# Woboq-CodeBrowser **Repository Path**: mirrors/Woboq-CodeBrowser ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: Woboq-CodeBrowser - **Description**: woboq codebrowser 利用 LLVM/Clang 深度解析 C++ 源码并建立索引 - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: Not specified - **Default Branch**: master - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 1 - **Forks**: 1 - **Created**: 2018-03-13 - **Last Updated**: 2025-09-27 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README # [![Logo](https://codebrowser.dev/img/webp/codebrowserLogo.webp)](https://codebrowser.dev) This is the generator for Code Browser, formerly created and maintained by [Woboq](https://woboq.com/), [KDAB](https://kdab.com) wants to thank Woboq to have made available such a great tool to the community in the first place. See https://codebrowser.dev/ for an example. The announcement blog: https://woboq.com/blog/codebrowser-introduction.html Introduction and Design ======================= There is a pre-processing step on your code that generates static html and reference database. The output of this phase is just a set of static files that can be uploaded on any web hoster. No software is required on the server other than the most basic web server that can serve files. While generating the code, you will give to the generator an output directory. The files reference themselves using relative path. The layout in the output directory will look like this: (Assuming the output directory is `~/public_html/mycode`) `$OUTPUTDIR/../data/` or `~/public_html/data/` is where all javascript and css files are located. Those are static files shipped with the code browser, they are not generated. `$OUTPUTDIR/projectname` or `~/public_html/mycode/projectname` contains the generated html files for your project `$OUTPUTDIR/refs` or `~/public_html/mycode/refs` contains the generated "database" used for the tooltips `$OUTPUTDIR/include` or `~/public_html/mycode/include` contains the generated html files for the files in /usr/include The idea is that you can have several project sharing the same output directory. In that case they will also share references and use searches will work between them. Install via Arch User Repository (AUR) ====================================== Execute these commands in Arch Linux: ```bash git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/woboq_codebrowser-git.git cd woboq_codebrowser-git makepkg -si ``` Compiling the generator on Linux ================================ LLVM+Clang version 16 or higher is required to build the generator. Example: ```bash mkdir build && cd build cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release .. make ``` Compiling the generator on macOS ============================================== Install XCode and then the command line tools: ```bash xcode-select --install ``` Install the clang libraries via [homebrew](http://brew.sh/): ```bash brew install llvm --with-clang --rtti ``` Then compile the generator: ```bash cmake . -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/usr/local/Cellar/llvm/ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release make ``` Using the generator =================== ### Step 1: Generate the compile_commands.json (see chapter "Compilation Database" below) for your project The code browser is built around the clang tooling infrastructure that uses compile_commands.json http://clang.llvm.org/docs/JSONCompilationDatabase.html See the section "Compilation Database (compile_commands.json)" below. ### Step 2: Create code HTML using codebrowser_generator Before generating, make sure the output directory is empty or does not contains stale files from a previous generation. Call the `codebrowser_generator`. See later for argument specification ### Step 3: Generate the directory index HTML files using codebrowser_indexgenerator By running the `codebrowser_indexgenerator` with the output directory as an argument ### Step 4: Copy the static data/ directory one level above the generated html ### Step 5: Open it in a browser or upload it to your webserver **Note**: By default, browsers do not allow AJAX on `file://` for security reasons. You need to upload the output directory on a web server, or serve your files with a local apache or nginx server. Alternatively, you can disable that security in Firefox by setting `security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy` to `false` in about:config (http://kb.mozillazine.org/Security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy) or start Chrome with the [--allow-file-access-from-files](http://www.chrome-allow-file-access-from-file.com/) option. Full usage example ================== Let's be meta in this example and try to generate the HTML files for the code browser itself. Assuming you are in the cloned directory: ```bash OUTPUT_DIRECTORY=~/public_html/codebrowser DATA_DIRECTORY=$OUTPUT_DIRECTORY/../data BUILD_DIRECTORY=$PWD SOURCE_DIRECTORY=$PWD VERSION=`git describe --always --tags` cmake . -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON ./generator/codebrowser_generator -b $BUILD_DIRECTORY -a -o $OUTPUT_DIRECTORY -p codebrowser:$SOURCE_DIRECTORY:$VERSION ./indexgenerator/codebrowser_indexgenerator $OUTPUT_DIRECTORY cp -rv ./data $DATA_DIRECTORY ``` You can adjust the variables and try similar commands to generate other projects. Arguments to codebrowser_generator ================================== Compiles sources into HTML files ```bash codebrowser_generator -a -o -b -p :[:] [-d ] [-e ::] ``` - `-a` process all files from the compile_commands.json. If this argument is not passed, the list of files to process need to be passed - `-o` with the output directory where the generated files will be put - `-b` the "build directory" containing the compile_commands.json If this argument is not passed, the compilation arguments can be passed on the command line after `--` - `-p` (one or more) with project specification. That is the name of the project, the absolute path of the source code, and the revision separated by colons example: `-p projectname:/path/to/source/code:0.3beta` - `-d` specify the data url where all the javascript and css files are found. default to ../data relative to the output dir example: `-d https://codebrowser.dev/data/`` - `-e` reference to an external project. example:`-e clang/include/clang:/opt/llvm/include/clang/:https://codebrowser.dev/llvm` Arguments to codebrowser_indexgenerator ======================================= Generates index HTML files for each directory for the generated HTML files ```bash codebrowser_indexgenerator [-d data_url] [-p project_definition] ``` - `-p` (one or more) with project specification. That is the name of the project, the absolute path of the source code, and the revision separated by colons example: `-p projectname:/path/to/source/code:0.3beta` - `-d` specify the data url where all the javascript and css files are found. default to ../data relative to the output dir example: `-d https://codebrowser.dev/data/` Compilation Database (compile_commands.json) ============================================ The generator is a tool which uses clang's LibTooling. It needs either a compile_commands.json or the arguments to be passed after '--' if they are the same for every file. To generate the compile_commands.json: * For cmake, pass `-DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON` as a cmake parameter * For qmake, configure/autoconf and others, follow the instructions in `scripts/fake_compiler.sh` or `scripts/woboq_cc.js`. These are fake compilers that append the compiler invocation to the json file and forward to the real compiler. Your real compiler is overriden using the CC/CXX environment variables Make sure to have the json file properly terminated. * If you use ninja, you can use `ninja -t compdb` * If you use qbs, you can use `qbs generate --generator clangdb` * There is also a project called Build EAR [Bear](https://github.com/rizsotto/Bear) that achieves a similar thing as our fake compilers but is using `LD_PRELOAD` to inject itself into the build process to catch how the compiler is invoked. There is also some further information on https://sarcasm.github.io/notes/dev/compilation-database.html#clang Getting help ============ No matter if you are a licensee or are just curious and evaulating, we'd love to help you. Ask us via e-mail on info@kdab.com If you find a bug or incompatibility, please file a github issue: https://github.com/kdab/codebrowser/issues Licence information ==================== Licensees holding valid commercial licenses provided by Woboq may use this software in accordance with the terms contained in a written agreement between the licensee and Woboq. Alternatively, this work may be used under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 (CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0) License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/deed.en_US This license does not allow you to use the code browser to assist the development of your commercial software. If you intent to do so, consider purchasing a commercial licence.