| ============================================== |
| JSON Compilation Database Format Specification |
| ============================================== |
| |
| This document describes a format for specifying how to replay single |
| compilations independently of the build system. |
| |
| Background |
| ========== |
| |
| Tools based on the C++ Abstract Syntax Tree need full information how to |
| parse a translation unit. Usually this information is implicitly |
| available in the build system, but running tools as part of the build |
| system is not necessarily the best solution: |
| |
| - Build systems are inherently change driven, so running multiple tools |
| over the same code base without changing the code does not fit into |
| the architecture of many build systems. |
| - Figuring out whether things have changed is often an IO bound |
| process; this makes it hard to build low latency end user tools based |
| on the build system. |
| - Build systems are inherently sequential in the build graph, for |
| example due to generated source code. While tools that run |
| independently of the build still need the generated source code to |
| exist, running tools multiple times over unchanging source does not |
| require serialization of the runs according to the build dependency |
| graph. |
| |
| Supported Systems |
| ================= |
| |
| Currently `CMake <https://cmake.org>`_ (since 2.8.5) supports generation |
| of compilation databases for Unix Makefile builds (Ninja builds in the |
| works) with the option ``CMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS``. |
| |
| For projects on Linux, there is an alternative to intercept compiler |
| calls with a tool called `Bear <https://github.com/rizsotto/Bear>`_. |
| |
| Clang's tooling interface supports reading compilation databases; see |
| the :doc:`LibTooling documentation <LibTooling>`. libclang and its |
| python bindings also support this (since clang 3.2); see |
| `CXCompilationDatabase.h </doxygen/group__COMPILATIONDB.html>`_. |
| |
| Format |
| ====== |
| |
| A compilation database is a JSON file, which consist of an array of |
| "command objects", where each command object specifies one way a |
| translation unit is compiled in the project. |
| |
| Each command object contains the translation unit's main file, the |
| working directory of the compile run and the actual compile command. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| [ |
| { "directory": "/home/user/llvm/build", |
| "command": "/usr/bin/clang++ -Irelative -DSOMEDEF=\"With spaces, quotes and \\-es.\" -c -o file.o file.cc", |
| "file": "file.cc" }, |
| ... |
| ] |
| |
| The contracts for each field in the command object are: |
| |
| - **directory:** The working directory of the compilation. All paths |
| specified in the **command** or **file** fields must be either |
| absolute or relative to this directory. |
| - **file:** The main translation unit source processed by this |
| compilation step. This is used by tools as the key into the |
| compilation database. There can be multiple command objects for the |
| same file, for example if the same source file is compiled with |
| different configurations. |
| - **command:** The compile command executed. After JSON unescaping, |
| this must be a valid command to rerun the exact compilation step for |
| the translation unit in the environment the build system uses. |
| Parameters use shell quoting and shell escaping of quotes, with '``"``' |
| and '``\``' being the only special characters. Shell expansion is not |
| supported. |
| - **arguments:** The compile command executed as list of strings. |
| Either **arguments** or **command** is required. |
| - **output:** The name of the output created by this compilation step. |
| This field is optional. It can be used to distinguish different processing |
| modes of the same input file. |
| |
| Build System Integration |
| ======================== |
| |
| The convention is to name the file compile\_commands.json and put it at |
| the top of the build directory. Clang tools are pointed to the top of |
| the build directory to detect the file and use the compilation database |
| to parse C++ code in the source tree. |
| |
| Alternatives |
| ============ |
| For simple projects, Clang tools also recognize a ``compile_flags.txt`` file. |
| This should contain one argument per line. The same flags will be used to |
| compile any file. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| -xc++ |
| -I |
| libwidget/include/ |
| |
| Here ``-I libwidget/include`` is two arguments, and so becomes two lines. |
| Paths are relative to the directory containing ``compile_flags.txt``. |
| |