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Pygmalion

Pygmalion is a code indexing tool based on libclang for C and C++ (and eventually other languages). The intention is to deliver the same kind of high quality code navigation that expensive commercial IDEs give you, accessible in a command-line form that fits the UNIX mindset and is easy to integrate into your editor of choice.

Pygmalion will work with almost no configuration and no maintenance on any project. It gathers information about your build system automatically when you build with pyg make, and it detects changes to the files in your project and updates its index automatically. Pygmalion is intended to Just Work.

pyg is the primary command-line interface to Pygmalion. Given a location in the source code, it can print information about the item found there. This includes definitions, references, the inheritance hierachy, callers and callees of functions, and other useful data. It can also provide metadata like the compiler flags used for compiling a file, or generate a clang compilation database or TAGS file for use with external tools.

Check the examples/ directory to see how to integrate Pygmalion with other tools, including emacs with irony-mode and vim with YouCompleteMe.

Requirements

  • The Haskell Platform 2013.2.0. On OS X, you can install it via homebrew with brew install haskell-platform. On Ubuntu 13.10, sudo apt-get install haskell-platform should suffice. On other platforms, check here.

  • Up-to-date Haskell LibClang bindings. For now you'll need to build from source from the Github repo.

  • hslibvoyeur, which you can build from source from the Github repo.

Build Instructions

Run make. This will build the project and install it to your cabal executables directory, by default usually ~/.cabal/bin. You may need to add this to your path.

Usage

Change to the root of the project you want to index and run pyg init to initialize a .pygmalion directory there. Pygmalion stores all of the information about the project in this directory, including the configuration file pygmalion.yaml which you can customize if needed. (See the next section.) For simple make-based projects, the default configuration should be enough.

To actually index the project, run pyg start-server to start the indexing daemon. Pygmalion will immediately start indexing your project. (FIXME: Except default compiler flags are not implemented right now, so just use pyg make.) For most projects, the default compiler flags will result in a poor quality index, so if you didn't specify appropriate flags in the configuration file it's advisable to immediately run a complete rebuild using pyg make. This will gather accurate compiler flags and greatly improve the quality of the index.

You can start using pyg queries to navigate the code in your project immediately. As new indexing results come in, results will become available for more and more of your project. For very large projects, this may take a while, but once you have the initial index the indexing daemon will automatically keep it up to date as you make changes to the source, check out branches, and pull in others' changes.

It's wise to always use pyg make to build so that Pygmalion picks up any changes to your build system or compilation settings. Since you can configure pyg make to run any command you want, this can actually be quite convenient: no matter which project you're working on, you can always use the same command to build.

Configuring Pygmalion

pyg init will create a default configuration file in .pygmalion/pygmalion.yaml in your project root. You can customize this as needed.

You will probably want to customize at least the value of make, which controls which command pyg make runs. You can set this to the command you normally use to build your project. There are two variables you can use in the value of make:

  • $(args) will be set to whichever arguments you provide to pyg make. If you don't include this, by default the arguments will just be appended.

  • $(projectroot) will be set to your project root, the directory which contains your .pygmalion directory. This can be convenient to make it possible to run pyg make from any directory in your project.

The command pyg make runs is evaluated by the shell after the variables are substituted.

There are more options; the best source of information on them is currently examples/pygmalion.yaml.default in the Pygmalion source tree, but these docs will be improved soon.

Frequently Asked Questions

On Linux I get the error 'addWatch: resource exhausted (No space left on device)'.

The default inotify watch limit is too small for your project. Unfortunately, on many Linux installations the limit is unreasonably low by default. Try again after running sudo sh -c 'echo 1048576 > /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches'.

You can make this fix permanent by adding fs.inotify.max_user_watches=1048576 to /etc/sysctl.conf.

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A code analysis tool based on libclang

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