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| Choosing the Right Interface for Your Application |
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| |
| Clang provides infrastructure to write tools that need syntactic and semantic |
| information about a program. This document will give a short introduction of |
| the different ways to write clang tools, and their pros and cons. |
| |
| LibClang |
| -------- |
| |
| `LibClang <http://clang.llvm.org/doxygen/group__CINDEX.html>`_ is a stable high |
| level C interface to clang. When in doubt LibClang is probably the interface |
| you want to use. Consider the other interfaces only when you have a good |
| reason not to use LibClang. |
| |
| Canonical examples of when to use LibClang: |
| |
| * Xcode |
| * Clang Python Bindings |
| |
| Use LibClang when you...: |
| |
| * want to interface with clang from other languages than C++ |
| * need a stable interface that takes care to be backwards compatible |
| * want powerful high-level abstractions, like iterating through an AST with a |
| cursor, and don't want to learn all the nitty gritty details of Clang's AST. |
| |
| Do not use LibClang when you...: |
| |
| * want full control over the Clang AST |
| |
| Clang Plugins |
| ------------- |
| |
| :doc:`Clang Plugins <ClangPlugins>` allow you to run additional actions on the |
| AST as part of a compilation. Plugins are dynamic libraries that are loaded at |
| runtime by the compiler, and they're easy to integrate into your build |
| environment. |
| |
| Canonical examples of when to use Clang Plugins: |
| |
| * special lint-style warnings or errors for your project |
| * creating additional build artifacts from a single compile step |
| |
| Use Clang Plugins when you...: |
| |
| * need your tool to rerun if any of the dependencies change |
| * want your tool to make or break a build |
| * need full control over the Clang AST |
| |
| Do not use Clang Plugins when you...: |
| |
| * want to run tools outside of your build environment |
| * want full control on how Clang is set up, including mapping of in-memory |
| virtual files |
| * need to run over a specific subset of files in your project which is not |
| necessarily related to any changes which would trigger rebuilds |
| |
| LibTooling |
| ---------- |
| |
| :doc:`LibTooling <LibTooling>` is a C++ interface aimed at writing standalone |
| tools, as well as integrating into services that run clang tools. Canonical |
| examples of when to use LibTooling: |
| |
| * a simple syntax checker |
| * refactoring tools |
| |
| Use LibTooling when you...: |
| |
| * want to run tools over a single file, or a specific subset of files, |
| independently of the build system |
| * want full control over the Clang AST |
| * want to share code with Clang Plugins |
| |
| Do not use LibTooling when you...: |
| |
| * want to run as part of the build triggered by dependency changes |
| * want a stable interface so you don't need to change your code when the AST API |
| changes |
| * want high level abstractions like cursors and code completion out of the box |
| * do not want to write your tools in C++ |
| |
| :doc:`Clang tools <ClangTools>` are a collection of specific developer tools |
| built on top of the LibTooling infrastructure as part of the Clang project. |
| They are targeted at automating and improving core development activities of |
| C/C++ developers. |
| |
| Examples of tools we are building or planning as part of the Clang project: |
| |
| * Syntax checking (:program:`clang-check`) |
| * Automatic fixing of compile errors (:program:`clang-fixit`) |
| * Automatic code formatting (:program:`clang-format`) |
| * Migration tools for new features in new language standards |
| * Core refactoring tools |
| |