Skip to content

xiaohongchen1991/clang-xform

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

34 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Status

Release versions

version 1.1.0:

  • matcher supports its own command line arguments

  • gen-test.py supports generating test for matchers with command line options

  • matcher "RenameFcn" is modified to support command line options

  • support new flag "-v, --version" to display version number

Description

clang-xform is a clang-based app that automatically performs predefined transformation on C++ source code. It can match certain code pattern and apply specified transformation through the Clang AST matcher and its callback function registered by the user. The predefined AST matchers are listed and explained in Matcher list. The Quick tutorial will demonstrate how to quickly authorize your own AST matchers and apply them in your codebase. Author/contact: Xiaohong Chen, xiaohong_chen1991@hotmail.com

Quick tutorial

This tutorial is aimed to demonstrate how to write your own Clang AST matcher and apply it in your codebase. Let's suppose you want to write a matcher to match all the callsites of function "Foo" and then rename them as "Bar". Typical workflow:

  1. Clone the git repository
git clone URL
  1. Let's say the matcher ID is "RenameFoo". One can create a matcher template file by using
cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform/src/matchers/rename
../../../scripts/gen-matcher.py RenameFoo
  1. A cpp file named "RenameFoo.cpp" is created in the current working directory. Edit it following the instructions in the file. In RenameFoo.cpp, you only need to edit the definitions of the matcher and its callback function. The following is the code snippet of the generated template file.
// This is a generated template file to help write your own clang AST matcher and callback.
// If you want to support command line options, use -o, --option flag for gen-option-matcher.py.
// Please address all comments in /**/ form below!
// [1] : use StatementMatcher or DeclarationMatcher
// [2] : replace it with a suitable node matcher
// [3] : add narrowing or traversal matchers here
// [4] : rename the string ID for a better description of the matched node
// [5] : replace it with the corresponding node class type bound with the string ID
// [6] : variable name for the matched node
// [7] : same as [5]
// [8] : string ID used in matcher, same as [4]
// [9] : name of the node to be replaced
// [10]: string used to replace the matched node
// [11]: Use ReplaceText() for replacement and InsertText() for insertion (ex. header insertion)
// [12]: use "LogASTNode(locBegin, srcMgr, oldExprString)" to log matched AST Node information

namespace {

// Match callback class RenameFooCallback is defined here
MATCH_CALLBACK(RenameFooCallback);

void RenameFooCallback::RegisterMatchers(clang::ast_matchers::MatchFinder* finder) {
  // Define your own matcher here.
  // Use StatementMatcher to match statements and DeclarationMatcher to match declarations.
  // It is recommended that isExpansionInMainFile() is used to avoid matches in
  // system headers or third-party libraries.
  // For AST matcher reference, see: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LibASTMatchersReference.html
  // For AST matcher examples, check files under "matchers/" directory
  StatementMatcher/*[1]*/ RenameFooMatcher =
      expr/*[2]*/(/*[3]*/,
                  isExpansionInMainFile()
                  ).bind("RenameFooExpr"/*[4]*/);

  finder->addMatcher(RenameFooMatcher, this);
}

// Definition of RenameFooCallback::run
void RenameFooCallback::run(const clang::ast_matchers::MatchFinder::MatchResult& Result) {
  std::string oldExprString;
  std::string newExprString;
  const auto& srcMgr = Result.Context->getSourceManager();
  const auto& langOpts = Result.Context->getLangOpts();

  // Check any AST node matched for the given string ID.
  // The node class name is usually the capitalized node matcher name.
  if (const Expr* /*[5]*/ RenameFooExpr/*[6]*/ =
      Result.Nodes.getNodeAs<Expr/*[7]*/>("RenameFooExpr"/*[8]*/)) {
    // find begin and end file locations of a given node
    auto locBegin = srcMgr.getFileLoc(RenameFooExpr/*[9]*/->getBeginLoc());
    auto locEnd = srcMgr.getFileLoc(RenameFooExpr/*[9]*/->getEndLoc());
    newExprString = ""/*[10]*/;
    // find source text for a given location
    oldExprString = getSourceText(locBegin, locEnd, srcMgr, langOpts);
    // replace source text with a given string or use InsertText() to insert new text
    ReplaceText(srcMgr, SourceRange(std::move(locBegin), std::move(locEnd)), newExprString)/*[11]*/;
    // log the replacement or AST node if no replacement is made
    LogReplacement(locBegin, srcMgr, oldExprString, newExprString)/*[12]*/;
  }
}

In this example, we only need to edit locations [2], [3], [5], [7], [9], and [10]. The new code looks like

// Match callback class RenameFooCallback is defined here
MATCH_CALLBACK(RenameFooCallback);

void RenameFooCallback::RegisterMatchers(clang::ast_matchers::MatchFinder* finder) {
  StatementMatcher/*[1]*/ RenameFooMatcher =
      callExpr/*[2]*/(callee(functionDecl(hasName("Foo")))/*[3]*/,
                      isExpansionInMainFile()
                      ).bind("RenameFooExpr"/*[4]*/);

  finder->addMatcher(RenameFooMatcher, this);
}

// Definition of RenameFooCallback::run
void RenameFooCallback::run(const clang::ast_matchers::MatchFinder::MatchResult& Result) {
  std::string oldExprString;
  std::string newExprString;
  const auto& srcMgr = Result.Context->getSourceManager();
  const auto& langOpts = Result.Context->getLangOpts();

  // Check any AST node matched for the given string ID.
  // The node class name is usually the capitalized node matcher name.
  if (const CallExpr* /*[5]*/ RenameFooExpr/*[6]*/ =
      Result.Nodes.getNodeAs<CallExpr/*[7]*/>("RenameFooExpr"/*[8]*/)) {
    // find begin and end file locations of a given node
    auto locBegin = srcMgr.getFileLoc(RenameFooExpr/*[9]*/->getCallee()->getExprLoc());
    auto locEnd = srcMgr.getFileLoc(RenameFooExpr/*[9]*/->getCallee()->getEndLoc());
    newExprString = "Bar"/*[10]*/;
    // find source text for a given location
    oldExprString = getSourceText(locBegin, locEnd, srcMgr, langOpts);
    // replace source text with a given string or use InsertText() to insert new text
    ReplaceText(srcMgr, SourceRange(std::move(locBegin), std::move(locEnd)), newExprString)/*[11]*/;
    // log the replacement or AST node if no replacement is made
    LogReplacement(locBegin, srcMgr, oldExprString, newExprString)/*[12]*/;
  }
}
  1. Rebuild the tool.
cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform
make
  1. Now you can apply your tool in your codebase. First check if your matcher is registered by
bin/clang-xform -d

This will print a list of registered matchers. You should find "RenameFoo" among them.

  1. The file "clang-xform/test/rename/RenameFcn/example.cpp" contains callsites of function "Foo". We can first run the matcher on this file to give a try.
bin/clang-xform -m RenameFoo -o output.yaml test/rename/RenameFcn/example.cpp

The logging information will be displayed on the screen and saved in clang-xform.log in the current working directory. Using switch "-l, --log FILE.log" can change the default log file. Open the log file clang-xform.log and check logged replacements. If everything looks fine, we can apply these replacements by

bin/clang-xform -a output.yaml

Note that the replacements stored in output.yaml may duplicate and even conflict each other. The tool will ignore these duplicates and conflicts.

  1. Now, we can run the tool in your codebase by
bin/clang-xform --compile-commands compile_commands.json

where "compile_commands.json" file contains compilation database for all the files you want to refactor.

  1. This matcher can be reused to rename any function callsites. Since the qualified name and new name are hard-coded in the matcher, it is quite inconvenient to edit the code and rebuild it again. Instead, we can supply this information in the command line arguments. To do this, we first use "-o, --option" in gen-matcher.py to regenerate a template file.
cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform/src/matchers/rename
../../../scripts/gen-matcher.py -o RenameFoo

This create a "RenameFcn.cpp" file. Then redo the previous steps. The final version has checked in to the repository. The following is part of the code snippet different from the original one.

// option1: qualified function name to match
// option2: new function name to use
const std::string option1 = "qualified-name";
const std::string option2 = "new-name";

// Match callback class RenameFcnCallback is defined here
OPTION_MATCH_CALLBACK(RenameFcnCallback);

void RenameFcnCallback::RegisterOptions() {
  AddOption<std::string>(option1);
  AddOption<std::string>(option2);
}

As you can see, MACRO "MATCH_CALLBACK" is replaced with "OPTION_MATCH_CALLBACK", and the member function "RegisterOptions()" is added where user can register different types of options. To retrieve the command arguments, use

std::string value1 = GetOption<std::string>(option1);

Please check this file in the repository for more details. To use this matcher, one has to supply these matcher options in command line. For example,

cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform
bin/clang-xform -m RenameFcn -o output.yaml -f test/rename/RenameFcn/example.cpp \
--matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name Foo --new-name Bar

Note that, in this case, input-files argument can not be positional when using with matcher arguments. Here "--matcher-args-RenameFcn" is a separator used to tell parser that the arguments after it and before the end or the next separator are used for matcher RenameFcn.

One can also initialize multiple instances of the same matcher with different groups of command arguments. For example,

cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform
bin/clang-xform -m RenameFcn -o output.yaml -f test/rename/RenameFcn/example.cpp \
--matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name Foo --new-name NewFoo \
--matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name Bar --new-name NewBar

For convenience, we can save this configuration in a file and the above command will be equivalent as

cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform
bin/clang-xform -c config.cfg -o output.yaml

config.cfg    # config file specifying matchers and input files
--------------
input-files = test/rename/RenameFcn/example.cpp
matchers = RenameFcn
matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name Foo --new-name NewFoo
matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name Bar --new-name NewBar

For more information, see Switches and arguments.

  1. Writing a unit test for each new added matcher is recommended. A unit test framework is set up for the users to easily add their tests. For more information, see Testing.

Switches and arguments

sbcodexform
  -h, --help                                    # produce help message
  -v, --version                                 # print out version number
  -a, --apply FILE.yaml                         # apply replacements
  -c, --config FILE.cfg                         # config file to read
  -j, --num-threads N                           # number of threads, default all cores
  -p, --compile-commands compile_commands.json  # read compile commands for clang
  -m, --matchers "MATCHER1,MATCHER2,..."        # select matchers to apply
  -o, --output FILE.yaml                        # export replacements suggestions in yaml file
  -d, --display                                 # display registered matchers
  -q, --quiet                                   # silent output in the terminal
  -l, --log FILE.log                            # log file name
  -f, --input-files "FILE1,FILE2,..."           # files to refactor
  --matcher-args-MATCHER_NAME [MATCHER_ARGS]    # arguments for registered matcher options
  -- [CLANG_FLAGS]                              # optional argument separator

clang-xform supports more-or-less traditional unix style for the command line options. Comma "," is used as the delimiter for the switches supporting mutiple arguments.

-a, --apply FILE.yaml

Specify the replacement file to apply. The extension of the supplied file must be yaml.

-c, --config FILE.cfg

Refactor files using the specified matchers listed in the given config file "FILE.cfg". Right now, only configurations for input files, matchers, and matcher arguments are supported. Two formats are allowed:

Specify multiple arguments in one line seperated by either space " " or comma ",":

files.cfg   # config file specifying files to refactor
--------------
input-files = FILE1, FILE2
matchers = RenameFcn, RenameVar

Specify arguments in multiple lines

files.cfg   # config file specifying files to refactor
--------------
input-files = FILE1
input-files = FILE2
matchers = RenameFcn
matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name Foo --new-name NewFoo
matcher-args-RenameFcn --qualified-name=Bar --new-name=NewBar

-j, --num-threads N

Number of cores to use. The default is all logical cores. Also, each core will run at least three files. So if there are only two files to refactor, no additional threads will be created.

-m, --matchers "MATCHER1,MATCHER2,..."

One or more matchers to apply. New matchers can be registered in cpp files under the folder "clang-xform/src/matchers". For example, to create a matcher for function renaming, one can do the following steps.

# cd to matchers folder
cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform/src/matchers

# create a new folder to store your files
mkdir rename

# use the helper script to generate a matcher file template
cd rename
../../../scripts/gen-matcher.py RenameFcn  # RenameFcn.cpp is generated in the current folder

Now one can edit RenameFcn.cpp following the instructions in the file. After rebuilding the tool, the new matcher can be selected by "--matchers RenameFcn".

See Matcher list for the information about predefined matchers.

-p, --compile-commands compile_commands.json

To refactor specified files, one has to provide compilation flags used by internal clang front-end. One way to do it is to read those flag from a specified "compile_commands.json" file.

-o, --output FILE.yaml

Specify the output yaml file to store generated replacement suggestions. One has to manually apply those replacements after the tool finishes using "-a, --apply FILE.yaml". If this switch is not provided, a temporary file "tmp.yaml" will be created and the tool will apply those replacements in "tmp.yaml" automatically at the end.

-d, --display

Print a list of matcher IDs registered in the tool.

-q, --quiet

Setting this switch will silent the log information output in the terminal screen. The log information can still be found in the log file.

-l, --log FILE.log

Specify log file to store logging information. It is an optional switch. By default, "clang-xform.log" in the current working directory is used.

-f, --input-files "FILE1,FILE2,..."

One or more files to be refactored. This switch is a positional argument, which means you can directly specifies these files at the end of command line. i.e.

clang-xform -m RenameFcn File -- [CLANG_FLAGS]

When using with "--matcher-args-MATCHER_NAME [MATCHER_ARGS]", the parser cannot tell if the supplied files are positional arguments. In this case, switch "-f, --input-files" has to be used. i.e.

clang-xform -m RenameFcn -p compile_commands.json -f File

--matcher-args-MATCHER_NAME [MATCHER_ARGS]

Optional arguments for registered matcher options. Here "--matcher-args-Matcher_Name" serves as a separator to tell the parser that the arguments after it and before the next separator are used for the matcher with the given name. This switch has to be used at the end of command line or before "--" if "--" is used for supplying Clang flags.

Different settings of arguments can be used to initialize mutiple instances of the same matcher. See the example in Quick tutorial.

-- [CLANG_FLAGS]

Optional argument separator used to specify compilation flags for internal clang front-end. If used, it is required to place them at the end of the command line. This is useful when testing ast_matcher on a simple test file. e.g.

# -g sets debug mode for clang
clang-xform -m DimCastRm FILE -- -g

Testing

This tool, in general, is used for pattern match and code refactoring. So the test strategy is to compare both the log file and the refactored file with their corresponding baseline. The log file contains matched file, line, code context, and is ideal to be used for testing when the tool is used for pattern match. The refactored file comparison is mainly used for code refactoring testing purpose. The following is the general procedure to add unit test for the new matcher "RenameFoo" demonstrated in Quick tutorial.

  1. Create a src file to be refactored by the matcher. Here, we choose to use default name "example.cpp".
cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform/test/rename
mkdir RenameFoo
cd RenameFoo
emacs example.cpp
  1. Generate unit test file and baselines by using the script gen-test.py
../../../gen-test.py -m RenameFoo -l clang-xform.log -p LLVM_ROOT example.cpp

This will generate a gtest file named "tRenameFoo.cpp" and two baseline, namely "example.cpp.gold" and "clang-xform.log.gold". Note that the argument "LLVM_ROOT" for the switch "-p, --path" refers to the LLVM library root path. This path will be used to generate compile_commands.json file for the matcher unit test. If the matcher has its own command line options, swtich "-a, --arguments" is required to supply the arguments in a quoted string. e.g.

../../../gen-test.py -m RenameFcn -l clang-xform.log -p LLVM_ROOT\
-a "--qualified-name Foo --new-name Bar" example.cpp
  1. Rebuild the tool by
cd INSTALL_DIR/clang-xform
make
  1. To run the tests, do
make test

Then, the refactored src file "example.cpp.refactored" and log file "clang-xform.log" will be generated by the tool and will be used to compare with their corresponding baseline file.

Matcher list

Rename

  • RenameFcn: rename callsites of a certain function by another specified name
RenameFcn
  --qualified-name                              # qualified name to match
  --new-name                                    # new name used to replace matched name

CONCURRENCY SUPPORT

The current version of Clang libtooling library is not thread-safe. Simply creating multiple instances of clang::tooling::ClangTool and running them on multiple threads may lead to unexpected behavior. This is due to the implementation of the API ClangTool::run() in which the current working directory is modified. To be more specific, let's assume the tool is creating two threads. Each thread instantiate a clang::tooling::ClangTool object and running over one source file using the following compile_commands.json file.

// compile_commands.json
[
   {
       "directory": "DIR1",
       "file": "Foo.cpp",
       "command": "clang++ -c Foo.cpp -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu -I/usr/include"
   },
   {
       "directory": "DIR2",
       "file": "Bar.cpp",
       "command": "clang++ -c Bar.cpp -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu -I/usr/include"
   }
]

When the API ClangTool::run() is invoked in each thread, the following scenario describe a possible execution order.

  • thread 1 changes the current working directory to DIR1
  • thread 2 changes the current working directory to DIR2
  • thread 1 runs over the file "Foo.cpp" with the given compile command
  • thread 2 runs over the file "Bar.cpp" with the given compile command
  • thread 1 restores the original current working directory
  • thread 2 restores the original current working directory

In this case, the file "Bar.cpp" will be processed correctly, but the tool wouldn't find the file "Foo.cpp" in directory "DIR2". So, one possible solution for this thread safety issue is to use absolute path in compile_commands.json file. The difficulty here is that updating "command" field to use absolute path is not an easy task.

An alternative solution is to require all the "directory" fields in the compile_commands.json file to have the same path. This approach is used by this tool.

Note that ClangTool::run() will restore the original current working directory at the end. We don't want this behavior for either solution stated above. One can use ClangTool::setRestoreWorkingDir() to disable it.

FAQ

Q1. What is the difference between "Replacement" and "Insertion"?

Two sets of public APIs are provided in "MatchCallbackBase.hpp" to replace or insert text. i.e.

// replace context specified by a starting source location and length with the given string
llvm::Error MatchCallbackBase::ReplaceText(const clang::SourceManager&,
	                                       clang::SourceLocation,
                                           unsigned,
                                           llvm::StringRef);
                                            
// replace context specified by a range of source locations with the given string
llvm::Error MatchCallbackBase::ReplaceText(const clang::SourceManager&,
                                           clang::SourceRange,
                                           llvm::StringRef,
                                           const clang::LangOptions&);

// insert string in the specified source location
void InsertText(const clang::SourceManager&,
                clang::SourceLocation,
                llvm::StringRef);

The major difference here is that InsertText() allows duplications and conflicts. For example, one should be allowed to insert multiple header includes in the same source location. In contrast, ReplaceText() will discard conflicts (e.g. overlapping source ranges) and most duplicates (e.g. same replacement). The only exception happens when using ReplaceText() to do insertion (source range length is zero). In this case, duplicates will be merged (like using InsertText()) instead of discarded.

Q2. How to insert a new header include in the file?

An API is provided in "MatchCallbackBase.hpp" to insert header includes. i.e.

// insert a new header include in the file specified by fileID and
// group header includes matching the given regex
llvm::Optional<clang::SourceLocation> InsertHeader(const clang::SourceManager& srcMgr,
                                                   const clang::FileID& fileID,
                                                   llvm::StringRef header,
                                                   llvm::StringRef regex);

This API will first look up for the given header in the file. If it is already existing, the API will simply return. Otherwise the header include will be inserted in the following way.

  1. If there exists header include matching the given regex, insert there.

  2. Otherwise, insert the new header include after user-defined headers (include "...") and before system and third-party library headers (include <...>).

Here is an example. Let's say we want to include a new header "Foo/foo.hpp". We can set regex to be "Foo". The followings are some possible results.

// file1
#include "Foo/foo2.hpp"
#include "Foo/foo.hpp"
#include "Bar/bar1.hpp"
#include "Bar/bar2.hpp"

#include <vector>
#include <memory>

// file2
#include "Bar/bar1.hpp"
#include "Bar/bar2.hpp"
#include "Foo/foo.hpp"

#include <vector>
#include <memory>

Note that, when inserting new header includes, it is best for your matcher to match each translation unit only once (remove isExpansionInMainFile from generated template matcher) to avoid including the same header multiple times.

Q3. How to get correct source location for macro expansion?

Clang::SourceLocation is designed to store both unexpanded locations and macro expanded locations. All AST statements or declarations have two member functions to retrieve its beginning and end source location, i.e. Stmt/Decl::getBeginLoc() and Stmt/Decl::getEndLoc(). But this pair of Clang::SourceLocation cannot be used directly to deal with macro expression. Before further discussion, let's first introduce a few basic concepts used in Clang.

Clang::SourceLocation represents a location either in a file or a macro expansion. This can be determined by two member functions,

bool SourceLocation::isFileID();
bool SourceLocation::isMacroID();

For example,

// an example to demonstrate whether a SourceLocation is in a file or a macro expansion
#define ADDONE(expr) expr + 1
//                          ^
//                          L1

int i;
//  ^
//  L2

i = ADDONE( 1 );
//  ^       ^ ^
//  L3     L4 L5

A binary operator matcher will match the expression "1 + 1" (expanded by ADDONE(1)) represented by Clang::BinaryOperator while a variable declaration matcher will match the expression "int i" represented by Clang::VarDecl. Let's call these two variables "binaryop" and "vardecl" respectively. Then, the format of their source locations printouts will look like,

vardecl.getEndLoc():  : "L2"
binaryop.getBeginLoc(): "L3<Spelling=L4>"
binaryop.getEndLoc()  : "L3<Spelling=L1>"

In this example, vardecl.getEndLoc() is a file location while both binaryop.getBeginLoc() and binaryop.getEndLoc() are macro expansion locations.

For locations in macro expansion, Clang::SourceLocation will encode two pieces of information, namely expansion location and spelling location. Spelling locations represent where the bytes corresponding to a token came from and expansion locations represent where the location is in the user's view. In the case of a macro expansion, for example, the spelling location indicates where the expanded token came from and the expansion location specifies where it was expanded. The SourceManager can be queried for information about SourceLocation objects, turning them into either spelling or expansion locations by using the following APIs.

SourceLocation SourceMagager::getExpansionLoc(SourceLocation);
SourceLocation SourceMagager::getSpellingLoc(SourceLocation);

That means, for the above example we have

srcMgr.getExpansionLoc(binaryop.getBeginLoc()) -> L3
srcMgr.getSpellingLoc(binaryop.getBeginLoc())  -> L4
srcMgr.getExpansionLoc(binaryop.getEndLoc())   -> L3
srcMgr.getSpellingLoc(binaryop.getEndLoc())    -> L1

Note that "SourceMagager::getExpansionLoc()" returns the point where the macro is expanded. That is "L3" for both binaryop.getBeginLoc() and binaryop.getEndLoc(). In some scenarios, location "L5" may be interested. And it can be accessed by using "SourceMagager::getExpansionRange()", i.e.

srcMgr.getExpansionRange(binaryop.getEndLoc()).getBegin() -> L3
srcMgr.getExpansionRange(binaryop.getEndLoc()).getEnd()   -> L5

By default, the template matcher file uses "SourceMagager::getFileLoc()" to retrieve source location. Given a macro location, the API returns its spelling location if it is macro argument expansion, otherwise returns expansion location. i.e.

srcMgr.getFileLoc(binaryop.getBeginLoc()) -> L4
srcMgr.getFileLoc(binaryop.getEndLoc())   -> L3

Note that "L4" is macro argument expansion, while "L1" is macro body expansion. If binaryop.getBeginLoc() and binaryop.getEndLoc() are directly used to get source text, then their spelling locations will be used.

Q4. How to retrieve source code context?

First, you need a pair of Clang::SourceLocation to mark the range of the source code. See Q3. How to get correct source location for macro expansion? for more details.

Then, just use the self-defined API getSourceText() provided in ToolingUtil.hpp to get the corresponding source code context.

std::string getSourceText(clang::SourceLocation start,
	                      clang::SourceLocation end,
                          const clang::SourceManager& sm,
                          const clang::LangOptions &langOpts);

In case you are interested, here are two possible implementations based on Clang::Lexer.

// implementation 1
std::string getSourceText(SourceLocation Start,
                          SourceLocation End,
                          const SourceManager& SM,
                          const LangOptions &LangOpts)
{
    End = Lexer::getLocForEndOfToken(End, 0, SM, LangOpts);
    return std::string(SM.getCharacterData(Start),
                       SM.getCharacterData(End) - SM.getCharacterData(Start));
}

// implementation 2
std::string getSourceText(SourceLocation Start,
                          SourceLocation End,
                          const SourceManager& SM,
                          const LangOptions &LangOpts)
{
    CharSourceRange Range = Lexer::getAsCharRange(SourceRange(std::move(Start), std::move(End)), SM, LangOpts);
    return Lexer::getSourceText(Range ,SM, LangOpts);
}

Linking

Clang 9.0.0 is required. Clang prebuilt binaries are available at http://releases.llvm.org/download.html

Requirements

This tool requires Clang 9.0.0 and a C++ compiler that supports C++14. Linux system is also required for now.

TODO list

  • Switch from error code into using exception handling
  • Support windows system