used to indicate that the translation unit should be built with an
    870    * implicit precompiled header for the preamble.
    871    *
    872    * An implicit precompiled header is used as an optimization when a
    873    * particular translation unit is likely to be reparsed many times
    874    * when the sources aren't changing that often. In this case, an
    875    * implicit precompiled header will be built containing all of the
    876    * initial includes at the top of the main file (what we refer to as
    877    * the "preamble" of the file). In subsequent parses, if the
    878    * preamble or the files in it have not changed, \c
    879    * clang_reparseTranslationUnit() will re-use the implicit
    880    * precompiled header to improve parsing performance.
    881    */
    882   CXTranslationUnit_PrecompiledPreamble = 0x04,
    883 
    884   /**
    885    * \brief Used to indicate that the translation unit should cache some
    886    * code-completion results with each reparse of the source file.
    887    *
    888    * Caching of code-completion results is a performance optimization that
    889    * introduces some overhead to reparsing but improves the performance of
    890    * code-completion operations.
    891    */
    892   CXTranslationUnit_CacheCompletionResults = 0x08,
    893   /**
    894    * \brief DEPRECATED: Enable precompiled preambles in C++.
    895    *
    896    * Note: this is a *temporary* option that is available only while
    897    * we are testing C++ precompiled preamble support. It is deprecated.
    898    */
    899   CXTranslationUnit_CXXPrecompiledPreamble = 0x10,
    900 
    901   /**
    902    * \brief DEPRECATED: Enabled chained precompiled preambles in C++.
    903    *
    904    * Note: this is a *temporary* option that is available only while
    905    * we are testing C++ precompiled preamble support. It is deprecated.
    906    */
    907   CXTranslationUnit_CXXChainedPCH = 0x20,
    908 
    909   /**
    910    * \brief Used to indicate that the "detailed" preprocessing record,
    911    * if requested, should also contain nested macro expansions.
    912    *
    913    * Nested macro expansions (i.e., macro expansions that occur
    914    * inside another macro expansion) can, in some code bases, require
    915    * a large amount of storage to due preprocessor metaprogramming. Moreover,
    916    * its fairly rare that this information is useful for libclang clients.
    917    */
    918   CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroExpansions = 0x40,
    919 
    920   /**
    921    * \brief Legacy name to indicate that the "detailed" preprocessing record,
    922    * if requested, should contain nested macro expansions.
    923    *
    924    * \see CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroExpansions for the current name for this
    925    * value, and its semantics. This is just an alias.
    926    */
    927   CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroInstantiations =
    928     CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroExpansions
    929 };
    930 
    931 /**
    932  * \brief Returns the set of flags that is suitable for parsing a translation
    933  * unit that is being edited.
    934  *
    935  * The set of flags returned provide options for \c clang_parseTranslationUnit()
    936  * to indicate that the translation unit is likely to be reparsed many times,
    937  * either explicitly (via \c clang_reparseTranslationUnit()) or implicitly
    938  * (e.g., by code completion (\c clang_codeCompletionAt())). The returned flag
    939  * set contains an unspecified set of optimizations (e.g., the precompiled
    940  * preamble) geared toward improving the performance of these routines. The
    941  * set of optimizations enabled may change from one version to the next.
    942  */
    943 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultEditingTranslationUnitOptions(void);
    944 
    945 /**
    946  * \brief Parse the given source file and the translation unit corresponding
    947  * to that file.
    948  *
    949  * This routine is the main entry point for the Clang C API, providing the
    950  * ability to parse a source file into a translation unit that can then be
    951  * queried by other functions in the API. This routine accepts a set of
    952  * command-line arguments so that the compilation can be configured in the same
    953  * way that the compiler is configured on the command line.
    954  *
    955  * \param CIdx The index object with which the translation unit will be
    956  * associated.
    957  *
    958  * \param source_filename The name of the source file to load, or NULL if the
    959  * source file is included in \p command_line_args.
    960  *
    961  * \param command_line_args The command-line arguments that would be
    962  * passed to the \c clang executable if it were being invoked out-of-process.
    963  * These command-line options will be parsed and will affect how the translation
    964  * unit is parsed. Note that the following options are ignored: '-c',
    965  * '-emit-ast', '-fsyntex-only' (which is the default), and '-o <output file>'.
    966  *
    967  * \param num_command_line_args The number of command-line arguments in
    968  * \p command_line_args.
    969  *
    970  * \param unsaved_files the files that have not yet been saved to disk
    971  * but may be required for parsing, including the contents of
    972  * those files.  The contents and name of these files (as specified by
    973  * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to
    974  * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns.
    975  *
    976  * \param num_unsaved_files the number of unsaved file entries in \p
    977  * unsaved_files.
    978  *
    979  * \param options A bitmask of options that affects how the translation unit
    980  * is managed but not its compilation. This should be a bitwise OR of the
    981  * CXTranslationUnit_XXX flags.
    982  *
    983  * \returns A new translation unit describing the parsed code and containing
    984  * any diagnostics produced by the compiler. If there is a failure from which
    985  * the compiler cannot recover, returns NULL.
    986  */
    987 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_parseTranslationUnit(CXIndex CIdx,
    988                                                     const char *source_filename,
    989                                          const char * const *command_line_args,
    990                                                       int num_command_line_args,
    991                                             struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files,
    992                                                      unsigned num_unsaved_files,
    993                                                             unsigned options);
    994 
    995 /**
    996  * \brief Flags that control how translation units are saved.
    997  *
    998  * The enumerators in this enumeration type are meant to be bitwise
    999  * ORed together to specify which options should be used when
   1000  * saving the translation unit.
   1001  */
   1002 enum CXSaveTranslationUnit_Flags {
   1003   /**
   1004    * \brief Used to indicate that no special saving options are needed.
   1005    */
   1006   CXSaveTranslationUnit_None = 0x0
   1007 };
   1008 
   1009 /**
   1010  * \brief Returns the set of flags that is suitable for saving a translation
   1011  * unit.
   1012  *
   1013  * The set of flags returned provide options for
   1014  * \c clang_saveTranslationUnit() by default. The returned flag
   1015  * set contains an unspecified set of options that save translation units with
   1016  * the most commonly-requested data.
   1017  */
   1018 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultSaveOptions(CXTranslationUnit TU);
   1019 
   1020 /**
   1021  * \brief Describes the kind of error that occurred (if any) in a call to
   1022  * \c clang_saveTranslationUnit().
   1023  */
   1024 enum CXSaveError {
   1025   /**
   1026    * \brief Indicates that no error occurred while saving a translation unit.
   1027    */
   1028   CXSaveError_None = 0,
   1029 
   1030   /**
   1031    * \brief Indicates that an unknown error occurred while attempting to save
   1032    * the file.
   1033    *
   1034    * This error typically indicates that file I/O failed when attempting to
   1035    * write the file.
   1036    */
   1037   CXSaveError_Unknown = 1,
   1038 
   1039   /**
   1040    * \brief Indicates that errors during translation prevented this attempt
   1041    * to save the translation unit.
   1042    *
   1043    * Errors that prevent the translation unit from being saved can be
   1044    * extracted using \c clang_getNumDiagnostics() and \c clang_getDiagnostic().
   1045    */
   1046   CXSaveError_TranslationErrors = 2,
   1047 
   1048   /**
   1049    * \brief Indicates that the translation unit to be saved was somehow
   1050    * invalid (e.g., NULL).
   1051    */
   1052   CXSaveError_InvalidTU = 3
   1053 };
   1054 
   1055 /**
   1056  * \brief Saves a translation unit into a serialized representation of
   1057  * that translation unit on disk.
   1058  *
   1059  * Any translation unit that was parsed without error can be saved
   1060  * into a file. The translation unit can then be deserialized into a
   1061  * new \c CXTranslationUnit with \c clang_createTranslationUnit() or,
   1062  * if it is an incomplete translation unit that corresponds to a
   1063  * header, used as a precompiled header when parsing other translation
   1064  * units.
   1065  *
   1066  * \param TU The translation unit to save.
   1067  *
   1068  * \param FileName The file to which the translation unit will be saved.
   1069  *
   1070  * \param options A bitmask of options that affects how the translation unit
   1071  * is saved. This should be a bitwise OR of the
   1072  * CXSaveTranslationUnit_XXX flags.
   1073  *
   1074  * \returns A value that will match one of the enumerators of the CXSaveError
   1075  * enumeration. Zero (CXSaveError_None) indicates that the translation unit was
   1076  * saved successfully, while a non-zero value indicates that a problem occurred.
   1077  */
   1078 CINDEX_LINKAGE int clang_saveTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit TU,
   1079                                              const char *FileName,
   1080                                              unsigned options);
   1081 
   1082 /**
   1083  * \brief Destroy the specified CXTranslationUnit object.
   1084  */
   1085 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit);
   1086 
   1087 /**
   1088  * \brief Flags that control the reparsing of translation units.
   1089  *
   1090  * The enumerators in this enumeration type are meant to be bitwise
   1091  * ORed together to specify which options should be used when
   1092  * reparsing the translation unit.
   1093  */
   1094 enum CXReparse_Flags {
   1095   /**
   1096    * \brief Used to indicate that no special reparsing options are needed.
   1097    */
   1098   CXReparse_None = 0x0
   1099 };
   1100 
   1101 /**
   1102  * \brief Returns the set of flags that is suitable for reparsing a translation
   1103  * unit.
   1104  *
   1105  * The set of flags returned provide options for
   1106  * \c clang_reparseTranslationUnit() by default. The returned flag
   1107  * set contains an unspecified set of optimizations geared toward common uses
   1108  * of reparsing. The set of optimizations enabled may change from one version
   1109  * to the next.
   1110  */
   1111 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultReparseOptions(CXTranslationUnit TU);
   1112 
   1113 /**
   1114  * \brief Reparse the source files that produced this translation unit.
   1115  *
   1116  * This routine can be used to re-parse the source files that originally
   1117  * created the given translation unit, for example because those source files
   1118  * have changed (either on disk or as passed via \p unsaved_files). The
   1119  * source code will be reparsed with the same command-line options as it
   1120  * was originally parsed.
   1121  *
   1122  * Reparsing a translation unit invalidates all cursors and source locations
   1123  * that refer into that translation unit. This makes reparsing a translation
   1124  * unit semantically equivalent to destroying the translation unit and then
   1125  * creating a new translation unit with the same command-line arguments.
   1126  * However, it may be more efficient to reparse a translation
   1127  * unit using this routine.
   1128  *
   1129  * \param TU The translation unit whose contents will be re-parsed. The
   1130  * translation unit must originally have been built with
   1131  * \c clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile().
   1132  *
   1133  * \param num_unsaved_files The number of unsaved file entries in \p
   1134  * unsaved_files.
   1135  *
   1136  * \param unsaved_files The files that have not yet been saved to disk
   1137  * but may be required for parsing, including the contents of
   1138  * those files.  The contents and name of these files (as specified by
   1139  * CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the client only needs to
   1140  * guarantee their validity until the call to this function returns.
   1141  *
   1142  * \param options A bitset of options composed of the flags in CXReparse_Flags.
   1143  * The function \c clang_defaultReparseOptions() produces a default set of
   1144  * options recommended for most uses, based on the translation unit.
   1145  *
   1146  * \returns 0 if the sources could be reparsed. A non-zero value will be
   1147  * returned if reparsing was impossible, such that the translation unit is
   1148  * invalid. In such cases, the only valid call for \p TU is
   1149  * \c clang_disposeTranslationUnit(TU).
   1150  */
   1151 CINDEX_LINKAGE int clang_reparseTranslationUnit(CXTranslationUnit TU,
   1152                                                 unsigned num_unsaved_files,
   1153                                           struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files,
   1154                                                 unsigned options);
   1155 
   1156 /**
   1157   * \brief Categorizes how memory is being used by a translation unit.
   1158   */
   1159 enum CXTUResourceUsageKind {
   1160   CXTUResourceUsage_AST = 1,
   1161   CXTUResourceUsage_Identifiers = 2,
   1162   CXTUResourceUsage_Selectors = 3,
   1163   CXTUResourceUsage_GlobalCompletionResults = 4,
   1164   CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManagerContentCache = 5,
   1165   CXTUResourceUsage_AST_SideTables = 6,
   1166   CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManager_Membuffer_Malloc = 7,
   1167   CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManager_Membuffer_MMap = 8,
   1168   CXTUResourceUsage_ExternalASTSource_Membuffer_Malloc = 9,
   1169   CXTUResourceUsage_ExternalASTSource_Membuffer_MMap = 10,
   1170   CXTUResourceUsage_Preprocessor = 11,
   1171   CXTUResourceUsage_PreprocessingRecord = 12,
   1172   CXTUResourceUsage_SourceManager_DataStructures = 13,
   1173   CXTUResourceUsage_Preprocessor_HeaderSearch = 14,
   1174   CXTUResourceUsage_MEMORY_IN_BYTES_BEGIN = CXTUResourceUsage_AST,
   1175   CXTUResourceUsage_MEMORY_IN_BYTES_END =
   1176     CXTUResourceUsage_Preprocessor_HeaderSearch,
   1177 
   1178   CXTUResourceUsage_First = CXTUResourceUsage_AST,
   1179   CXTUResourceUsage_Last = CXTUResourceUsage_Preprocessor_HeaderSearch
   1180 };
   1181 
   1182 /**
   1183   * \brief Returns the human-readable null-terminated C string that represents
   1184   *  the name of the memory category.  This string should never be freed.
   1185   */
   1186 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   1187 const char *clang_getTUResourceUsageName(enum CXTUResourceUsageKind kind);
   1188 
   1189 typedef struct CXTUResourceUsageEntry {
   1190   /* \brief The memory usage category. */
   1191   enum CXTUResourceUsageKind kind;
   1192   /* \brief Amount of resources used.
   1193       The units will depend on the resource kind. */
   1194   unsigned long amount;
   1195 } CXTUResourceUsageEntry;
   1196 
   1197 /**
   1198   * \brief The memory usage of a CXTranslationUnit, broken into categories.
   1199   */
   1200 typedef struct CXTUResourceUsage {
   1201   /* \brief Private data member, used for queries. */
   1202   void *data;
   1203 
   1204   /* \brief The number of entries in the 'entries' array. */
   1205   unsigned numEntries;
   1206 
   1207   /* \brief An array of key-value pairs, representing the breakdown of memory
   1208             usage. */
   1209   CXTUResourceUsageEntry *entries;
   1210 
   1211 } CXTUResourceUsage;
   1212 
   1213 /**
   1214   * \brief Return the memory usage of a translation unit.  This object
   1215   *  should be released with clang_disposeCXTUResourceUsage().
   1216   */
   1217 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTUResourceUsage clang_getCXTUResourceUsage(CXTranslationUnit TU);
   1218 
   1219 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeCXTUResourceUsage(CXTUResourceUsage usage);
   1220 
   1221 /**
   1222  * @}
   1223  */
   1224 
   1225 /**
   1226  * \brief Describes the kind of entity that a cursor refers to.
   1227  */
   1228 enum CXCursorKind {
   1229   /* Declarations */
   1230   /**
   1231    * \brief A declaration whose specific kind is not exposed via this
   1232    * interface.
   1233    *
   1234    * Unexposed declarations have the same operations as any other kind
   1235    * of declaration; one can extract their location information,
   1236    * spelling, find their definitions, etc. However, the specific kind
   1237    * of the declaration is not reported.
   1238    */
   1239   CXCursor_UnexposedDecl                 = 1,
   1240   /** \brief A C or C++ struct. */
   1241   CXCursor_StructDecl                    = 2,
   1242   /** \brief A C or C++ union. */
   1243   CXCursor_UnionDecl                     = 3,
   1244   /** \brief A C++ class. */
   1245   CXCursor_ClassDecl                     = 4,
   1246   /** \brief An enumeration. */
   1247   CXCursor_EnumDecl                      = 5,
   1248   /**
   1249    * \brief A field (in C) or non-static data member (in C++) in a
   1250    * struct, union, or C++ class.
   1251    */
   1252   CXCursor_FieldDecl                     = 6,
   1253   /** \brief An enumerator constant. */
   1254   CXCursor_EnumConstantDecl              = 7,
   1255   /** \brief A function. */
   1256   CXCursor_FunctionDecl                  = 8,
   1257   /** \brief A variable. */
   1258   CXCursor_VarDecl                       = 9,
   1259   /** \brief A function or method parameter. */
   1260   CXCursor_ParmDecl                      = 10,
   1261   /** \brief An Objective-C @interface. */
   1262   CXCursor_ObjCInterfaceDecl             = 11,
   1263   /** \brief An Objective-C @interface for a category. */
   1264   CXCursor_ObjCCategoryDecl              = 12,
   1265   /** \brief An Objective-C @protocol declaration. */
   1266   CXCursor_ObjCProtocolDecl              = 13,
   1267   /** \brief An Objective-C @property declaration. */
   1268   CXCursor_ObjCPropertyDecl              = 14,
   1269   /** \brief An Objective-C instance variable. */
   1270   CXCursor_ObjCIvarDecl                  = 15,
   1271   /** \brief An Objective-C instance method. */
   1272   CXCursor_ObjCInstanceMethodDecl        = 16,
   1273   /** \brief An Objective-C class method. */
   1274   CXCursor_ObjCClassMethodDecl           = 17,
   1275   /** \brief An Objective-C @implementation. */
   1276   CXCursor_ObjCImplementationDecl        = 18,
   1277   /** \brief An Objective-C @implementation for a category. */
   1278   CXCursor_ObjCCategoryImplDecl          = 19,
   1279   /** \brief A typedef */
   1280   CXCursor_TypedefDecl                   = 20,
   1281   /** \brief A C++ class method. */
   1282   CXCursor_CXXMethod                     = 21,
   1283   /** \brief A C++ namespace. */
   1284   CXCursor_Namespace                     = 22,
   1285   /** \brief A linkage specification, e.g. 'extern "C"'. */
   1286   CXCursor_LinkageSpec                   = 23,
   1287   /** \brief A C++ constructor. */
   1288   CXCursor_Constructor                   = 24,
   1289   /** \brief A C++ destructor. */
   1290   CXCursor_Destructor                    = 25,
   1291   /** \brief A C++ conversion function. */
   1292   CXCursor_ConversionFunction            = 26,
   1293   /** \brief A C++ template type parameter. */
   1294   CXCursor_TemplateTypeParameter         = 27,
   1295   /** \brief A C++ non-type template parameter. */
   1296   CXCursor_NonTypeTemplateParameter      = 28,
   1297   /** \brief A C++ template template parameter. */
   1298   CXCursor_TemplateTemplateParameter     = 29,
   1299   /** \brief A C++ function template. */
   1300   CXCursor_FunctionTemplate              = 30,
   1301   /** \brief A C++ class template. */
   1302   CXCursor_ClassTemplate                 = 31,
   1303   /** \brief A C++ class template partial specialization. */
   1304   CXCursor_ClassTemplatePartialSpecialization = 32,
   1305   /** \brief A C++ namespace alias declaration. */
   1306   CXCursor_NamespaceAlias                = 33,
   1307   /** \brief A C++ using directive. */
   1308   CXCursor_UsingDirective                = 34,
   1309   /** \brief A C++ using declaration. */
   1310   CXCursor_UsingDeclaration              = 35,
   1311   /** \brief A C++ alias declaration */
   1312   CXCursor_TypeAliasDecl                 = 36,
   1313   /** \brief An Objective-C @synthesize definition. */
   1314   CXCursor_ObjCSynthesizeDecl            = 37,
   1315   /** \brief An Objective-C @dynamic definition. */
   1316   CXCursor_ObjCDynamicDecl               = 38,
   1317   /** \brief An access specifier. */
   1318   CXCursor_CXXAccessSpecifier            = 39,
   1319 
   1320   CXCursor_FirstDecl                     = CXCursor_UnexposedDecl,
   1321   CXCursor_LastDecl                      = CXCursor_CXXAccessSpecifier,
   1322 
   1323   /* References */
   1324   CXCursor_FirstRef                      = 40, /* Decl references */
   1325   CXCursor_ObjCSuperClassRef             = 40,
   1326   CXCursor_ObjCProtocolRef               = 41,
   1327   CXCursor_ObjCClassRef                  = 42,
   1328   /**
   1329    * \brief A reference to a type declaration.
   1330    *
   1331    * A type reference occurs anywhere where a type is named but not
   1332    * declared. For example, given:
   1333    *
   1334    * \code
   1335    * typedef unsigned size_type;
   1336    * size_type size;
   1337    * \endcode
   1338    *
   1339    * The typedef is a declaration of size_type (CXCursor_TypedefDecl),
   1340    * while the type of the variable "size" is referenced. The cursor
   1341    * referenced by the type of size is the typedef for size_type.
   1342    */
   1343   CXCursor_TypeRef                       = 43,
   1344   CXCursor_CXXBaseSpecifier              = 44,
   1345   /**
   1346    * \brief A reference to a class template, function template, template
   1347    * template parameter, or class template partial specialization.
   1348    */
   1349   CXCursor_TemplateRef                   = 45,
   1350   /**
   1351    * \brief A reference to a namespace or namespace alias.
   1352    */
   1353   CXCursor_NamespaceRef                  = 46,
   1354   /**
   1355    * \brief A reference to a member of a struct, union, or class that occurs in
   1356    * some non-expression context, e.g., a designated initializer.
   1357    */
   1358   CXCursor_MemberRef                     = 47,
   1359   /**
   1360    * \brief A reference to a labeled statement.
   1361    *
   1362    * This cursor kind is used to describe the jump to "start_over" in the
   1363    * goto statement in the following example:
   1364    *
   1365    * \code
   1366    *   start_over:
   1367    *     ++counter;
   1368    *
   1369    *     goto start_over;
   1370    * \endcode
   1371    *
   1372    * A label reference cursor refers to a label statement.
   1373    */
   1374   CXCursor_LabelRef                      = 48,
   1375 
   1376   /**
   1377    * \brief A reference to a set of overloaded functions or function templates
   1378    * that has not yet been resolved to a specific function or function template.
   1379    *
   1380    * An overloaded declaration reference cursor occurs in C++ templates where
   1381    * a dependent name refers to a function. For example:
   1382    *
   1383    * \code
   1384    * template<typename T> void swap(T&, T&);
   1385    *
   1386    * struct X { ... };
   1387    * void swap(X&, X&);
   1388    *
   1389    * template<typename T>
   1390    * void reverse(T* first, T* last) {
   1391    *   while (first < last - 1) {
   1392    *     swap(*first, *--last);
   1393    *     ++first;
   1394    *   }
   1395    * }
   1396    *
   1397    * struct Y { };
   1398    * void swap(Y&, Y&);
   1399    * \endcode
   1400    *
   1401    * Here, the identifier "swap" is associated with an overloaded declaration
   1402    * reference. In the template definition, "swap" refers to either of the two
   1403    * "swap" functions declared above, so both results will be available. At
   1404    * instantiation time, "swap" may also refer to other functions found via
   1405    * argument-dependent lookup (e.g., the "swap" function at the end of the
   1406    * example).
   1407    *
   1408    * The functions \c clang_getNumOverloadedDecls() and
   1409    * \c clang_getOverloadedDecl() can be used to retrieve the definitions
   1410    * referenced by this cursor.
   1411    */
   1412   CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef             = 49,
   1413 
   1414   CXCursor_LastRef                       = CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef,
   1415 
   1416   /* Error conditions */
   1417   CXCursor_FirstInvalid                  = 70,
   1418   CXCursor_InvalidFile                   = 70,
   1419   CXCursor_NoDeclFound                   = 71,
   1420   CXCursor_NotImplemented                = 72,
   1421   CXCursor_InvalidCode                   = 73,
   1422   CXCursor_LastInvalid                   = CXCursor_InvalidCode,
   1423 
   1424   /* Expressions */
   1425   CXCursor_FirstExpr                     = 100,
   1426 
   1427   /**
   1428    * \brief An expression whose specific kind is not exposed via this
   1429    * interface.
   1430    *
   1431    * Unexposed expressions have the same operations as any other kind
   1432    * of expression; one can extract their location information,
   1433    * spelling, children, etc. However, the specific kind of the
   1434    * expression is not reported.
   1435    */
   1436   CXCursor_UnexposedExpr                 = 100,
   1437 
   1438   /**
   1439    * \brief An expression that refers to some value declaration, such
   1440    * as a function, varible, or enumerator.
   1441    */
   1442   CXCursor_DeclRefExpr                   = 101,
   1443 
   1444   /**
   1445    * \brief An expression that refers to a member of a struct, union,
   1446    * class, Objective-C class, etc.
   1447    */
   1448   CXCursor_MemberRefExpr                 = 102,
   1449 
   1450   /** \brief An expression that calls a function. */
   1451   CXCursor_CallExpr                      = 103,
   1452 
   1453   /** \brief An expression that sends a message to an Objective-C
   1454    object or class. */
   1455   CXCursor_ObjCMessageExpr               = 104,
   1456 
   1457   /** \brief An expression that represents a block literal. */
   1458   CXCursor_BlockExpr                     = 105,
   1459 
   1460   /** \brief An integer literal.
   1461    */
   1462   CXCursor_IntegerLiteral                = 106,
   1463 
   1464   /** \brief A floating point number literal.
   1465    */
   1466   CXCursor_FloatingLiteral               = 107,
   1467 
   1468   /** \brief An imaginary number literal.
   1469    */
   1470   CXCursor_ImaginaryLiteral              = 108,
   1471 
   1472   /** \brief A string literal.
   1473    */
   1474   CXCursor_StringLiteral                 = 109,
   1475 
   1476   /** \brief A character literal.
   1477    */
   1478   CXCursor_CharacterLiteral              = 110,
   1479 
   1480   /** \brief A parenthesized expression, e.g. "(1)".
   1481    *
   1482    * This AST node is only formed if full location information is requested.
   1483    */
   1484   CXCursor_ParenExpr                     = 111,
   1485 
   1486   /** \brief This represents the unary-expression's (except sizeof and
   1487    * alignof).
   1488    */
   1489   CXCursor_UnaryOperator                 = 112,
   1490 
   1491   /** \brief [C99 6.5.2.1] Array Subscripting.
   1492    */
   1493   CXCursor_ArraySubscriptExpr            = 113,
   1494 
   1495   /** \brief A builtin binary operation expression such as "x + y" or
   1496    * "x <= y".
   1497    */
   1498   CXCursor_BinaryOperator                = 114,
   1499 
   1500   /** \brief Compound assignment such as "+=".
   1501    */
   1502   CXCursor_CompoundAssignOperator        = 115,
   1503 
   1504   /** \brief The ?: ternary operator.
   1505    */
   1506   CXCursor_ConditionalOperator           = 116,
   1507 
   1508   /** \brief An explicit cast in C (C99 6.5.4) or a C-style cast in C++
   1509    * (C++ [expr.cast]), which uses the syntax (Type)expr.
   1510    *
   1511    * For example: (int)f.
   1512    */
   1513   CXCursor_CStyleCastExpr                = 117,
   1514 
   1515   /** \brief [C99 6.5.2.5]
   1516    */
   1517   CXCursor_CompoundLiteralExpr           = 118,
   1518 
   1519   /** \brief Describes an C or C++ initializer list.
   1520    */
   1521   CXCursor_InitListExpr                  = 119,
   1522 
   1523   /** \brief The GNU address of label extension, representing &&label.
   1524    */
   1525   CXCursor_AddrLabelExpr                 = 120,
   1526 
   1527   /** \brief This is the GNU Statement Expression extension: ({int X=4; X;})
   1528    */
   1529   CXCursor_StmtExpr                      = 121,
   1530 
   1531   /** \brief Represents a C1X generic selection.
   1532    */
   1533   CXCursor_GenericSelectionExpr          = 122,
   1534 
   1535   /** \brief Implements the GNU __null extension, which is a name for a null
   1536    * pointer constant that has integral type (e.g., int or long) and is the same
   1537    * size and alignment as a pointer.
   1538    *
   1539    * The __null extension is typically only used by system headers, which define
   1540    * NULL as __null in C++ rather than using 0 (which is an integer that may not
   1541    * match the size of a pointer).
   1542    */
   1543   CXCursor_GNUNullExpr                   = 123,
   1544 
   1545   /** \brief C++'s static_cast<> expression.
   1546    */
   1547   CXCursor_CXXStaticCastExpr             = 124,
   1548 
   1549   /** \brief C++'s dynamic_cast<> expression.
   1550    */
   1551   CXCursor_CXXDynamicCastExpr            = 125,
   1552 
   1553   /** \brief C++'s reinterpret_cast<> expression.
   1554    */
   1555   CXCursor_CXXReinterpretCastExpr        = 126,
   1556 
   1557   /** \brief C++'s const_cast<> expression.
   1558    */
   1559   CXCursor_CXXConstCastExpr              = 127,
   1560 
   1561   /** \brief Represents an explicit C++ type conversion that uses "functional"
   1562    * notion (C++ [expr.type.conv]).
   1563    *
   1564    * Example:
   1565    * \code
   1566    *   x = int(0.5);
   1567    * \endcode
   1568    */
   1569   CXCursor_CXXFunctionalCastExpr         = 128,
   1570 
   1571   /** \brief A C++ typeid expression (C++ [expr.typeid]).
   1572    */
   1573   CXCursor_CXXTypeidExpr                 = 129,
   1574 
   1575   /** \brief [C++ 2.13.5] C++ Boolean Literal.
   1576    */
   1577   CXCursor_CXXBoolLiteralExpr            = 130,
   1578 
   1579   /** \brief [C++0x 2.14.7] C++ Pointer Literal.
   1580    */
   1581   CXCursor_CXXNullPtrLiteralExpr         = 131,
   1582 
   1583   /** \brief Represents the "this" expression in C++
   1584    */
   1585   CXCursor_CXXThisExpr                   = 132,
   1586 
   1587   /** \brief [C++ 15] C++ Throw Expression.
   1588    *
   1589    * This handles 'throw' and 'throw' assignment-expression. When
   1590    * assignment-expression isn't present, Op will be null.
   1591    */
   1592   CXCursor_CXXThrowExpr                  = 133,
   1593 
   1594   /** \brief A new expression for memory allocation and constructor calls, e.g:
   1595    * "new CXXNewExpr(foo)".
   1596    */
   1597   CXCursor_CXXNewExpr                    = 134,
   1598 
   1599   /** \brief A delete expression for memory deallocation and destructor calls,
   1600    * e.g. "delete[] pArray".
   1601    */
   1602   CXCursor_CXXDeleteExpr                 = 135,
   1603 
   1604   /** \brief A unary expression.
   1605    */
   1606   CXCursor_UnaryExpr                     = 136,
   1607 
   1608   /** \brief ObjCStringLiteral, used for Objective-C string literals i.e. "foo".
   1609    */
   1610   CXCursor_ObjCStringLiteral             = 137,
   1611 
   1612   /** \brief ObjCEncodeExpr, used for in Objective-C.
   1613    */
   1614   CXCursor_ObjCEncodeExpr                = 138,
   1615 
   1616   /** \brief ObjCSelectorExpr used for in Objective-C.
   1617    */
   1618   CXCursor_ObjCSelectorExpr              = 139,
   1619 
   1620   /** \brief Objective-C's protocol expression.
   1621    */
   1622   CXCursor_ObjCProtocolExpr              = 140,
   1623 
   1624   /** \brief An Objective-C "bridged" cast expression, which casts between
   1625    * Objective-C pointers and C pointers, transferring ownership in the process.
   1626    *
   1627    * \code
   1628    *   NSString *str = (__bridge_transfer NSString *)CFCreateString();
   1629    * \endcode
   1630    */
   1631   CXCursor_ObjCBridgedCastExpr           = 141,
   1632 
   1633   /** \brief Represents a C++0x pack expansion that produces a sequence of
   1634    * expressions.
   1635    *
   1636    * A pack expansion expression contains a pattern (which itself is an
   1637    * expression) followed by an ellipsis. For example:
   1638    *
   1639    * \code
   1640    * template<typename F, typename ...Types>
   1641    * void forward(F f, Types &&...args) {
   1642    *  f(static_cast<Types&&>(args)...);
   1643    * }
   1644    * \endcode
   1645    */
   1646   CXCursor_PackExpansionExpr             = 142,
   1647 
   1648   /** \brief Represents an expression that computes the length of a parameter
   1649    * pack.
   1650    *
   1651    * \code
   1652    * template<typename ...Types>
   1653    * struct count {
   1654    *   static const unsigned value = sizeof...(Types);
   1655    * };
   1656    * \endcode
   1657    */
   1658   CXCursor_SizeOfPackExpr                = 143,
   1659 
   1660   CXCursor_LastExpr                      = CXCursor_SizeOfPackExpr,
   1661 
   1662   /* Statements */
   1663   CXCursor_FirstStmt                     = 200,
   1664   /**
   1665    * \brief A statement whose specific kind is not exposed via this
   1666    * interface.
   1667    *
   1668    * Unexposed statements have the same operations as any other kind of
   1669    * statement; one can extract their location information, spelling,
   1670    * children, etc. However, the specific kind of the statement is not
   1671    * reported.
   1672    */
   1673   CXCursor_UnexposedStmt                 = 200,
   1674 
   1675   /** \brief A labelled statement in a function.
   1676    *
   1677    * This cursor kind is used to describe the "start_over:" label statement in
   1678    * the following example:
   1679    *
   1680    * \code
   1681    *   start_over:
   1682    *     ++counter;
   1683    * \endcode
   1684    *
   1685    */
   1686   CXCursor_LabelStmt                     = 201,
   1687 
   1688   /** \brief A group of statements like { stmt stmt }.
   1689    *
   1690    * This cursor kind is used to describe compound statements, e.g. function
   1691    * bodies.
   1692    */
   1693   CXCursor_CompoundStmt                  = 202,
   1694 
   1695   /** \brief A case statment.
   1696    */
   1697   CXCursor_CaseStmt                      = 203,
   1698 
   1699   /** \brief A default statement.
   1700    */
   1701   CXCursor_DefaultStmt                   = 204,
   1702 
   1703   /** \brief An if statement
   1704    */
   1705   CXCursor_IfStmt                        = 205,
   1706 
   1707   /** \brief A switch statement.
   1708    */
   1709   CXCursor_SwitchStmt                    = 206,
   1710 
   1711   /** \brief A while statement.
   1712    */
   1713   CXCursor_WhileStmt                     = 207,
   1714 
   1715   /** \brief A do statement.
   1716    */
   1717   CXCursor_DoStmt                        = 208,
   1718 
   1719   /** \brief A for statement.
   1720    */
   1721   CXCursor_ForStmt                       = 209,
   1722 
   1723   /** \brief A goto statement.
   1724    */
   1725   CXCursor_GotoStmt                      = 210,
   1726 
   1727   /** \brief An indirect goto statement.
   1728    */
   1729   CXCursor_IndirectGotoStmt              = 211,
   1730 
   1731   /** \brief A continue statement.
   1732    */
   1733   CXCursor_ContinueStmt                  = 212,
   1734 
   1735   /** \brief A break statement.
   1736    */
   1737   CXCursor_BreakStmt                     = 213,
   1738 
   1739   /** \brief A return statement.
   1740    */
   1741   CXCursor_ReturnStmt                    = 214,
   1742 
   1743   /** \brief A GNU inline assembly statement extension.
   1744    */
   1745   CXCursor_AsmStmt                       = 215,
   1746 
   1747   /** \brief Objective-C's overall @try-@catc-@finall statement.
   1748    */
   1749   CXCursor_ObjCAtTryStmt                 = 216,
   1750 
   1751   /** \brief Objective-C's @catch statement.
   1752    */
   1753   CXCursor_ObjCAtCatchStmt               = 217,
   1754 
   1755   /** \brief Objective-C's @finally statement.
   1756    */
   1757   CXCursor_ObjCAtFinallyStmt             = 218,
   1758 
   1759   /** \brief Objective-C's @throw statement.
   1760    */
   1761   CXCursor_ObjCAtThrowStmt               = 219,
   1762 
   1763   /** \brief Objective-C's @synchronized statement.
   1764    */
   1765   CXCursor_ObjCAtSynchronizedStmt        = 220,
   1766 
   1767   /** \brief Objective-C's autorelease pool statement.
   1768    */
   1769   CXCursor_ObjCAutoreleasePoolStmt       = 221,
   1770 
   1771   /** \brief Objective-C's collection statement.
   1772    */
   1773   CXCursor_ObjCForCollectionStmt         = 222,
   1774 
   1775   /** \brief C++'s catch statement.
   1776    */
   1777   CXCursor_CXXCatchStmt                  = 223,
   1778 
   1779   /** \brief C++'s try statement.
   1780    */
   1781   CXCursor_CXXTryStmt                    = 224,
   1782 
   1783   /** \brief C++'s for (* : *) statement.
   1784    */
   1785   CXCursor_CXXForRangeStmt               = 225,
   1786 
   1787   /** \brief Windows Structured Exception Handling's try statement.
   1788    */
   1789   CXCursor_SEHTryStmt                    = 226,
   1790 
   1791   /** \brief Windows Structured Exception Handling's except statement.
   1792    */
   1793   CXCursor_SEHExceptStmt                 = 227,
   1794 
   1795   /** \brief Windows Structured Exception Handling's finally statement.
   1796    */
   1797   CXCursor_SEHFinallyStmt                = 228,
   1798 
   1799   /** \brief The null satement ";": C99 6.8.3p3.
   1800    *
   1801    * This cursor kind is used to describe the null statement.
   1802    */
   1803   CXCursor_NullStmt                      = 230,
   1804 
   1805   /** \brief Adaptor class for mixing declarations with statements and
   1806    * expressions.
   1807    */
   1808   CXCursor_DeclStmt                      = 231,
   1809 
   1810   CXCursor_LastStmt                      = CXCursor_DeclStmt,
   1811 
   1812   /**
   1813    * \brief Cursor that represents the translation unit itself.
   1814    *
   1815    * The translation unit cursor exists primarily to act as the root
   1816    * cursor for traversing the contents of a translation unit.
   1817    */
   1818   CXCursor_TranslationUnit               = 300,
   1819 
   1820   /* Attributes */
   1821   CXCursor_FirstAttr                     = 400,
   1822   /**
   1823    * \brief An attribute whose specific kind is not exposed via this
   1824    * interface.
   1825    */
   1826   CXCursor_UnexposedAttr                 = 400,
   1827 
   1828   CXCursor_IBActionAttr                  = 401,
   1829   CXCursor_IBOutletAttr                  = 402,
   1830   CXCursor_IBOutletCollectionAttr        = 403,
   1831   CXCursor_CXXFinalAttr                  = 404,
   1832   CXCursor_CXXOverrideAttr               = 405,
   1833   CXCursor_AnnotateAttr                  = 406,
   1834   CXCursor_LastAttr                      = CXCursor_AnnotateAttr,
   1835 
   1836   /* Preprocessing */
   1837   CXCursor_PreprocessingDirective        = 500,
   1838   CXCursor_MacroDefinition               = 501,
   1839   CXCursor_MacroExpansion                = 502,
   1840   CXCursor_MacroInstantiation            = CXCursor_MacroExpansion,
   1841   CXCursor_InclusionDirective            = 503,
   1842   CXCursor_FirstPreprocessing            = CXCursor_PreprocessingDirective,
   1843   CXCursor_LastPreprocessing             = CXCursor_InclusionDirective
   1844 };
   1845 
   1846 /**
   1847  * \brief A cursor representing some element in the abstract syntax tree for
   1848  * a translation unit.
   1849  *
   1850  * The cursor abstraction unifies the different kinds of entities in a
   1851  * program--declaration, statements, expressions, references to declarations,
   1852  * etc.--under a single "cursor" abstraction with a common set of operations.
   1853  * Common operation for a cursor include: getting the physical location in
   1854  * a source file where the cursor points, getting the name associated with a
   1855  * cursor, and retrieving cursors for any child nodes of a particular cursor.
   1856  *
   1857  * Cursors can be produced in two specific ways.
   1858  * clang_getTranslationUnitCursor() produces a cursor for a translation unit,
   1859  * from which one can use clang_visitChildren() to explore the rest of the
   1860  * translation unit. clang_getCursor() maps from a physical source location
   1861  * to the entity that resides at that location, allowing one to map from the
   1862  * source code into the AST.
   1863  */
   1864 typedef struct {
   1865   enum CXCursorKind kind;
   1866   int xdata;
   1867   void *data[3];
   1868 } CXCursor;
   1869 
   1870 /**
   1871  * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_MANIP Cursor manipulations
   1872  *
   1873  * @{
   1874  */
   1875 
   1876 /**
   1877  * \brief Retrieve the NULL cursor, which represents no entity.
   1878  */
   1879 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getNullCursor(void);
   1880 
   1881 /**
   1882  * \brief Retrieve the cursor that represents the given translation unit.
   1883  *
   1884  * The translation unit cursor can be used to start traversing the
   1885  * various declarations within the given translation unit.
   1886  */
   1887 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getTranslationUnitCursor(CXTranslationUnit);
   1888 
   1889 /**
   1890  * \brief Determine whether two cursors are equivalent.
   1891  */
   1892 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalCursors(CXCursor, CXCursor);
   1893 
   1894 /**
   1895  * \brief Returns non-zero if \arg cursor is null.
   1896  */
   1897 int clang_Cursor_isNull(CXCursor);
   1898 
   1899 /**
   1900  * \brief Compute a hash value for the given cursor.
   1901  */
   1902 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_hashCursor(CXCursor);
   1903 
   1904 /**
   1905  * \brief Retrieve the kind of the given cursor.
   1906  */
   1907 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCursorKind clang_getCursorKind(CXCursor);
   1908 
   1909 /**
   1910  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a declaration.
   1911  */
   1912 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isDeclaration(enum CXCursorKind);
   1913 
   1914 /**
   1915  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a simple
   1916  * reference.
   1917  *
   1918  * Note that other kinds of cursors (such as expressions) can also refer to
   1919  * other cursors. Use clang_getCursorReferenced() to determine whether a
   1920  * particular cursor refers to another entity.
   1921  */
   1922 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isReference(enum CXCursorKind);
   1923 
   1924 /**
   1925  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an expression.
   1926  */
   1927 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isExpression(enum CXCursorKind);
   1928 
   1929 /**
   1930  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a statement.
   1931  */
   1932 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isStatement(enum CXCursorKind);
   1933 
   1934 /**
   1935  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an attribute.
   1936  */
   1937 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isAttribute(enum CXCursorKind);
   1938 
   1939 /**
   1940  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents an invalid
   1941  * cursor.
   1942  */
   1943 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isInvalid(enum CXCursorKind);
   1944 
   1945 /**
   1946  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor kind represents a translation
   1947  * unit.
   1948  */
   1949 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isTranslationUnit(enum CXCursorKind);
   1950 
   1951 /***
   1952  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor represents a preprocessing
   1953  * element, such as a preprocessor directive or macro instantiation.
   1954  */
   1955 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isPreprocessing(enum CXCursorKind);
   1956 
   1957 /***
   1958  * \brief Determine whether the given cursor represents a currently
   1959  *  unexposed piece of the AST (e.g., CXCursor_UnexposedStmt).
   1960  */
   1961 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isUnexposed(enum CXCursorKind);
   1962 
   1963 /**
   1964  * \brief Describe the linkage of the entity referred to by a cursor.
   1965  */
   1966 enum CXLinkageKind {
   1967   /** \brief This value indicates that no linkage information is available
   1968    * for a provided CXCursor. */
   1969   CXLinkage_Invalid,
   1970   /**
   1971    * \brief This is the linkage for variables, parameters, and so on that
   1972    *  have automatic storage.  This covers normal (non-extern) local variables.
   1973    */
   1974   CXLinkage_NoLinkage,
   1975   /** \brief This is the linkage for static variables and static functions. */
   1976   CXLinkage_Internal,
   1977   /** \brief This is the linkage for entities with external linkage that live
   1978    * in C++ anonymous namespaces.*/
   1979   CXLinkage_UniqueExternal,
   1980   /** \brief This is the linkage for entities with true, external linkage. */
   1981   CXLinkage_External
   1982 };
   1983 
   1984 /**
   1985  * \brief Determine the linkage of the entity referred to by a given cursor.
   1986  */
   1987 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLinkageKind clang_getCursorLinkage(CXCursor cursor);
   1988 
   1989 /**
   1990  * \brief Determine the availability of the entity that this cursor refers to.
   1991  *
   1992  * \param cursor The cursor to query.
   1993  *
   1994  * \returns The availability of the cursor.
   1995  */
   1996 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXAvailabilityKind
   1997 clang_getCursorAvailability(CXCursor cursor);
   1998 
   1999 /**
   2000  * \brief Describe the "language" of the entity referred to by a cursor.
   2001  */
   2002 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLanguageKind {
   2003   CXLanguage_Invalid = 0,
   2004   CXLanguage_C,
   2005   CXLanguage_ObjC,
   2006   CXLanguage_CPlusPlus
   2007 };
   2008 
   2009 /**
   2010  * \brief Determine the "language" of the entity referred to by a given cursor.
   2011  */
   2012 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXLanguageKind clang_getCursorLanguage(CXCursor cursor);
   2013 
   2014 /**
   2015  * \brief Returns the translation unit that a cursor originated from.
   2016  */
   2017 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTranslationUnit clang_Cursor_getTranslationUnit(CXCursor);
   2018 
   2019 
   2020 /**
   2021  * \brief A fast container representing a set of CXCursors.
   2022  */
   2023 typedef struct CXCursorSetImpl *CXCursorSet;
   2024 
   2025 /**
   2026  * \brief Creates an empty CXCursorSet.
   2027  */
   2028 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursorSet clang_createCXCursorSet();
   2029 
   2030 /**
   2031  * \brief Disposes a CXCursorSet and releases its associated memory.
   2032  */
   2033 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeCXCursorSet(CXCursorSet cset);
   2034 
   2035 /**
   2036  * \brief Queries a CXCursorSet to see if it contains a specific CXCursor.
   2037  *
   2038  * \returns non-zero if the set contains the specified cursor.
   2039 */
   2040 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXCursorSet_contains(CXCursorSet cset,
   2041                                                    CXCursor cursor);
   2042 
   2043 /**
   2044  * \brief Inserts a CXCursor into a CXCursorSet.
   2045  *
   2046  * \returns zero if the CXCursor was already in the set, and non-zero otherwise.
   2047 */
   2048 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXCursorSet_insert(CXCursorSet cset,
   2049                                                  CXCursor cursor);
   2050 
   2051 /**
   2052  * \brief Determine the semantic parent of the given cursor.
   2053  *
   2054  * The semantic parent of a cursor is the cursor that semantically contains
   2055  * the given \p cursor. For many declarations, the lexical and semantic parents
   2056  * are equivalent (the lexical parent is returned by
   2057  * \c clang_getCursorLexicalParent()). They diverge when declarations or
   2058  * definitions are provided out-of-line. For example:
   2059  *
   2060  * \code
   2061  * class C {
   2062  *  void f();
   2063  * };
   2064  *
   2065  * void C::f() { }
   2066  * \endcode
   2067  *
   2068  * In the out-of-line definition of \c C::f, the semantic parent is the
   2069  * the class \c C, of which this function is a member. The lexical parent is
   2070  * the place where the declaration actually occurs in the source code; in this
   2071  * case, the definition occurs in the translation unit. In general, the
   2072  * lexical parent for a given entity can change without affecting the semantics
   2073  * of the program, and the lexical parent of different declarations of the
   2074  * same entity may be different. Changing the semantic parent of a declaration,
   2075  * on the other hand, can have a major impact on semantics, and redeclarations
   2076  * of a particular entity should all have the same semantic context.
   2077  *
   2078  * In the example above, both declarations of \c C::f have \c C as their
   2079  * semantic context, while the lexical context of the first \c C::f is \c C
   2080  * and the lexical context of the second \c C::f is the translation unit.
   2081  *
   2082  * For global declarations, the semantic parent is the translation unit.
   2083  */
   2084 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorSemanticParent(CXCursor cursor);
   2085 
   2086 /**
   2087  * \brief Determine the lexical parent of the given cursor.
   2088  *
   2089  * The lexical parent of a cursor is the cursor in which the given \p cursor
   2090  * was actually written. For many declarations, the lexical and semantic parents
   2091  * are equivalent (the semantic parent is returned by
   2092  * \c clang_getCursorSemanticParent()). They diverge when declarations or
   2093  * definitions are provided out-of-line. For example:
   2094  *
   2095  * \code
   2096  * class C {
   2097  *  void f();
   2098  * };
   2099  *
   2100  * void C::f() { }
   2101  * \endcode
   2102  *
   2103  * In the out-of-line definition of \c C::f, the semantic parent is the
   2104  * the class \c C, of which this function is a member. The lexical parent is
   2105  * the place where the declaration actually occurs in the source code; in this
   2106  * case, the definition occurs in the translation unit. In general, the
   2107  * lexical parent for a given entity can change without affecting the semantics
   2108  * of the program, and the lexical parent of different declarations of the
   2109  * same entity may be different. Changing the semantic parent of a declaration,
   2110  * on the other hand, can have a major impact on semantics, and redeclarations
   2111  * of a particular entity should all have the same semantic context.
   2112  *
   2113  * In the example above, both declarations of \c C::f have \c C as their
   2114  * semantic context, while the lexical context of the first \c C::f is \c C
   2115  * and the lexical context of the second \c C::f is the translation unit.
   2116  *
   2117  * For declarations written in the global scope, the lexical parent is
   2118  * the translation unit.
   2119  */
   2120 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorLexicalParent(CXCursor cursor);
   2121 
   2122 /**
   2123  * \brief Determine the set of methods that are overridden by the given
   2124  * method.
   2125  *
   2126  * In both Objective-C and C++, a method (aka virtual member function,
   2127  * in C++) can override a virtual method in a base class. For
   2128  * Objective-C, a method is said to override any method in the class's
   2129  * interface (if we're coming from an implementation), its protocols,
   2130  * or its categories, that has the same selector and is of the same
   2131  * kind (class or instance). If no such method exists, the search
   2132  * continues to the class's superclass, its protocols, and its
   2133  * categories, and so on.
   2134  *
   2135  * For C++, a virtual member function overrides any virtual member
   2136  * function with the same signature that occurs in its base
   2137  * classes. With multiple inheritance, a virtual member function can
   2138  * override several virtual member functions coming from different
   2139  * base classes.
   2140  *
   2141  * In all cases, this function determines the immediate overridden
   2142  * method, rather than all of the overridden methods. For example, if
   2143  * a method is originally declared in a class A, then overridden in B
   2144  * (which in inherits from A) and also in C (which inherited from B),
   2145  * then the only overridden method returned from this function when
   2146  * invoked on C's method will be B's method. The client may then
   2147  * invoke this function again, given the previously-found overridden
   2148  * methods, to map out the complete method-override set.
   2149  *
   2150  * \param cursor A cursor representing an Objective-C or C++
   2151  * method. This routine will compute the set of methods that this
   2152  * method overrides.
   2153  *
   2154  * \param overridden A pointer whose pointee will be replaced with a
   2155  * pointer to an array of cursors, representing the set of overridden
   2156  * methods. If there are no overridden methods, the pointee will be
   2157  * set to NULL. The pointee must be freed via a call to
   2158  * \c clang_disposeOverriddenCursors().
   2159  *
   2160  * \param num_overridden A pointer to the number of overridden
   2161  * functions, will be set to the number of overridden functions in the
   2162  * array pointed to by \p overridden.
   2163  */
   2164 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getOverriddenCursors(CXCursor cursor,
   2165                                                CXCursor **overridden,
   2166                                                unsigned *num_overridden);
   2167 
   2168 /**
   2169  * \brief Free the set of overridden cursors returned by \c
   2170  * clang_getOverriddenCursors().
   2171  */
   2172 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeOverriddenCursors(CXCursor *overridden);
   2173 
   2174 /**
   2175  * \brief Retrieve the file that is included by the given inclusion directive
   2176  * cursor.
   2177  */
   2178 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXFile clang_getIncludedFile(CXCursor cursor);
   2179 
   2180 /**
   2181  * @}
   2182  */
   2183 
   2184 /**
   2185  * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_SOURCE Mapping between cursors and source code
   2186  *
   2187  * Cursors represent a location within the Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). These
   2188  * routines help map between cursors and the physical locations where the
   2189  * described entities occur in the source code. The mapping is provided in
   2190  * both directions, so one can map from source code to the AST and back.
   2191  *
   2192  * @{
   2193  */
   2194 
   2195 /**
   2196  * \brief Map a source location to the cursor that describes the entity at that
   2197  * location in the source code.
   2198  *
   2199  * clang_getCursor() maps an arbitrary source location within a translation
   2200  * unit down to the most specific cursor that describes the entity at that
   2201  * location. For example, given an expression \c x + y, invoking
   2202  * clang_getCursor() with a source location pointing to "x" will return the
   2203  * cursor for "x"; similarly for "y". If the cursor points anywhere between
   2204  * "x" or "y" (e.g., on the + or the whitespace around it), clang_getCursor()
   2205  * will return a cursor referring to the "+" expression.
   2206  *
   2207  * \returns a cursor representing the entity at the given source location, or
   2208  * a NULL cursor if no such entity can be found.
   2209  */
   2210 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursor(CXTranslationUnit, CXSourceLocation);
   2211 
   2212 /**
   2213  * \brief Retrieve the physical location of the source constructor referenced
   2214  * by the given cursor.
   2215  *
   2216  * The location of a declaration is typically the location of the name of that
   2217  * declaration, where the name of that declaration would occur if it is
   2218  * unnamed, or some keyword that introduces that particular declaration.
   2219  * The location of a reference is where that reference occurs within the
   2220  * source code.
   2221  */
   2222 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getCursorLocation(CXCursor);
   2223 
   2224 /**
   2225  * \brief Retrieve the physical extent of the source construct referenced by
   2226  * the given cursor.
   2227  *
   2228  * The extent of a cursor starts with the file/line/column pointing at the
   2229  * first character within the source construct that the cursor refers to and
   2230  * ends with the last character withinin that source construct. For a
   2231  * declaration, the extent covers the declaration itself. For a reference,
   2232  * the extent covers the location of the reference (e.g., where the referenced
   2233  * entity was actually used).
   2234  */
   2235 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getCursorExtent(CXCursor);
   2236 
   2237 /**
   2238  * @}
   2239  */
   2240 
   2241 /**
   2242  * \defgroup CINDEX_TYPES Type information for CXCursors
   2243  *
   2244  * @{
   2245  */
   2246 
   2247 /**
   2248  * \brief Describes the kind of type
   2249  */
   2250 enum CXTypeKind {
   2251   /**
   2252    * \brief Reprents an invalid type (e.g., where no type is available).
   2253    */
   2254   CXType_Invalid = 0,
   2255 
   2256   /**
   2257    * \brief A type whose specific kind is not exposed via this
   2258    * interface.
   2259    */
   2260   CXType_Unexposed = 1,
   2261 
   2262   /* Builtin types */
   2263   CXType_Void = 2,
   2264   CXType_Bool = 3,
   2265   CXType_Char_U = 4,
   2266   CXType_UChar = 5,
   2267   CXType_Char16 = 6,
   2268   CXType_Char32 = 7,
   2269   CXType_UShort = 8,
   2270   CXType_UInt = 9,
   2271   CXType_ULong = 10,
   2272   CXType_ULongLong = 11,
   2273   CXType_UInt128 = 12,
   2274   CXType_Char_S = 13,
   2275   CXType_SChar = 14,
   2276   CXType_WChar = 15,
   2277   CXType_Short = 16,
   2278   CXType_Int = 17,
   2279   CXType_Long = 18,
   2280   CXType_LongLong = 19,
   2281   CXType_Int128 = 20,
   2282   CXType_Float = 21,
   2283   CXType_Double = 22,
   2284   CXType_LongDouble = 23,
   2285   CXType_NullPtr = 24,
   2286   CXType_Overload = 25,
   2287   CXType_Dependent = 26,
   2288   CXType_ObjCId = 27,
   2289   CXType_ObjCClass = 28,
   2290   CXType_ObjCSel = 29,
   2291   CXType_FirstBuiltin = CXType_Void,
   2292   CXType_LastBuiltin  = CXType_ObjCSel,
   2293 
   2294   CXType_Complex = 100,
   2295   CXType_Pointer = 101,
   2296   CXType_BlockPointer = 102,
   2297   CXType_LValueReference = 103,
   2298   CXType_RValueReference = 104,
   2299   CXType_Record = 105,
   2300   CXType_Enum = 106,
   2301   CXType_Typedef = 107,
   2302   CXType_ObjCInterface = 108,
   2303   CXType_ObjCObjectPointer = 109,
   2304   CXType_FunctionNoProto = 110,
   2305   CXType_FunctionProto = 111,
   2306   CXType_ConstantArray = 112
   2307 };
   2308 
   2309 /**
   2310  * \brief The type of an element in the abstract syntax tree.
   2311  *
   2312  */
   2313 typedef struct {
   2314   enum CXTypeKind kind;
   2315   void *data[2];
   2316 } CXType;
   2317 
   2318 /**
   2319  * \brief Retrieve the type of a CXCursor (if any).
   2320  */
   2321 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCursorType(CXCursor C);
   2322 
   2323 /**
   2324  * \determine Determine whether two CXTypes represent the same type.
   2325  *
   2326  * \returns non-zero if the CXTypes represent the same type and
   2327             zero otherwise.
   2328  */
   2329 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_equalTypes(CXType A, CXType B);
   2330 
   2331 /**
   2332  * \brief Return the canonical type for a CXType.
   2333  *
   2334  * Clang's type system explicitly models typedefs and all the ways
   2335  * a specific type can be represented.  The canonical type is the underlying
   2336  * type with all the "sugar" removed.  For example, if 'T' is a typedef
   2337  * for 'int', the canonical type for 'T' would be 'int'.
   2338  */
   2339 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCanonicalType(CXType T);
   2340 
   2341 /**
   2342  *  \determine Determine whether a CXType has the "const" qualifier set,
   2343  *  without looking through typedefs that may have added "const" at a different level.
   2344  */
   2345 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isConstQualifiedType(CXType T);
   2346 
   2347 /**
   2348  *  \determine Determine whether a CXType has the "volatile" qualifier set,
   2349  *  without looking through typedefs that may have added "volatile" at a different level.
   2350  */
   2351 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isVolatileQualifiedType(CXType T);
   2352 
   2353 /**
   2354  *  \determine Determine whether a CXType has the "restrict" qualifier set,
   2355  *  without looking through typedefs that may have added "restrict" at a different level.
   2356  */
   2357 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isRestrictQualifiedType(CXType T);
   2358 
   2359 /**
   2360  * \brief For pointer types, returns the type of the pointee.
   2361  *
   2362  */
   2363 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getPointeeType(CXType T);
   2364 
   2365 /**
   2366  * \brief Return the cursor for the declaration of the given type.
   2367  */
   2368 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getTypeDeclaration(CXType T);
   2369 
   2370 /**
   2371  * Returns the Objective-C type encoding for the specified declaration.
   2372  */
   2373 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getDeclObjCTypeEncoding(CXCursor C);
   2374 
   2375 /**
   2376  * \brief Retrieve the spelling of a given CXTypeKind.
   2377  */
   2378 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getTypeKindSpelling(enum CXTypeKind K);
   2379 
   2380 /**
   2381  * \brief Retrieve the result type associated with a function type.
   2382  */
   2383 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getResultType(CXType T);
   2384 
   2385 /**
   2386  * \brief Retrieve the result type associated with a given cursor.  This only
   2387  *  returns a valid type of the cursor refers to a function or method.
   2388  */
   2389 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getCursorResultType(CXCursor C);
   2390 
   2391 /**
   2392  * \brief Return 1 if the CXType is a POD (plain old data) type, and 0
   2393  *  otherwise.
   2394  */
   2395 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isPODType(CXType T);
   2396 
   2397 /**
   2398  * \brief Return the element type of an array type.
   2399  *
   2400  * If a non-array type is passed in, an invalid type is returned.
   2401  */
   2402 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getArrayElementType(CXType T);
   2403 
   2404 /**
   2405  * \brief Return the the array size of a constant array.
   2406  *
   2407  * If a non-array type is passed in, -1 is returned.
   2408  */
   2409 CINDEX_LINKAGE long long clang_getArraySize(CXType T);
   2410 
   2411 /**
   2412  * \brief Returns 1 if the base class specified by the cursor with kind
   2413  *   CX_CXXBaseSpecifier is virtual.
   2414  */
   2415 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isVirtualBase(CXCursor);
   2416 
   2417 /**
   2418  * \brief Represents the C++ access control level to a base class for a
   2419  * cursor with kind CX_CXXBaseSpecifier.
   2420  */
   2421 enum CX_CXXAccessSpecifier {
   2422   CX_CXXInvalidAccessSpecifier,
   2423   CX_CXXPublic,
   2424   CX_CXXProtected,
   2425   CX_CXXPrivate
   2426 };
   2427 
   2428 /**
   2429  * \brief Returns the access control level for the C++ base specifier
   2430  * represented by a cursor with kind CXCursor_CXXBaseSpecifier or
   2431  * CXCursor_AccessSpecifier.
   2432  */
   2433 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CX_CXXAccessSpecifier clang_getCXXAccessSpecifier(CXCursor);
   2434 
   2435 /**
   2436  * \brief Determine the number of overloaded declarations referenced by a
   2437  * \c CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef cursor.
   2438  *
   2439  * \param cursor The cursor whose overloaded declarations are being queried.
   2440  *
   2441  * \returns The number of overloaded declarations referenced by \c cursor. If it
   2442  * is not a \c CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef cursor, returns 0.
   2443  */
   2444 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_getNumOverloadedDecls(CXCursor cursor);
   2445 
   2446 /**
   2447  * \brief Retrieve a cursor for one of the overloaded declarations referenced
   2448  * by a \c CXCursor_OverloadedDeclRef cursor.
   2449  *
   2450  * \param cursor The cursor whose overloaded declarations are being queried.
   2451  *
   2452  * \param index The zero-based index into the set of overloaded declarations in
   2453  * the cursor.
   2454  *
   2455  * \returns A cursor representing the declaration referenced by the given
   2456  * \c cursor at the specified \c index. If the cursor does not have an
   2457  * associated set of overloaded declarations, or if the index is out of bounds,
   2458  * returns \c clang_getNullCursor();
   2459  */
   2460 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getOverloadedDecl(CXCursor cursor,
   2461                                                 unsigned index);
   2462 
   2463 /**
   2464  * @}
   2465  */
   2466 
   2467 /**
   2468  * \defgroup CINDEX_ATTRIBUTES Information for attributes
   2469  *
   2470  * @{
   2471  */
   2472 
   2473 
   2474 /**
   2475  * \brief For cursors representing an iboutletcollection attribute,
   2476  *  this function returns the collection element type.
   2477  *
   2478  */
   2479 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXType clang_getIBOutletCollectionType(CXCursor);
   2480 
   2481 /**
   2482  * @}
   2483  */
   2484 
   2485 /**
   2486  * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_TRAVERSAL Traversing the AST with cursors
   2487  *
   2488  * These routines provide the ability to traverse the abstract syntax tree
   2489  * using cursors.
   2490  *
   2491  * @{
   2492  */
   2493 
   2494 /**
   2495  * \brief Describes how the traversal of the children of a particular
   2496  * cursor should proceed after visiting a particular child cursor.
   2497  *
   2498  * A value of this enumeration type should be returned by each
   2499  * \c CXCursorVisitor to indicate how clang_visitChildren() proceed.
   2500  */
   2501 enum CXChildVisitResult {
   2502   /**
   2503    * \brief Terminates the cursor traversal.
   2504    */
   2505   CXChildVisit_Break,
   2506   /**
   2507    * \brief Continues the cursor traversal with the next sibling of
   2508    * the cursor just visited, without visiting its children.
   2509    */
   2510   CXChildVisit_Continue,
   2511   /**
   2512    * \brief Recursively traverse the children of this cursor, using
   2513    * the same visitor and client data.
   2514    */
   2515   CXChildVisit_Recurse
   2516 };
   2517 
   2518 /**
   2519  * \brief Visitor invoked for each cursor found by a traversal.
   2520  *
   2521  * This visitor function will be invoked for each cursor found by
   2522  * clang_visitCursorChildren(). Its first argument is the cursor being
   2523  * visited, its second argument is the parent visitor for that cursor,
   2524  * and its third argument is the client data provided to
   2525  * clang_visitCursorChildren().
   2526  *
   2527  * The visitor should return one of the \c CXChildVisitResult values
   2528  * to direct clang_visitCursorChildren().
   2529  */
   2530 typedef enum CXChildVisitResult (*CXCursorVisitor)(CXCursor cursor,
   2531                                                    CXCursor parent,
   2532                                                    CXClientData client_data);
   2533 
   2534 /**
   2535  * \brief Visit the children of a particular cursor.
   2536  *
   2537  * This function visits all the direct children of the given cursor,
   2538  * invoking the given \p visitor function with the cursors of each
   2539  * visited child. The traversal may be recursive, if the visitor returns
   2540  * \c CXChildVisit_Recurse. The traversal may also be ended prematurely, if
   2541  * the visitor returns \c CXChildVisit_Break.
   2542  *
   2543  * \param parent the cursor whose child may be visited. All kinds of
   2544  * cursors can be visited, including invalid cursors (which, by
   2545  * definition, have no children).
   2546  *
   2547  * \param visitor the visitor function that will be invoked for each
   2548  * child of \p parent.
   2549  *
   2550  * \param client_data pointer data supplied by the client, which will
   2551  * be passed to the visitor each time it is invoked.
   2552  *
   2553  * \returns a non-zero value if the traversal was terminated
   2554  * prematurely by the visitor returning \c CXChildVisit_Break.
   2555  */
   2556 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_visitChildren(CXCursor parent,
   2557                                             CXCursorVisitor visitor,
   2558                                             CXClientData client_data);
   2559 #ifdef __has_feature
   2560 #  if __has_feature(blocks)
   2561 /**
   2562  * \brief Visitor invoked for each cursor found by a traversal.
   2563  *
   2564  * This visitor block will be invoked for each cursor found by
   2565  * clang_visitChildrenWithBlock(). Its first argument is the cursor being
   2566  * visited, its second argument is the parent visitor for that cursor.
   2567  *
   2568  * The visitor should return one of the \c CXChildVisitResult values
   2569  * to direct clang_visitChildrenWithBlock().
   2570  */
   2571 typedef enum CXChildVisitResult
   2572      (^CXCursorVisitorBlock)(CXCursor cursor, CXCursor parent);
   2573 
   2574 /**
   2575  * Visits the children of a cursor using the specified block.  Behaves
   2576  * identically to clang_visitChildren() in all other respects.
   2577  */
   2578 unsigned clang_visitChildrenWithBlock(CXCursor parent,
   2579                                       CXCursorVisitorBlock block);
   2580 #  endif
   2581 #endif
   2582 
   2583 /**
   2584  * @}
   2585  */
   2586 
   2587 /**
   2588  * \defgroup CINDEX_CURSOR_XREF Cross-referencing in the AST
   2589  *
   2590  * These routines provide the ability to determine references within and
   2591  * across translation units, by providing the names of the entities referenced
   2592  * by cursors, follow reference cursors to the declarations they reference,
   2593  * and associate declarations with their definitions.
   2594  *
   2595  * @{
   2596  */
   2597 
   2598 /**
   2599  * \brief Retrieve a Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) for the entity referenced
   2600  * by the given cursor.
   2601  *
   2602  * A Unified Symbol Resolution (USR) is a string that identifies a particular
   2603  * entity (function, class, variable, etc.) within a program. USRs can be
   2604  * compared across translation units to determine, e.g., when references in
   2605  * one translation refer to an entity defined in another translation unit.
   2606  */
   2607 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorUSR(CXCursor);
   2608 
   2609 /**
   2610  * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C class.
   2611  */
   2612 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCClass(const char *class_name);
   2613 
   2614 /**
   2615  * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C category.
   2616  */
   2617 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString
   2618   clang_constructUSR_ObjCCategory(const char *class_name,
   2619                                  const char *category_name);
   2620 
   2621 /**
   2622  * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C protocol.
   2623  */
   2624 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString
   2625   clang_constructUSR_ObjCProtocol(const char *protocol_name);
   2626 
   2627 
   2628 /**
   2629  * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C instance variable and
   2630  *   the USR for its containing class.
   2631  */
   2632 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCIvar(const char *name,
   2633                                                     CXString classUSR);
   2634 
   2635 /**
   2636  * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C method and
   2637  *   the USR for its containing class.
   2638  */
   2639 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCMethod(const char *name,
   2640                                                       unsigned isInstanceMethod,
   2641                                                       CXString classUSR);
   2642 
   2643 /**
   2644  * \brief Construct a USR for a specified Objective-C property and the USR
   2645  *  for its containing class.
   2646  */
   2647 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_constructUSR_ObjCProperty(const char *property,
   2648                                                         CXString classUSR);
   2649 
   2650 /**
   2651  * \brief Retrieve a name for the entity referenced by this cursor.
   2652  */
   2653 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorSpelling(CXCursor);
   2654 
   2655 /**
   2656  * \brief Retrieve the display name for the entity referenced by this cursor.
   2657  *
   2658  * The display name contains extra information that helps identify the cursor,
   2659  * such as the parameters of a function or template or the arguments of a
   2660  * class template specialization.
   2661  */
   2662 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorDisplayName(CXCursor);
   2663 
   2664 /** \brief For a cursor that is a reference, retrieve a cursor representing the
   2665  * entity that it references.
   2666  *
   2667  * Reference cursors refer to other entities in the AST. For example, an
   2668  * Objective-C superclass reference cursor refers to an Objective-C class.
   2669  * This function produces the cursor for the Objective-C class from the
   2670  * cursor for the superclass reference. If the input cursor is a declaration or
   2671  * definition, it returns that declaration or definition unchanged.
   2672  * Otherwise, returns the NULL cursor.
   2673  */
   2674 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorReferenced(CXCursor);
   2675 
   2676 /**
   2677  *  \brief For a cursor that is either a reference to or a declaration
   2678  *  of some entity, retrieve a cursor that describes the definition of
   2679  *  that entity.
   2680  *
   2681  *  Some entities can be declared multiple times within a translation
   2682  *  unit, but only one of those declarations can also be a
   2683  *  definition. For example, given:
   2684  *
   2685  *  \code
   2686  *  int f(int, int);
   2687  *  int g(int x, int y) { return f(x, y); }
   2688  *  int f(int a, int b) { return a + b; }
   2689  *  int f(int, int);
   2690  *  \endcode
   2691  *
   2692  *  there are three declarations of the function "f", but only the
   2693  *  second one is a definition. The clang_getCursorDefinition()
   2694  *  function will take any cursor pointing to a declaration of "f"
   2695  *  (the first or fourth lines of the example) or a cursor referenced
   2696  *  that uses "f" (the call to "f' inside "g") and will return a
   2697  *  declaration cursor pointing to the definition (the second "f"
   2698  *  declaration).
   2699  *
   2700  *  If given a cursor for which there is no corresponding definition,
   2701  *  e.g., because there is no definition of that entity within this
   2702  *  translation unit, returns a NULL cursor.
   2703  */
   2704 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCursorDefinition(CXCursor);
   2705 
   2706 /**
   2707  * \brief Determine whether the declaration pointed to by this cursor
   2708  * is also a definition of that entity.
   2709  */
   2710 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_isCursorDefinition(CXCursor);
   2711 
   2712 /**
   2713  * \brief Retrieve the canonical cursor corresponding to the given cursor.
   2714  *
   2715  * In the C family of languages, many kinds of entities can be declared several
   2716  * times within a single translation unit. For example, a structure type can
   2717  * be forward-declared (possibly multiple times) and later defined:
   2718  *
   2719  * \code
   2720  * struct X;
   2721  * struct X;
   2722  * struct X {
   2723  *   int member;
   2724  * };
   2725  * \endcode
   2726  *
   2727  * The declarations and the definition of \c X are represented by three
   2728  * different cursors, all of which are declarations of the same underlying
   2729  * entity. One of these cursor is considered the "canonical" cursor, which
   2730  * is effectively the representative for the underlying entity. One can
   2731  * determine if two cursors are declarations of the same underlying entity by
   2732  * comparing their canonical cursors.
   2733  *
   2734  * \returns The canonical cursor for the entity referred to by the given cursor.
   2735  */
   2736 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getCanonicalCursor(CXCursor);
   2737 
   2738 /**
   2739  * @}
   2740  */
   2741 
   2742 /**
   2743  * \defgroup CINDEX_CPP C++ AST introspection
   2744  *
   2745  * The routines in this group provide access information in the ASTs specific
   2746  * to C++ language features.
   2747  *
   2748  * @{
   2749  */
   2750 
   2751 /**
   2752  * \brief Determine if a C++ member function or member function template is
   2753  * declared 'static'.
   2754  */
   2755 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXXMethod_isStatic(CXCursor C);
   2756 
   2757 /**
   2758  * \brief Determine if a C++ member function or member function template is
   2759  * explicitly declared 'virtual' or if it overrides a virtual method from
   2760  * one of the base classes.
   2761  */
   2762 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_CXXMethod_isVirtual(CXCursor C);
   2763 
   2764 /**
   2765  * \brief Given a cursor that represents a template, determine
   2766  * the cursor kind of the specializations would be generated by instantiating
   2767  * the template.
   2768  *
   2769  * This routine can be used to determine what flavor of function template,
   2770  * class template, or class template partial specialization is stored in the
   2771  * cursor. For example, it can describe whether a class template cursor is
   2772  * declared with "struct", "class" or "union".
   2773  *
   2774  * \param C The cursor to query. This cursor should represent a template
   2775  * declaration.
   2776  *
   2777  * \returns The cursor kind of the specializations that would be generated
   2778  * by instantiating the template \p C. If \p C is not a template, returns
   2779  * \c CXCursor_NoDeclFound.
   2780  */
   2781 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCursorKind clang_getTemplateCursorKind(CXCursor C);
   2782 
   2783 /**
   2784  * \brief Given a cursor that may represent a specialization or instantiation
   2785  * of a template, retrieve the cursor that represents the template that it
   2786  * specializes or from which it was instantiated.
   2787  *
   2788  * This routine determines the template involved both for explicit
   2789  * specializations of templates and for implicit instantiations of the template,
   2790  * both of which are referred to as "specializations". For a class template
   2791  * specialization (e.g., \c std::vector<bool>), this routine will return
   2792  * either the primary template (\c std::vector) or, if the specialization was
   2793  * instantiated from a class template partial specialization, the class template
   2794  * partial specialization. For a class template partial specialization and a
   2795  * function template specialization (including instantiations), this
   2796  * this routine will return the specialized template.
   2797  *
   2798  * For members of a class template (e.g., member functions, member classes, or
   2799  * static data members), returns the specialized or instantiated member.
   2800  * Although not strictly "templates" in the C++ language, members of class
   2801  * templates have the same notions of specializations and instantiations that
   2802  * templates do, so this routine treats them similarly.
   2803  *
   2804  * \param C A cursor that may be a specialization of a template or a member
   2805  * of a template.
   2806  *
   2807  * \returns If the given cursor is a specialization or instantiation of a
   2808  * template or a member thereof, the template or member that it specializes or
   2809  * from which it was instantiated. Otherwise, returns a NULL cursor.
   2810  */
   2811 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCursor clang_getSpecializedCursorTemplate(CXCursor C);
   2812 
   2813 /**
   2814  * \brief Given a cursor that references something else, return the source range
   2815  * covering that reference.
   2816  *
   2817  * \param C A cursor pointing to a member reference, a declaration reference, or
   2818  * an operator call.
   2819  * \param NameFlags A bitset with three independent flags:
   2820  * CXNameRange_WantQualifier, CXNameRange_WantTemplateArgs, and
   2821  * CXNameRange_WantSinglePiece.
   2822  * \param PieceIndex For contiguous names or when passing the flag
   2823  * CXNameRange_WantSinglePiece, only one piece with index 0 is
   2824  * available. When the CXNameRange_WantSinglePiece flag is not passed for a
   2825  * non-contiguous names, this index can be used to retreive the individual
   2826  * pieces of the name. See also CXNameRange_WantSinglePiece.
   2827  *
   2828  * \returns The piece of the name pointed to by the given cursor. If there is no
   2829  * name, or if the PieceIndex is out-of-range, a null-cursor will be returned.
   2830  */
   2831 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getCursorReferenceNameRange(CXCursor C,
   2832                                                 unsigned NameFlags,
   2833                                                 unsigned PieceIndex);
   2834 
   2835 enum CXNameRefFlags {
   2836   /**
   2837    * \brief Include the nested-name-specifier, e.g. Foo:: in x.Foo::y, in the
   2838    * range.
   2839    */
   2840   CXNameRange_WantQualifier = 0x1,
   2841 
   2842   /**
   2843    * \brief Include the explicit template arguments, e.g. <int> in x.f<int>, in
   2844    * the range.
   2845    */
   2846   CXNameRange_WantTemplateArgs = 0x2,
   2847 
   2848   /**
   2849    * \brief If the name is non-contiguous, return the full spanning range.
   2850    *
   2851    * Non-contiguous names occur in Objective-C when a selector with two or more
   2852    * parameters is used, or in C++ when using an operator:
   2853    * \code
   2854    * [object doSomething:here withValue:there]; // ObjC
   2855    * return some_vector[1]; // C++
   2856    * \endcode
   2857    */
   2858   CXNameRange_WantSinglePiece = 0x4
   2859 };
   2860 
   2861 /**
   2862  * @}
   2863  */
   2864 
   2865 /**
   2866  * \defgroup CINDEX_LEX Token extraction and manipulation
   2867  *
   2868  * The routines in this group provide access to the tokens within a
   2869  * translation unit, along with a semantic mapping of those tokens to
   2870  * their corresponding cursors.
   2871  *
   2872  * @{
   2873  */
   2874 
   2875 /**
   2876  * \brief Describes a kind of token.
   2877  */
   2878 typedef enum CXTokenKind {
   2879   /**
   2880    * \brief A token that contains some kind of punctuation.
   2881    */
   2882   CXToken_Punctuation,
   2883 
   2884   /**
   2885    * \brief A language keyword.
   2886    */
   2887   CXToken_Keyword,
   2888 
   2889   /**
   2890    * \brief An identifier (that is not a keyword).
   2891    */
   2892   CXToken_Identifier,
   2893 
   2894   /**
   2895    * \brief A numeric, string, or character literal.
   2896    */
   2897   CXToken_Literal,
   2898 
   2899   /**
   2900    * \brief A comment.
   2901    */
   2902   CXToken_Comment
   2903 } CXTokenKind;
   2904 
   2905 /**
   2906  * \brief Describes a single preprocessing token.
   2907  */
   2908 typedef struct {
   2909   unsigned int_data[4];
   2910   void *ptr_data;
   2911 } CXToken;
   2912 
   2913 /**
   2914  * \brief Determine the kind of the given token.
   2915  */
   2916 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXTokenKind clang_getTokenKind(CXToken);
   2917 
   2918 /**
   2919  * \brief Determine the spelling of the given token.
   2920  *
   2921  * The spelling of a token is the textual representation of that token, e.g.,
   2922  * the text of an identifier or keyword.
   2923  */
   2924 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getTokenSpelling(CXTranslationUnit, CXToken);
   2925 
   2926 /**
   2927  * \brief Retrieve the source location of the given token.
   2928  */
   2929 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceLocation clang_getTokenLocation(CXTranslationUnit,
   2930                                                        CXToken);
   2931 
   2932 /**
   2933  * \brief Retrieve a source range that covers the given token.
   2934  */
   2935 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXSourceRange clang_getTokenExtent(CXTranslationUnit, CXToken);
   2936 
   2937 /**
   2938  * \brief Tokenize the source code described by the given range into raw
   2939  * lexical tokens.
   2940  *
   2941  * \param TU the translation unit whose text is being tokenized.
   2942  *
   2943  * \param Range the source range in which text should be tokenized. All of the
   2944  * tokens produced by tokenization will fall within this source range,
   2945  *
   2946  * \param Tokens this pointer will be set to point to the array of tokens
   2947  * that occur within the given source range. The returned pointer must be
   2948  * freed with clang_disposeTokens() before the translation unit is destroyed.
   2949  *
   2950  * \param NumTokens will be set to the number of tokens in the \c *Tokens
   2951  * array.
   2952  *
   2953  */
   2954 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_tokenize(CXTranslationUnit TU, CXSourceRange Range,
   2955                                    CXToken **Tokens, unsigned *NumTokens);
   2956 
   2957 /**
   2958  * \brief Annotate the given set of tokens by providing cursors for each token
   2959  * that can be mapped to a specific entity within the abstract syntax tree.
   2960  *
   2961  * This token-annotation routine is equivalent to invoking
   2962  * clang_getCursor() for the source locations of each of the
   2963  * tokens. The cursors provided are filtered, so that only those
   2964  * cursors that have a direct correspondence to the token are
   2965  * accepted. For example, given a function call \c f(x),
   2966  * clang_getCursor() would provide the following cursors:
   2967  *
   2968  *   * when the cursor is over the 'f', a DeclRefExpr cursor referring to 'f'.
   2969  *   * when the cursor is over the '(' or the ')', a CallExpr referring to 'f'.
   2970  *   * when the cursor is over the 'x', a DeclRefExpr cursor referring to 'x'.
   2971  *
   2972  * Only the first and last of these cursors will occur within the
   2973  * annotate, since the tokens "f" and "x' directly refer to a function
   2974  * and a variable, respectively, but the parentheses are just a small
   2975  * part of the full syntax of the function call expression, which is
   2976  * not provided as an annotation.
   2977  *
   2978  * \param TU the translation unit that owns the given tokens.
   2979  *
   2980  * \param Tokens the set of tokens to annotate.
   2981  *
   2982  * \param NumTokens the number of tokens in \p Tokens.
   2983  *
   2984  * \param Cursors an array of \p NumTokens cursors, whose contents will be
   2985  * replaced with the cursors corresponding to each token.
   2986  */
   2987 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_annotateTokens(CXTranslationUnit TU,
   2988                                          CXToken *Tokens, unsigned NumTokens,
   2989                                          CXCursor *Cursors);
   2990 
   2991 /**
   2992  * \brief Free the given set of tokens.
   2993  */
   2994 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_disposeTokens(CXTranslationUnit TU,
   2995                                         CXToken *Tokens, unsigned NumTokens);
   2996 
   2997 /**
   2998  * @}
   2999  */
   3000 
   3001 /**
   3002  * \defgroup CINDEX_DEBUG Debugging facilities
   3003  *
   3004  * These routines are used for testing and debugging, only, and should not
   3005  * be relied upon.
   3006  *
   3007  * @{
   3008  */
   3009 
   3010 /* for debug/testing */
   3011 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getCursorKindSpelling(enum CXCursorKind Kind);
   3012 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getDefinitionSpellingAndExtent(CXCursor,
   3013                                           const char **startBuf,
   3014                                           const char **endBuf,
   3015                                           unsigned *startLine,
   3016                                           unsigned *startColumn,
   3017                                           unsigned *endLine,
   3018                                           unsigned *endColumn);
   3019 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_enableStackTraces(void);
   3020 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_executeOnThread(void (*fn)(void*), void *user_data,
   3021                                           unsigned stack_size);
   3022 
   3023 /**
   3024  * @}
   3025  */
   3026 
   3027 /**
   3028  * \defgroup CINDEX_CODE_COMPLET Code completion
   3029  *
   3030  * Code completion involves taking an (incomplete) source file, along with
   3031  * knowledge of where the user is actively editing that file, and suggesting
   3032  * syntactically- and semantically-valid constructs that the user might want to
   3033  * use at that particular point in the source code. These data structures and
   3034  * routines provide support for code completion.
   3035  *
   3036  * @{
   3037  */
   3038 
   3039 /**
   3040  * \brief A semantic string that describes a code-completion result.
   3041  *
   3042  * A semantic string that describes the formatting of a code-completion
   3043  * result as a single "template" of text that should be inserted into the
   3044  * source buffer when a particular code-completion result is selected.
   3045  * Each semantic string is made up of some number of "chunks", each of which
   3046  * contains some text along with a description of what that text means, e.g.,
   3047  * the name of the entity being referenced, whether the text chunk is part of
   3048  * the template, or whether it is a "placeholder" that the user should replace
   3049  * with actual code,of a specific kind. See \c CXCompletionChunkKind for a
   3050  * description of the different kinds of chunks.
   3051  */
   3052 typedef void *CXCompletionString;
   3053 
   3054 /**
   3055  * \brief A single result of code completion.
   3056  */
   3057 typedef struct {
   3058   /**
   3059    * \brief The kind of entity that this completion refers to.
   3060    *
   3061    * The cursor kind will be a macro, keyword, or a declaration (one of the
   3062    * *Decl cursor kinds), describing the entity that the completion is
   3063    * referring to.
   3064    *
   3065    * \todo In the future, we would like to provide a full cursor, to allow
   3066    * the client to extract additional information from declaration.
   3067    */
   3068   enum CXCursorKind CursorKind;
   3069 
   3070   /**
   3071    * \brief The code-completion string that describes how to insert this
   3072    * code-completion result into the editing buffer.
   3073    */
   3074   CXCompletionString CompletionString;
   3075 } CXCompletionResult;
   3076 
   3077 /**
   3078  * \brief Describes a single piece of text within a code-completion string.
   3079  *
   3080  * Each "chunk" within a code-completion string (\c CXCompletionString) is
   3081  * either a piece of text with a specific "kind" that describes how that text
   3082  * should be interpreted by the client or is another completion string.
   3083  */
   3084 enum CXCompletionChunkKind {
   3085   /**
   3086    * \brief A code-completion string that describes "optional" text that
   3087    * could be a part of the template (but is not required).
   3088    *
   3089    * The Optional chunk is the only kind of chunk that has a code-completion
   3090    * string for its representation, which is accessible via
   3091    * \c clang_getCompletionChunkCompletionString(). The code-completion string
   3092    * describes an additional part of the template that is completely optional.
   3093    * For example, optional chunks can be used to describe the placeholders for
   3094    * arguments that match up with defaulted function parameters, e.g. given:
   3095    *
   3096    * \code
   3097    * void f(int x, float y = 3.14, double z = 2.71828);
   3098    * \endcode
   3099    *
   3100    * The code-completion string for this function would contain:
   3101    *   - a TypedText chunk for "f".
   3102    *   - a LeftParen chunk for "(".
   3103    *   - a Placeholder chunk for "int x"
   3104    *   - an Optional chunk containing the remaining defaulted arguments, e.g.,
   3105    *       - a Comma chunk for ","
   3106    *       - a Placeholder chunk for "float y"
   3107    *       - an Optional chunk containing the last defaulted argument:
   3108    *           - a Comma chunk for ","
   3109    *           - a Placeholder chunk for "double z"
   3110    *   - a RightParen chunk for ")"
   3111    *
   3112    * There are many ways to handle Optional chunks. Two simple approaches are:
   3113    *   - Completely ignore optional chunks, in which case the template for the
   3114    *     function "f" would only include the first parameter ("int x").
   3115    *   - Fully expand all optional chunks, in which case the template for the
   3116    *     function "f" would have all of the parameters.
   3117    */
   3118   CXCompletionChunk_Optional,
   3119   /**
   3120    * \brief Text that a user would be expected to type to get this
   3121    * code-completion result.
   3122    *
   3123    * There will be exactly one "typed text" chunk in a semantic string, which
   3124    * will typically provide the spelling of a keyword or the name of a
   3125    * declaration that could be used at the current code point. Clients are
   3126    * expected to filter the code-completion results based on the text in this
   3127    * chunk.
   3128    */
   3129   CXCompletionChunk_TypedText,
   3130   /**
   3131    * \brief Text that should be inserted as part of a code-completion result.
   3132    *
   3133    * A "text" chunk represents text that is part of the template to be
   3134    * inserted into user code should this particular code-completion result
   3135    * be selected.
   3136    */
   3137   CXCompletionChunk_Text,
   3138   /**
   3139    * \brief Placeholder text that should be replaced by the user.
   3140    *
   3141    * A "placeholder" chunk marks a place where the user should insert text
   3142    * into the code-completion template. For example, placeholders might mark
   3143    * the function parameters for a function declaration, to indicate that the
   3144    * user should provide arguments for each of those parameters. The actual
   3145    * text in a placeholder is a suggestion for the text to display before
   3146    * the user replaces the placeholder with real code.
   3147    */
   3148   CXCompletionChunk_Placeholder,
   3149   /**
   3150    * \brief Informative text that should be displayed but never inserted as
   3151    * part of the template.
   3152    *
   3153    * An "informative" chunk contains annotations that can be displayed to
   3154    * help the user decide whether a particular code-completion result is the
   3155    * right option, but which is not part of the actual template to be inserted
   3156    * by code completion.
   3157    */
   3158   CXCompletionChunk_Informative,
   3159   /**
   3160    * \brief Text that describes the current parameter when code-completion is
   3161    * referring to function call, message send, or template specialization.
   3162    *
   3163    * A "current parameter" chunk occurs when code-completion is providing
   3164    * information about a parameter corresponding to the argument at the
   3165    * code-completion point. For example, given a function
   3166    *
   3167    * \code
   3168    * int add(int x, int y);
   3169    * \endcode
   3170    *
   3171    * and the source code \c add(, where the code-completion point is after the
   3172    * "(", the code-completion string will contain a "current parameter" chunk
   3173    * for "int x", indicating that the current argument will initialize that
   3174    * parameter. After typing further, to \c add(17, (where the code-completion
   3175    * point is after the ","), the code-completion string will contain a
   3176    * "current paremeter" chunk to "int y".
   3177    */
   3178   CXCompletionChunk_CurrentParameter,
   3179   /**
   3180    * \brief A left parenthesis ('('), used to initiate a function call or
   3181    * signal the beginning of a function parameter list.
   3182    */
   3183   CXCompletionChunk_LeftParen,
   3184   /**
   3185    * \brief A right parenthesis (')'), used to finish a function call or
   3186    * signal the end of a function parameter list.
   3187    */
   3188   CXCompletionChunk_RightParen,
   3189   /**
   3190    * \brief A left bracket ('[').
   3191    */
   3192   CXCompletionChunk_LeftBracket,
   3193   /**
   3194    * \brief A right bracket (']').
   3195    */
   3196   CXCompletionChunk_RightBracket,
   3197   /**
   3198    * \brief A left brace ('{').
   3199    */
   3200   CXCompletionChunk_LeftBrace,
   3201   /**
   3202    * \brief A right brace ('}').
   3203    */
   3204   CXCompletionChunk_RightBrace,
   3205   /**
   3206    * \brief A left angle bracket ('<').
   3207    */
   3208   CXCompletionChunk_LeftAngle,
   3209   /**
   3210    * \brief A right angle bracket ('>').
   3211    */
   3212   CXCompletionChunk_RightAngle,
   3213   /**
   3214    * \brief A comma separator (',').
   3215    */
   3216   CXCompletionChunk_Comma,
   3217   /**
   3218    * \brief Text that specifies the result type of a given result.
   3219    *
   3220    * This special kind of informative chunk is not meant to be inserted into
   3221    * the text buffer. Rather, it is meant to illustrate the type that an
   3222    * expression using the given completion string would have.
   3223    */
   3224   CXCompletionChunk_ResultType,
   3225   /**
   3226    * \brief A colon (':').
   3227    */
   3228   CXCompletionChunk_Colon,
   3229   /**
   3230    * \brief A semicolon (';').
   3231    */
   3232   CXCompletionChunk_SemiColon,
   3233   /**
   3234    * \brief An '=' sign.
   3235    */
   3236   CXCompletionChunk_Equal,
   3237   /**
   3238    * Horizontal space (' ').
   3239    */
   3240   CXCompletionChunk_HorizontalSpace,
   3241   /**
   3242    * Vertical space ('\n'), after which it is generally a good idea to
   3243    * perform indentation.
   3244    */
   3245   CXCompletionChunk_VerticalSpace
   3246 };
   3247 
   3248 /**
   3249  * \brief Determine the kind of a particular chunk within a completion string.
   3250  *
   3251  * \param completion_string the completion string to query.
   3252  *
   3253  * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string.
   3254  *
   3255  * \returns the kind of the chunk at the index \c chunk_number.
   3256  */
   3257 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXCompletionChunkKind
   3258 clang_getCompletionChunkKind(CXCompletionString completion_string,
   3259                              unsigned chunk_number);
   3260 
   3261 /**
   3262  * \brief Retrieve the text associated with a particular chunk within a
   3263  * completion string.
   3264  *
   3265  * \param completion_string the completion string to query.
   3266  *
   3267  * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string.
   3268  *
   3269  * \returns the text associated with the chunk at index \c chunk_number.
   3270  */
   3271 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString
   3272 clang_getCompletionChunkText(CXCompletionString completion_string,
   3273                              unsigned chunk_number);
   3274 
   3275 /**
   3276  * \brief Retrieve the completion string associated with a particular chunk
   3277  * within a completion string.
   3278  *
   3279  * \param completion_string the completion string to query.
   3280  *
   3281  * \param chunk_number the 0-based index of the chunk in the completion string.
   3282  *
   3283  * \returns the completion string associated with the chunk at index
   3284  * \c chunk_number.
   3285  */
   3286 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCompletionString
   3287 clang_getCompletionChunkCompletionString(CXCompletionString completion_string,
   3288                                          unsigned chunk_number);
   3289 
   3290 /**
   3291  * \brief Retrieve the number of chunks in the given code-completion string.
   3292  */
   3293 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned
   3294 clang_getNumCompletionChunks(CXCompletionString completion_string);
   3295 
   3296 /**
   3297  * \brief Determine the priority of this code completion.
   3298  *
   3299  * The priority of a code completion indicates how likely it is that this
   3300  * particular completion is the completion that the user will select. The
   3301  * priority is selected by various internal heuristics.
   3302  *
   3303  * \param completion_string The completion string to query.
   3304  *
   3305  * \returns The priority of this completion string. Smaller values indicate
   3306  * higher-priority (more likely) completions.
   3307  */
   3308 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned
   3309 clang_getCompletionPriority(CXCompletionString completion_string);
   3310 
   3311 /**
   3312  * \brief Determine the availability of the entity that this code-completion
   3313  * string refers to.
   3314  *
   3315  * \param completion_string The completion string to query.
   3316  *
   3317  * \returns The availability of the completion string.
   3318  */
   3319 CINDEX_LINKAGE enum CXAvailabilityKind
   3320 clang_getCompletionAvailability(CXCompletionString completion_string);
   3321 
   3322 /**
   3323  * \brief Retrieve the number of annotations associated with the given
   3324  * completion string.
   3325  *
   3326  * \param completion_string the completion string to query.
   3327  *
   3328  * \returns the number of annotations associated with the given completion
   3329  * string.
   3330  */
   3331 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned
   3332 clang_getCompletionNumAnnotations(CXCompletionString completion_string);
   3333 
   3334 /**
   3335  * \brief Retrieve the annotation associated with the given completion string.
   3336  *
   3337  * \param completion_string the completion string to query.
   3338  *
   3339  * \param annotation_number the 0-based index of the annotation of the
   3340  * completion string.
   3341  *
   3342  * \returns annotation string associated with the completion at index
   3343  * \c annotation_number, or a NULL string if that annotation is not available.
   3344  */
   3345 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString
   3346 clang_getCompletionAnnotation(CXCompletionString completion_string,
   3347                               unsigned annotation_number);
   3348 
   3349 /**
   3350  * \brief Retrieve a completion string for an arbitrary declaration or macro
   3351  * definition cursor.
   3352  *
   3353  * \param cursor The cursor to query.
   3354  *
   3355  * \returns A non-context-sensitive completion string for declaration and macro
   3356  * definition cursors, or NULL for other kinds of cursors.
   3357  */
   3358 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXCompletionString
   3359 clang_getCursorCompletionString(CXCursor cursor);
   3360 
   3361 /**
   3362  * \brief Contains the results of code-completion.
   3363  *
   3364  * This data structure contains the results of code completion, as
   3365  * produced by \c clang_codeCompleteAt(). Its contents must be freed by
   3366  * \c clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults.
   3367  */
   3368 typedef struct {
   3369   /**
   3370    * \brief The code-completion results.
   3371    */
   3372   CXCompletionResult *Results;
   3373 
   3374   /**
   3375    * \brief The number of code-completion results stored in the
   3376    * \c Results array.
   3377    */
   3378   unsigned NumResults;
   3379 } CXCodeCompleteResults;
   3380 
   3381 /**
   3382  * \brief Flags that can be passed to \c clang_codeCompleteAt() to
   3383  * modify its behavior.
   3384  *
   3385  * The enumerators in this enumeration can be bitwise-OR'd together to
   3386  * provide multiple options to \c clang_codeCompleteAt().
   3387  */
   3388 enum CXCodeComplete_Flags {
   3389   /**
   3390    * \brief Whether to include macros within the set of code
   3391    * completions returned.
   3392    */
   3393   CXCodeComplete_IncludeMacros = 0x01,
   3394 
   3395   /**
   3396    * \brief Whether to include code patterns for language constructs
   3397    * within the set of code completions, e.g., for loops.
   3398    */
   3399   CXCodeComplete_IncludeCodePatterns = 0x02
   3400 };
   3401 
   3402 /**
   3403  * \brief Bits that represent the context under which completion is occurring.
   3404  *
   3405  * The enumerators in this enumeration may be bitwise-OR'd together if multiple
   3406  * contexts are occurring simultaneously.
   3407  */
   3408 enum CXCompletionContext {
   3409   /**
   3410    * \brief The context for completions is unexposed, as only Clang results
   3411    * should be included. (This is equivalent to having no context bits set.)
   3412    */
   3413   CXCompletionContext_Unexposed = 0,
   3414 
   3415   /**
   3416    * \brief Completions for any possible type should be included in the results.
   3417    */
   3418   CXCompletionContext_AnyType = 1 << 0,
   3419 
   3420   /**
   3421    * \brief Completions for any possible value (variables, function calls, etc.)
   3422    * should be included in the results.
   3423    */
   3424   CXCompletionContext_AnyValue = 1 << 1,
   3425   /**
   3426    * \brief Completions for values that resolve to an Objective-C object should
   3427    * be included in the results.
   3428    */
   3429   CXCompletionContext_ObjCObjectValue = 1 << 2,
   3430   /**
   3431    * \brief Completions for values that resolve to an Objective-C selector
   3432    * should be included in the results.
   3433    */
   3434   CXCompletionContext_ObjCSelectorValue = 1 << 3,
   3435   /**
   3436    * \brief Completions for values that resolve to a C++ class type should be
   3437    * included in the results.
   3438    */
   3439   CXCompletionContext_CXXClassTypeValue = 1 << 4,
   3440 
   3441   /**
   3442    * \brief Completions for fields of the member being accessed using the dot
   3443    * operator should be included in the results.
   3444    */
   3445   CXCompletionContext_DotMemberAccess = 1 << 5,
   3446   /**
   3447    * \brief Completions for fields of the member being accessed using the arrow
   3448    * operator should be included in the results.
   3449    */
   3450   CXCompletionContext_ArrowMemberAccess = 1 << 6,
   3451   /**
   3452    * \brief Completions for properties of the Objective-C object being accessed
   3453    * using the dot operator should be included in the results.
   3454    */
   3455   CXCompletionContext_ObjCPropertyAccess = 1 << 7,
   3456 
   3457   /**
   3458    * \brief Completions for enum tags should be included in the results.
   3459    */
   3460   CXCompletionContext_EnumTag = 1 << 8,
   3461   /**
   3462    * \brief Completions for union tags should be included in the results.
   3463    */
   3464   CXCompletionContext_UnionTag = 1 << 9,
   3465   /**
   3466    * \brief Completions for struct tags should be included in the results.
   3467    */
   3468   CXCompletionContext_StructTag = 1 << 10,
   3469 
   3470   /**
   3471    * \brief Completions for C++ class names should be included in the results.
   3472    */
   3473   CXCompletionContext_ClassTag = 1 << 11,
   3474   /**
   3475    * \brief Completions for C++ namespaces and namespace aliases should be
   3476    * included in the results.
   3477    */
   3478   CXCompletionContext_Namespace = 1 << 12,
   3479   /**
   3480    * \brief Completions for C++ nested name specifiers should be included in
   3481    * the results.
   3482    */
   3483   CXCompletionContext_NestedNameSpecifier = 1 << 13,
   3484 
   3485   /**
   3486    * \brief Completions for Objective-C interfaces (classes) should be included
   3487    * in the results.
   3488    */
   3489   CXCompletionContext_ObjCInterface = 1 << 14,
   3490   /**
   3491    * \brief Completions for Objective-C protocols should be included in
   3492    * the results.
   3493    */
   3494   CXCompletionContext_ObjCProtocol = 1 << 15,
   3495   /**
   3496    * \brief Completions for Objective-C categories should be included in
   3497    * the results.
   3498    */
   3499   CXCompletionContext_ObjCCategory = 1 << 16,
   3500   /**
   3501    * \brief Completions for Objective-C instance messages should be included
   3502    * in the results.
   3503    */
   3504   CXCompletionContext_ObjCInstanceMessage = 1 << 17,
   3505   /**
   3506    * \brief Completions for Objective-C class messages should be included in
   3507    * the results.
   3508    */
   3509   CXCompletionContext_ObjCClassMessage = 1 << 18,
   3510   /**
   3511    * \brief Completions for Objective-C selector names should be included in
   3512    * the results.
   3513    */
   3514   CXCompletionContext_ObjCSelectorName = 1 << 19,
   3515 
   3516   /**
   3517    * \brief Completions for preprocessor macro names should be included in
   3518    * the results.
   3519    */
   3520   CXCompletionContext_MacroName = 1 << 20,
   3521 
   3522   /**
   3523    * \brief Natural language completions should be included in the results.
   3524    */
   3525   CXCompletionContext_NaturalLanguage = 1 << 21,
   3526 
   3527   /**
   3528    * \brief The current context is unknown, so set all contexts.
   3529    */
   3530   CXCompletionContext_Unknown = ((1 << 22) - 1)
   3531 };
   3532 
   3533 /**
   3534  * \brief Returns a default set of code-completion options that can be
   3535  * passed to\c clang_codeCompleteAt().
   3536  */
   3537 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_defaultCodeCompleteOptions(void);
   3538 
   3539 /**
   3540  * \brief Perform code completion at a given location in a translation unit.
   3541  *
   3542  * This function performs code completion at a particular file, line, and
   3543  * column within source code, providing results that suggest potential
   3544  * code snippets based on the context of the completion. The basic model
   3545  * for code completion is that Clang will parse a complete source file,
   3546  * performing syntax checking up to the location where code-completion has
   3547  * been requested. At that point, a special code-completion token is passed
   3548  * to the parser, which recognizes this token and determines, based on the
   3549  * current location in the C/Objective-C/C++ grammar and the state of
   3550  * semantic analysis, what completions to provide. These completions are
   3551  * returned via a new \c CXCodeCompleteResults structure.
   3552  *
   3553  * Code completion itself is meant to be triggered by the client when the
   3554  * user types punctuation characters or whitespace, at which point the
   3555  * code-completion location will coincide with the cursor. For example, if \c p
   3556  * is a pointer, code-completion might be triggered after the "-" and then
   3557  * after the ">" in \c p->. When the code-completion location is afer the ">",
   3558  * the completion results will provide, e.g., the members of the struct that
   3559  * "p" points to. The client is responsible for placing the cursor at the
   3560  * beginning of the token currently being typed, then filtering the results
   3561  * based on the contents of the token. For example, when code-completing for
   3562  * the expression \c p->get, the client should provide the location just after
   3563  * the ">" (e.g., pointing at the "g") to this code-completion hook. Then, the
   3564  * client can filter the results based on the current token text ("get"), only
   3565  * showing those results that start with "get". The intent of this interface
   3566  * is to separate the relatively high-latency acquisition of code-completion
   3567  * results from the filtering of results on a per-character basis, which must
   3568  * have a lower latency.
   3569  *
   3570  * \param TU The translation unit in which code-completion should
   3571  * occur. The source files for this translation unit need not be
   3572  * completely up-to-date (and the contents of those source files may
   3573  * be overridden via \p unsaved_files). Cursors referring into the
   3574  * translation unit may be invalidated by this invocation.
   3575  *
   3576  * \param complete_filename The name of the source file where code
   3577  * completion should be performed. This filename may be any file
   3578  * included in the translation unit.
   3579  *
   3580  * \param complete_line The line at which code-completion should occur.
   3581  *
   3582  * \param complete_column The column at which code-completion should occur.
   3583  * Note that the column should point just after the syntactic construct that
   3584  * initiated code completion, and not in the middle of a lexical token.
   3585  *
   3586  * \param unsaved_files the Tiles that have not yet been saved to disk
   3587  * but may be required for parsing or code completion, including the
   3588  * contents of those files.  The contents and name of these files (as
   3589  * specified by CXUnsavedFile) are copied when necessary, so the
   3590  * client only needs to guarantee their validity until the call to
   3591  * this function returns.
   3592  *
   3593  * \param num_unsaved_files The number of unsaved file entries in \p
   3594  * unsaved_files.
   3595  *
   3596  * \param options Extra options that control the behavior of code
   3597  * completion, expressed as a bitwise OR of the enumerators of the
   3598  * CXCodeComplete_Flags enumeration. The
   3599  * \c clang_defaultCodeCompleteOptions() function returns a default set
   3600  * of code-completion options.
   3601  *
   3602  * \returns If successful, a new \c CXCodeCompleteResults structure
   3603  * containing code-completion results, which should eventually be
   3604  * freed with \c clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults(). If code
   3605  * completion fails, returns NULL.
   3606  */
   3607 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3608 CXCodeCompleteResults *clang_codeCompleteAt(CXTranslationUnit TU,
   3609                                             const char *complete_filename,
   3610                                             unsigned complete_line,
   3611                                             unsigned complete_column,
   3612                                             struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files,
   3613                                             unsigned num_unsaved_files,
   3614                                             unsigned options);
   3615 
   3616 /**
   3617  * \brief Sort the code-completion results in case-insensitive alphabetical
   3618  * order.
   3619  *
   3620  * \param Results The set of results to sort.
   3621  * \param NumResults The number of results in \p Results.
   3622  */
   3623 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3624 void clang_sortCodeCompletionResults(CXCompletionResult *Results,
   3625                                      unsigned NumResults);
   3626 
   3627 /**
   3628  * \brief Free the given set of code-completion results.
   3629  */
   3630 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3631 void clang_disposeCodeCompleteResults(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results);
   3632 
   3633 /**
   3634  * \brief Determine the number of diagnostics produced prior to the
   3635  * location where code completion was performed.
   3636  */
   3637 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3638 unsigned clang_codeCompleteGetNumDiagnostics(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results);
   3639 
   3640 /**
   3641  * \brief Retrieve a diagnostic associated with the given code completion.
   3642  *
   3643  * \param Result the code completion results to query.
   3644  * \param Index the zero-based diagnostic number to retrieve.
   3645  *
   3646  * \returns the requested diagnostic. This diagnostic must be freed
   3647  * via a call to \c clang_disposeDiagnostic().
   3648  */
   3649 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3650 CXDiagnostic clang_codeCompleteGetDiagnostic(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results,
   3651                                              unsigned Index);
   3652 
   3653 /**
   3654  * \brief Determines what compeltions are appropriate for the context
   3655  * the given code completion.
   3656  *
   3657  * \param Results the code completion results to query
   3658  *
   3659  * \returns the kinds of completions that are appropriate for use
   3660  * along with the given code completion results.
   3661  */
   3662 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3663 unsigned long long clang_codeCompleteGetContexts(
   3664                                                 CXCodeCompleteResults *Results);
   3665 
   3666 /**
   3667  * \brief Returns the cursor kind for the container for the current code
   3668  * completion context. The container is only guaranteed to be set for
   3669  * contexts where a container exists (i.e. member accesses or Objective-C
   3670  * message sends); if there is not a container, this function will return
   3671  * CXCursor_InvalidCode.
   3672  *
   3673  * \param Results the code completion results to query
   3674  *
   3675  * \param IsIncomplete on return, this value will be false if Clang has complete
   3676  * information about the container. If Clang does not have complete
   3677  * information, this value will be true.
   3678  *
   3679  * \returns the container kind, or CXCursor_InvalidCode if there is not a
   3680  * container
   3681  */
   3682 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3683 enum CXCursorKind clang_codeCompleteGetContainerKind(
   3684                                                  CXCodeCompleteResults *Results,
   3685                                                      unsigned *IsIncomplete);
   3686 
   3687 /**
   3688  * \brief Returns the USR for the container for the current code completion
   3689  * context. If there is not a container for the current context, this
   3690  * function will return the empty string.
   3691  *
   3692  * \param Results the code completion results to query
   3693  *
   3694  * \returns the USR for the container
   3695  */
   3696 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3697 CXString clang_codeCompleteGetContainerUSR(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results);
   3698 
   3699 
   3700 /**
   3701  * \brief Returns the currently-entered selector for an Objective-C message
   3702  * send, formatted like "initWithFoo:bar:". Only guaranteed to return a
   3703  * non-empty string for CXCompletionContext_ObjCInstanceMessage and
   3704  * CXCompletionContext_ObjCClassMessage.
   3705  *
   3706  * \param Results the code completion results to query
   3707  *
   3708  * \returns the selector (or partial selector) that has been entered thus far
   3709  * for an Objective-C message send.
   3710  */
   3711 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3712 CXString clang_codeCompleteGetObjCSelector(CXCodeCompleteResults *Results);
   3713 
   3714 /**
   3715  * @}
   3716  */
   3717 
   3718 
   3719 /**
   3720  * \defgroup CINDEX_MISC Miscellaneous utility functions
   3721  *
   3722  * @{
   3723  */
   3724 
   3725 /**
   3726  * \brief Return a version string, suitable for showing to a user, but not
   3727  *        intended to be parsed (the format is not guaranteed to be stable).
   3728  */
   3729 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXString clang_getClangVersion();
   3730 
   3731 
   3732 /**
   3733  * \brief Enable/disable crash recovery.
   3734  *
   3735  * \param Flag to indicate if crash recovery is enabled.  A non-zero value
   3736  *        enables crash recovery, while 0 disables it.
   3737  */
   3738 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_toggleCrashRecovery(unsigned isEnabled);
   3739 
   3740  /**
   3741   * \brief Visitor invoked for each file in a translation unit
   3742   *        (used with clang_getInclusions()).
   3743   *
   3744   * This visitor function will be invoked by clang_getInclusions() for each
   3745   * file included (either at the top-level or by #include directives) within
   3746   * a translation unit.  The first argument is the file being included, and
   3747   * the second and third arguments provide the inclusion stack.  The
   3748   * array is sorted in order of immediate inclusion.  For example,
   3749   * the first element refers to the location that included 'included_file'.
   3750   */
   3751 typedef void (*CXInclusionVisitor)(CXFile included_file,
   3752                                    CXSourceLocation* inclusion_stack,
   3753                                    unsigned include_len,
   3754                                    CXClientData client_data);
   3755 
   3756 /**
   3757  * \brief Visit the set of preprocessor inclusions in a translation unit.
   3758  *   The visitor function is called with the provided data for every included
   3759  *   file.  This does not include headers included by the PCH file (unless one
   3760  *   is inspecting the inclusions in the PCH file itself).
   3761  */
   3762 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_getInclusions(CXTranslationUnit tu,
   3763                                         CXInclusionVisitor visitor,
   3764                                         CXClientData client_data);
   3765 
   3766 /**
   3767  * @}
   3768  */
   3769 
   3770 /** \defgroup CINDEX_REMAPPING Remapping functions
   3771  *
   3772  * @{
   3773  */
   3774 
   3775 /**
   3776  * \brief A remapping of original source files and their translated files.
   3777  */
   3778 typedef void *CXRemapping;
   3779 
   3780 /**
   3781  * \brief Retrieve a remapping.
   3782  *
   3783  * \param path the path that contains metadata about remappings.
   3784  *
   3785  * \returns the requested remapping. This remapping must be freed
   3786  * via a call to \c clang_remap_dispose(). Can return NULL if an error occurred.
   3787  */
   3788 CINDEX_LINKAGE CXRemapping clang_getRemappings(const char *path);
   3789 
   3790 /**
   3791  * \brief Determine the number of remappings.
   3792  */
   3793 CINDEX_LINKAGE unsigned clang_remap_getNumFiles(CXRemapping);
   3794 
   3795 /**
   3796  * \brief Get the original and the associated filename from the remapping.
   3797  *
   3798  * \param original If non-NULL, will be set to the original filename.
   3799  *
   3800  * \param transformed If non-NULL, will be set to the filename that the original
   3801  * is associated with.
   3802  */
   3803 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_remap_getFilenames(CXRemapping, unsigned index,
   3804                                      CXString *original, CXString *transformed);
   3805 
   3806 /**
   3807  * \brief Dispose the remapping.
   3808  */
   3809 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_remap_dispose(CXRemapping);
   3810 
   3811 /**
   3812  * @}
   3813  */
   3814 
   3815 /** \defgroup CINDEX_HIGH Higher level API functions
   3816  *
   3817  * @{
   3818  */
   3819 
   3820 enum CXVisitorResult {
   3821   CXVisit_Break,
   3822   CXVisit_Continue
   3823 };
   3824 
   3825 typedef struct {
   3826   void *context;
   3827   enum CXVisitorResult (*visit)(void *context, CXCursor, CXSourceRange);
   3828 } CXCursorAndRangeVisitor;
   3829 
   3830 /**
   3831  * \brief Find references of a declaration in a specific file.
   3832  *
   3833  * \param cursor pointing to a declaration or a reference of one.
   3834  *
   3835  * \param file to search for references.
   3836  *
   3837  * \param visitor callback that will receive pairs of CXCursor/CXSourceRange for
   3838  * each reference found.
   3839  * The CXSourceRange will point inside the file; if the reference is inside
   3840  * a macro (and not a macro argument) the CXSourceRange will be invalid.
   3841  */
   3842 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_findReferencesInFile(CXCursor cursor, CXFile file,
   3843                                                CXCursorAndRangeVisitor visitor);
   3844 
   3845 #ifdef __has_feature
   3846 #  if __has_feature(blocks)
   3847 
   3848 typedef enum CXVisitorResult
   3849     (^CXCursorAndRangeVisitorBlock)(CXCursor, CXSourceRange);
   3850 
   3851 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   3852 void clang_findReferencesInFileWithBlock(CXCursor, CXFile,
   3853                                          CXCursorAndRangeVisitorBlock);
   3854 
   3855 #  endif
   3856 #endif
   3857 
   3858 typedef void *CXIdxFile;
   3859 typedef void *CXIdxEntity;
   3860 typedef void *CXIdxContainer;
   3861 typedef void *CXIdxMacro;
   3862 typedef void *CXIdxASTFile;
   3863 
   3864 typedef struct {
   3865   void *ptr_data[2];
   3866   unsigned int_data;
   3867 } CXIdxLoc;
   3868 
   3869 typedef struct {
   3870   CXIdxLoc hashLoc;
   3871   const char *filename;
   3872   CXIdxFile file;
   3873   int isImport;
   3874   int isAngled;
   3875 } CXIdxIncludedFileInfo;
   3876 
   3877 typedef struct {
   3878   CXFile file;
   3879   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3880   int isModule;
   3881 } CXIdxImportedASTFileInfo;
   3882 
   3883 typedef struct {
   3884   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3885   const char *name;
   3886 } CXIdxMacroInfo;
   3887 
   3888 typedef struct {
   3889   CXIdxMacroInfo *macroInfo;
   3890   CXIdxLoc defBegin;
   3891   unsigned defLength;
   3892 } CXIdxMacroDefinedInfo;
   3893 
   3894 typedef struct {
   3895   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3896   const char *name;
   3897   CXIdxMacro macro;
   3898 } CXIdxMacroUndefinedInfo;
   3899 
   3900 typedef struct {
   3901   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3902   const char *name;
   3903   CXIdxMacro macro;
   3904 } CXIdxMacroExpandedInfo;
   3905 
   3906 typedef struct {
   3907   const char *name;
   3908   const char *USR;
   3909 } CXIdxEntityInfo;
   3910 
   3911 typedef struct {
   3912   CXCursor cursor;
   3913   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3914   CXIdxContainer container;
   3915 } CXIdxIndexedDeclInfo;
   3916 
   3917 typedef struct {
   3918   CXIdxEntityInfo *entityInfo;
   3919   CXCursor cursor;
   3920   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3921   CXIdxASTFile ASTFile;
   3922 } CXIdxImportedEntityInfo;
   3923 
   3924 typedef struct {
   3925   CXIdxMacroInfo *macroInfo;
   3926   CXIdxASTFile ASTFile;
   3927 } CXIdxImportedMacroInfo;
   3928 
   3929 typedef struct {
   3930   CXIdxEntityInfo *entityInfo;
   3931   CXIdxIndexedDeclInfo *declInfo;
   3932 } CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo;
   3933 
   3934 typedef struct {
   3935   CXIdxIndexedDeclInfo *declInfo;
   3936   CXIdxEntity entity;
   3937 } CXIdxIndexedRedeclInfo;
   3938 
   3939 typedef struct {
   3940   CXCursor cursor;
   3941   CXIdxLoc loc;
   3942   CXIdxEntity entity;
   3943 } CXIdxContainerInfo;
   3944 
   3945 typedef struct {
   3946   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3947 } CXIdxTypedefInfo;
   3948 
   3949 typedef struct {
   3950   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3951   int isDefinition;
   3952 } CXIdxFunctionInfo;
   3953 
   3954 typedef struct {
   3955   CXIdxIndexedRedeclInfo *indexedRedeclInfo;
   3956   int isDefinition;
   3957 } CXIdxFunctionRedeclInfo;
   3958 
   3959 typedef struct {
   3960   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3961   int isDefinition;
   3962 } CXIdxVariableInfo;
   3963 
   3964 typedef struct {
   3965   CXIdxIndexedRedeclInfo *indexedRedeclInfo;
   3966   int isDefinition;
   3967 } CXIdxVariableRedeclInfo;
   3968 
   3969 typedef struct {
   3970   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3971   int isDefinition;
   3972   int isAnonymous;
   3973 } CXIdxTagTypeInfo;
   3974 
   3975 typedef struct {
   3976   CXIdxIndexedRedeclInfo *indexedRedeclInfo;
   3977   int isDefinition;
   3978 } CXIdxTagTypeRedeclInfo;
   3979 
   3980 typedef struct {
   3981   CXIdxContainerInfo *containerInfo;
   3982 } CXIdxTagTypeDefinitionInfo;
   3983 
   3984 typedef struct {
   3985   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3986 } CXIdxFieldInfo;
   3987 
   3988 typedef struct {
   3989   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3990 } CXIdxEnumeratorInfo;
   3991 
   3992 typedef struct {
   3993   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3994   int isForwardRef;
   3995 } CXIdxObjCClassInfo;
   3996 
   3997 typedef struct {
   3998   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   3999   int isForwardRef;
   4000 } CXIdxObjCProtocolInfo;
   4001 
   4002 typedef struct {
   4003   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   4004   CXIdxEntity objcClass;
   4005 } CXIdxObjCCategoryInfo;
   4006 
   4007 typedef struct {
   4008   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   4009   int isDefinition;
   4010 } CXIdxObjCMethodInfo;
   4011 
   4012 typedef struct {
   4013   CXIdxIndexedEntityInfo *indexedEntityInfo;
   4014 } CXIdxObjCPropertyInfo;
   4015 
   4016 typedef struct {
   4017   CXIdxIndexedRedeclInfo *indexedRedeclInfo;
   4018   int isDefinition;
   4019 } CXIdxObjCMethodRedeclInfo;
   4020 
   4021 typedef struct {
   4022   CXIdxContainerInfo *containerInfo;
   4023   CXIdxLoc bodyBegin;
   4024 } CXIdxStmtBodyInfo;
   4025 
   4026 typedef struct {
   4027   CXIdxContainerInfo *containerInfo;
   4028 } CXIdxObjCContainerInfo;
   4029 
   4030 typedef struct {
   4031   CXIdxEntity objcClass;
   4032   CXIdxLoc loc;
   4033 } CXIdxObjCBaseClassInfo;
   4034 
   4035 typedef struct {
   4036   CXIdxEntity protocol;
   4037   CXIdxLoc loc;
   4038 } CXIdxObjCProtocolRefInfo;
   4039 
   4040 typedef struct {
   4041   CXCursor cursor;
   4042   CXIdxEntity objcClass;
   4043   CXIdxContainer container;
   4044   CXIdxObjCBaseClassInfo *baseInfo;
   4045   CXIdxObjCProtocolRefInfo **protocols;
   4046   unsigned numProtocols;
   4047 } CXIdxObjCClassDefineInfo;
   4048 
   4049 typedef struct {
   4050   CXIdxContainer container;
   4051   CXIdxLoc endLoc;
   4052 } CXIdxEndContainerInfo;
   4053 
   4054 typedef enum {
   4055   CXIdxEntityRef_Direct = 1,
   4056   CXIdxEntityRef_ImplicitProperty = 2
   4057 } CXIdxEntityRefKind;
   4058 
   4059 typedef struct {
   4060   CXCursor cursor;
   4061   CXIdxLoc loc;
   4062   CXIdxEntity referencedEntity;
   4063   CXIdxEntity parentEntity;
   4064   CXIdxContainer container;
   4065   CXIdxEntityRefKind kind;
   4066 } CXIdxEntityRefInfo;
   4067 
   4068 typedef struct {
   4069   void (*diagnostic)(CXClientData client_data,
   4070                      CXDiagnostic, void *reserved);
   4071 
   4072   CXIdxFile (*recordFile)(CXClientData client_data,
   4073                           CXFile file, void *reserved);
   4074 
   4075   void (*ppIncludedFile)(CXClientData client_data,
   4076                          CXIdxIncludedFileInfo *);
   4077 
   4078   CXIdxMacro (*ppMacroDefined)(CXClientData client_data,
   4079                                CXIdxMacroDefinedInfo *);
   4080 
   4081   void (*ppMacroUndefined)(CXClientData client_data,
   4082                            CXIdxMacroUndefinedInfo *);
   4083 
   4084   void (*ppMacroExpanded)(CXClientData client_data,
   4085                           CXIdxMacroExpandedInfo *);
   4086 
   4087   CXIdxASTFile (*importedASTFile)(CXClientData client_data,
   4088                                   CXIdxImportedASTFileInfo *);
   4089 
   4090   CXIdxEntity (*importedEntity)(CXClientData client_data,
   4091                                 CXIdxImportedEntityInfo *);
   4092 
   4093   CXIdxEntity (*importedMacro)(CXClientData client_data,
   4094                                CXIdxImportedMacroInfo *);
   4095 
   4096   CXIdxContainer (*startedTranslationUnit)(CXClientData client_data,
   4097                                            void *reserved);
   4098 
   4099   CXIdxEntity (*indexTypedef)(CXClientData client_data,
   4100                               CXIdxTypedefInfo *);
   4101 
   4102   CXIdxEntity (*indexFunction)(CXClientData client_data,
   4103                                CXIdxFunctionInfo *);
   4104 
   4105   void (*indexFunctionRedeclaration)(CXClientData client_data,
   4106                                      CXIdxFunctionRedeclInfo *);
   4107 
   4108   CXIdxEntity (*indexVariable)(CXClientData client_data,
   4109                                CXIdxVariableInfo *);
   4110 
   4111   void (*indexVariableRedeclaration)(CXClientData client_data,
   4112                                      CXIdxVariableRedeclInfo *);
   4113 
   4114   CXIdxEntity (*indexTagType)(CXClientData client_data,
   4115                               CXIdxTagTypeInfo *);
   4116 
   4117   void (*indexTagTypeRedeclaration)(CXClientData client_data,
   4118                                     CXIdxTagTypeRedeclInfo *);
   4119 
   4120   CXIdxEntity (*indexField)(CXClientData client_data,
   4121                             CXIdxFieldInfo *);
   4122 
   4123   CXIdxEntity (*indexEnumerator)(CXClientData client_data,
   4124                                  CXIdxEnumeratorInfo *);
   4125 
   4126   CXIdxContainer (*startedTagTypeDefinition)(CXClientData client_data,
   4127                                             CXIdxTagTypeDefinitionInfo *);
   4128 
   4129   CXIdxEntity (*indexObjCClass)(CXClientData client_data,
   4130                                 CXIdxObjCClassInfo *);
   4131 
   4132   CXIdxEntity (*indexObjCProtocol)(CXClientData client_data,
   4133                                    CXIdxObjCProtocolInfo *);
   4134 
   4135   CXIdxEntity (*indexObjCCategory)(CXClientData client_data,
   4136                                    CXIdxObjCCategoryInfo *);
   4137 
   4138   CXIdxEntity (*indexObjCMethod)(CXClientData client_data,
   4139                                  CXIdxObjCMethodInfo *);
   4140 
   4141   CXIdxEntity (*indexObjCProperty)(CXClientData client_data,
   4142                                    CXIdxObjCPropertyInfo *);
   4143 
   4144   void (*indexObjCMethodRedeclaration)(CXClientData client_data,
   4145                                        CXIdxObjCMethodRedeclInfo *);
   4146 
   4147   CXIdxContainer (*startedStatementBody)(CXClientData client_data,
   4148                                          CXIdxStmtBodyInfo *);
   4149 
   4150   CXIdxContainer (*startedObjCContainer)(CXClientData client_data,
   4151                                          CXIdxObjCContainerInfo *);
   4152 
   4153   void (*defineObjCClass)(CXClientData client_data,
   4154                           CXIdxObjCClassDefineInfo *);
   4155 
   4156   void (*endedContainer)(CXClientData client_data,
   4157                          CXIdxEndContainerInfo *);
   4158 
   4159   void (*indexEntityReference)(CXClientData client_data,
   4160                                CXIdxEntityRefInfo *);
   4161 
   4162 } IndexerCallbacks;
   4163 
   4164 CINDEX_LINKAGE int clang_indexTranslationUnit(CXIndex CIdx,
   4165                                          CXClientData client_data,
   4166                                          IndexerCallbacks *index_callbacks,
   4167                                          unsigned index_callbacks_size,
   4168                                          unsigned index_options,
   4169                                          const char *source_filename,
   4170                                          const char * const *command_line_args,
   4171                                          int num_command_line_args,
   4172                                          struct CXUnsavedFile *unsaved_files,
   4173                                          unsigned num_unsaved_files,
   4174                                          CXTranslationUnit *out_TU,
   4175                                          unsigned TU_options);
   4176 
   4177 CINDEX_LINKAGE void clang_indexLoc_getFileLocation(CXIdxLoc loc,
   4178                                                    CXIdxFile *indexFile,
   4179                                                    CXFile *file,
   4180                                                    unsigned *line,
   4181                                                    unsigned *column,
   4182                                                    unsigned *offset);
   4183 
   4184 CINDEX_LINKAGE
   4185 CXSourceLocation clang_indexLoc_getCXSourceLocation(CXIdxLoc loc);
   4186 
   4187 /**
   4188  * @}
   4189  */
   4190 
   4191 /**
   4192  * @}
   4193  */
   4194 
   4195 #ifdef __cplusplus
   4196 }
   4197 #endif
   4198 #endif
   4199 
   4200