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cpplint.py
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cpplint.py
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#!/usr/bin/python2.4
#
# Copyright (c) 2009 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
#
# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
# met:
#
# * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
# * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
# copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
# in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
# distribution.
# * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
# contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
# this software without specific prior written permission.
#
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
# "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
# LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
# A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
# OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
# SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
# LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
# DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
# THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
# (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
# OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
# Here are some issues that I've had people identify in my code during reviews,
# that I think are possible to flag automatically in a lint tool. If these were
# caught by lint, it would save time both for myself and that of my reviewers.
# Most likely, some of these are beyond the scope of the current lint framework,
# but I think it is valuable to retain these wish-list items even if they cannot
# be immediately implemented.
#
# Suggestions
# -----------
# - Check for no 'explicit' for multi-arg ctor
# - Check for boolean assign RHS in parens
# - Check for ctor initializer-list colon position and spacing
# - Check that if there's a ctor, there should be a dtor
# - Check accessors that return non-pointer member variables are
# declared const
# - Check accessors that return non-const pointer member vars are
# *not* declared const
# - Check for using public includes for testing
# - Check for spaces between brackets in one-line inline method
# - Check for no assert()
# - Check for spaces surrounding operators
# - Check for 0 in pointer context (should be NULL)
# - Check for 0 in char context (should be '\0')
# - Check for camel-case method name conventions for methods
# that are not simple inline getters and setters
# - Check that base classes have virtual destructors
# put " // namespace" after } that closes a namespace, with
# namespace's name after 'namespace' if it is named.
# - Do not indent namespace contents
# - Avoid inlining non-trivial constructors in header files
# include base/basictypes.h if DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS is used
# - Check for old-school (void) cast for call-sites of functions
# ignored return value
# - Check gUnit usage of anonymous namespace
# - Check for class declaration order (typedefs, consts, enums,
# ctor(s?), dtor, friend declarations, methods, member vars)
#
"""Does google-lint on c++ files.
The goal of this script is to identify places in the code that *may*
be in non-compliance with google style. It does not attempt to fix
up these problems -- the point is to educate. It does also not
attempt to find all problems, or to ensure that everything it does
find is legitimately a problem.
In particular, we can get very confused by /* and // inside strings!
We do a small hack, which is to ignore //'s with "'s after them on the
same line, but it is far from perfect (in either direction).
"""
import multiprocessing
import codecs
import getopt
import math # for log
import os
import re
import sre_compile
import string
import sys
import unicodedata
_USAGE = """
Syntax: cpplint.py [--verbose=#] [--output=vs7] [--filter=-x,+y,...]
[--counting=total|toplevel|detailed]
<file> [file] ...
The style guidelines this tries to follow are those in
http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.xml
Every problem is given a confidence score from 1-5, with 5 meaning we are
certain of the problem, and 1 meaning it could be a legitimate construct.
This will miss some errors, and is not a substitute for a code review.
To prevent specific lines from being linted, add a '// NOLINT' comment to the
end of the line.
The files passed in will be linted; at least one file must be provided.
Linted extensions are .cc, .cpp, and .h. Other file types will be ignored.
Flags:
output=vs7
By default, the output is formatted to ease emacs parsing. Visual Studio
compatible output (vs7) may also be used. Other formats are unsupported.
verbose=#
Specify a number 0-5 to restrict errors to certain verbosity levels.
filter=-x,+y,...
Specify a comma-separated list of category-filters to apply: only
error messages whose category names pass the filters will be printed.
(Category names are printed with the message and look like
"[whitespace/indent]".) Filters are evaluated left to right.
"-FOO" and "FOO" means "do not print categories that start with FOO".
"+FOO" means "do print categories that start with FOO".
Examples: --filter=-whitespace,+whitespace/braces
--filter=whitespace,runtime/printf,+runtime/printf_format
--filter=-,+build/include_what_you_use
To see a list of all the categories used in cpplint, pass no arg:
--filter=
counting=total|toplevel|detailed
The total number of errors found is always printed. If
'toplevel' is provided, then the count of errors in each of
the top-level categories like 'build' and 'whitespace' will
also be printed. If 'detailed' is provided, then a count
is provided for each category like 'build/class'.
"""
# We categorize each error message we print. Here are the categories.
# We want an explicit list so we can list them all in cpplint --filter=.
# If you add a new error message with a new category, add it to the list
# here! cpplint_unittest.py should tell you if you forget to do this.
# \ used for clearer layout -- pylint: disable-msg=C6013
_ERROR_CATEGORIES = '''\
ramcloud/undeclared_test
ramcloud/throw_new
ramcloud/catch_ref
ramcloud/include
ramcloud/cppunit
ramcloud/random
ramcloud/object_pool
build/class
build/deprecated
build/endif_comment
build/forward_decl
build/header_guard
build/include
build/include_alpha
build/include_order
build/include_what_you_use
build/namespaces
build/printf_format
build/storage_class
legal/copyright
readability/braces
readability/casting
readability/check
readability/constructors
readability/fn_size
readability/function
readability/multiline_comment
readability/multiline_string
readability/streams
readability/todo
readability/utf8
runtime/arrays
runtime/casting
runtime/explicit
runtime/int
runtime/init
runtime/invalid_increment
runtime/member_string_references
runtime/memset
runtime/operator
runtime/printf
runtime/printf_format
runtime/references
runtime/rtti
runtime/sizeof
runtime/string
runtime/threadsafe_fn
runtime/virtual
whitespace/blank_line
whitespace/braces
whitespace/comma
whitespace/comments
whitespace/end_of_line
whitespace/ending_newline
whitespace/indent
whitespace/labels
whitespace/line_length
whitespace/newline
whitespace/operators
whitespace/parens
whitespace/semicolon
whitespace/tab
whitespace/todo
'''
# The default state of the category filter. This is overrided by the --filter=
# flag. By default all errors are on, so only add here categories that should be
# off by default (i.e., categories that must be enabled by the --filter= flags).
# All entries here should start with a '-' or '+', as in the --filter= flag.
_DEFAULT_FILTERS = [ '-build/include_alpha' ]
# We used to check for high-bit characters, but after much discussion we
# decided those were OK, as long as they were in UTF-8 and didn't represent
# hard-coded international strings, which belong in a seperate i18n file.
# Headers that we consider STL headers.
_STL_HEADERS = frozenset([
'algobase.h', 'algorithm', 'alloc.h', 'bitset', 'deque', 'exception',
'function.h', 'functional', 'hash_map', 'hash_map.h', 'hash_set',
'hash_set.h', 'iterator', 'list', 'list.h', 'map', 'memory', 'pair.h',
'pthread_alloc', 'queue', 'set', 'set.h', 'sstream', 'stack',
'stl_alloc.h', 'stl_relops.h', 'type_traits.h',
'utility', 'vector', 'vector.h',
'unordered_map', 'unordered_set',
])
# Non-STL C++ system headers.
_CPP_HEADERS = frozenset([
'algo.h', 'builtinbuf.h', 'bvector.h', 'cassert', 'cctype',
'cerrno', 'cfloat', 'ciso646', 'climits', 'clocale', 'cmath',
'complex', 'complex.h', 'csetjmp', 'csignal', 'cstdarg', 'cstddef',
'cstdio', 'cstdlib', 'cstring', 'ctime', 'cwchar', 'cwctype',
'defalloc.h', 'deque.h', 'editbuf.h', 'exception', 'fstream',
'fstream.h', 'hashtable.h', 'heap.h', 'indstream.h', 'iomanip',
'iomanip.h', 'ios', 'iosfwd', 'iostream', 'iostream.h', 'istream.h',
'iterator.h', 'limits', 'map.h', 'multimap.h', 'multiset.h',
'numeric', 'ostream.h', 'parsestream.h', 'pfstream.h', 'PlotFile.h',
'procbuf.h', 'pthread_alloc.h', 'rope', 'rope.h', 'ropeimpl.h',
'SFile.h', 'slist', 'slist.h', 'stack.h', 'stdexcept',
'stdiostream.h', 'streambuf.h', 'stream.h', 'strfile.h', 'string',
'strstream', 'strstream.h', 'tempbuf.h', 'tree.h', 'typeinfo', 'valarray',
])
# Assertion macros. These are defined in base/logging.h and
# testing/base/gunit.h. Note that the _M versions need to come first
# for substring matching to work.
_CHECK_MACROS = [
'DCHECK', 'CHECK',
'EXPECT_TRUE_M', 'EXPECT_TRUE',
'ASSERT_TRUE_M', 'ASSERT_TRUE',
'EXPECT_FALSE_M', 'EXPECT_FALSE',
'ASSERT_FALSE_M', 'ASSERT_FALSE',
]
# Replacement macros for CHECK/DCHECK/EXPECT_TRUE/EXPECT_FALSE
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT = dict([(m, {}) for m in _CHECK_MACROS])
for op, replacement in [('==', 'EQ'), ('!=', 'NE'),
('>=', 'GE'), ('>', 'GT'),
('<=', 'LE'), ('<', 'LT')]:
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['DCHECK'][op] = 'DCHECK_%s' % replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['CHECK'][op] = 'CHECK_%s' % replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_TRUE'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s' % replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_TRUE'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s' % replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_TRUE_M'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s_M' % replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_TRUE_M'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s_M' % replacement
for op, inv_replacement in [('==', 'NE'), ('!=', 'EQ'),
('>=', 'LT'), ('>', 'LE'),
('<=', 'GT'), ('<', 'GE')]:
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_FALSE'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s' % inv_replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_FALSE'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s' % inv_replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_FALSE_M'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s_M' % inv_replacement
_CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_FALSE_M'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s_M' % inv_replacement
# These constants define types of headers for use with
# _IncludeState.CheckNextIncludeOrder().
_C_SYS_HEADER = 1
_CPP_SYS_HEADER = 2
_LIKELY_MY_HEADER = 3
_POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER = 4
_OTHER_HEADER = 5
_regexp_compile_cache = {}
def Match(pattern, s):
"""Matches the string with the pattern, caching the compiled regexp."""
# The regexp compilation caching is inlined in both Match and Search for
# performance reasons; factoring it out into a separate function turns out
# to be noticeably expensive.
if not pattern in _regexp_compile_cache:
_regexp_compile_cache[pattern] = sre_compile.compile(pattern)
return _regexp_compile_cache[pattern].match(s)
def Search(pattern, s):
"""Searches the string for the pattern, caching the compiled regexp."""
if not pattern in _regexp_compile_cache:
_regexp_compile_cache[pattern] = sre_compile.compile(pattern)
return _regexp_compile_cache[pattern].search(s)
class _IncludeState(dict):
"""Tracks line numbers for includes, and the order in which includes appear.
As a dict, an _IncludeState object serves as a mapping between include
filename and line number on which that file was included.
Call CheckNextIncludeOrder() once for each header in the file, passing
in the type constants defined above. Calls in an illegal order will
raise an _IncludeError with an appropriate error message.
"""
# self._section will move monotonically through this set. If it ever
# needs to move backwards, CheckNextIncludeOrder will raise an error.
_INITIAL_SECTION = 0
_MY_H_SECTION = 1
_C_SECTION = 2
_CPP_SECTION = 3
_OTHER_H_SECTION = 4
_TYPE_NAMES = {
_C_SYS_HEADER: 'C system header',
_CPP_SYS_HEADER: 'C++ system header',
_LIKELY_MY_HEADER: 'header this file implements',
_POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER: 'header this file may implement',
_OTHER_HEADER: 'other header',
}
_SECTION_NAMES = {
_INITIAL_SECTION: "... nothing. (This can't be an error.)",
_MY_H_SECTION: 'a header this file implements',
_C_SECTION: 'C system header',
_CPP_SECTION: 'C++ system header',
_OTHER_H_SECTION: 'other header',
}
def __init__(self):
dict.__init__(self)
# The name of the current section.
self._section = self._INITIAL_SECTION
# The path of last found header.
self._last_header = ''
def CanonicalizeAlphabeticalOrder(self, header_path):
"""Returns a path canonicalized for alphabetical comparisson.
- replaces "-" with "_" so they both cmp the same.
- removes '-inl' since we don't require them to be after the main header.
- lowercase everything, just in case.
Args:
header_path: Path to be canonicalized.
Returns:
Canonicalized path.
"""
return header_path.replace('-inl.h', '.h').replace('-', '_').lower()
def IsInAlphabeticalOrder(self, header_path):
"""Check if a header is in alphabetical order with the previous header.
Args:
header_path: Header to be checked.
Returns:
Returns true if the header is in alphabetical order.
"""
canonical_header = self.CanonicalizeAlphabeticalOrder(header_path)
if self._last_header > canonical_header:
return False
self._last_header = canonical_header
return True
def CheckNextIncludeOrder(self, header_type):
"""Returns a non-empty error message if the next header is out of order.
This function also updates the internal state to be ready to check
the next include.
Args:
header_type: One of the _XXX_HEADER constants defined above.
Returns:
The empty string if the header is in the right order, or an
error message describing what's wrong.
"""
error_message = ('Found %s after %s' %
(self._TYPE_NAMES[header_type],
self._SECTION_NAMES[self._section]))
last_section = self._section
if header_type == _C_SYS_HEADER:
if self._section <= self._C_SECTION:
self._section = self._C_SECTION
else:
self._last_header = ''
return error_message
elif header_type == _CPP_SYS_HEADER:
if self._section <= self._CPP_SECTION:
self._section = self._CPP_SECTION
else:
self._last_header = ''
return error_message
elif header_type == _LIKELY_MY_HEADER:
if self._section <= self._MY_H_SECTION:
self._section = self._MY_H_SECTION
else:
self._section = self._OTHER_H_SECTION
elif header_type == _POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER:
if self._section <= self._MY_H_SECTION:
self._section = self._MY_H_SECTION
else:
# This will always be the fallback because we're not sure
# enough that the header is associated with this file.
self._section = self._OTHER_H_SECTION
else:
assert header_type == _OTHER_HEADER
self._section = self._OTHER_H_SECTION
if last_section != self._section:
self._last_header = ''
return ''
class _CppLintState(object):
"""Maintains module-wide state.."""
def __init__(self):
self.verbose_level = 1 # global setting.
self.error_count = 0 # global count of reported errors
# filters to apply when emitting error messages
self.filters = _DEFAULT_FILTERS[:]
self.counting = 'total' # In what way are we counting errors?
self.errors_by_category = {} # string to int dict storing error counts
# output format:
# "emacs" - format that emacs can parse (default)
# "vs7" - format that Microsoft Visual Studio 7 can parse
self.output_format = 'emacs'
def SetOutputFormat(self, output_format):
"""Sets the output format for errors."""
self.output_format = output_format
def SetVerboseLevel(self, level):
"""Sets the module's verbosity, and returns the previous setting."""
last_verbose_level = self.verbose_level
self.verbose_level = level
return last_verbose_level
def SetCountingStyle(self, counting_style):
"""Sets the module's counting options."""
self.counting = counting_style
def SetFilters(self, filters):
"""Sets the error-message filters.
These filters are applied when deciding whether to emit a given
error message.
Args:
filters: A string of comma-separated filters (eg "+whitespace/indent").
Each filter should start with + or -; else we die.
Raises:
ValueError: The comma-separated filters did not all start with '+' or '-'.
E.g. "-,+whitespace,-whitespace/indent,whitespace/badfilter"
"""
# Default filters always have less priority than the flag ones.
self.filters = _DEFAULT_FILTERS[:]
for filt in filters.split(','):
clean_filt = filt.strip()
if clean_filt:
self.filters.append(clean_filt)
for filt in self.filters:
if not (filt.startswith('+') or filt.startswith('-')):
raise ValueError('Every filter in --filters must start with + or -'
' (%s does not)' % filt)
def ResetErrorCounts(self):
"""Sets the module's error statistic back to zero."""
self.error_count = 0
self.errors_by_category = {}
def IncrementErrorCount(self, category):
"""Bumps the module's error statistic."""
self.error_count += 1
if self.counting in ('toplevel', 'detailed'):
if self.counting != 'detailed':
category = category.split('/')[0]
if category not in self.errors_by_category:
self.errors_by_category[category] = 0
self.errors_by_category[category] += 1
def PrintErrorCounts(self):
"""Print a summary of errors by category, and the total."""
for category, count in self.errors_by_category.iteritems():
sys.stderr.write('Category \'%s\' errors found: %d\n' %
(category, count))
sys.stderr.write('Total errors found: %d\n' % self.error_count)
_cpplint_state = _CppLintState()
def _OutputFormat():
"""Gets the module's output format."""
return _cpplint_state.output_format
def _SetOutputFormat(output_format):
"""Sets the module's output format."""
_cpplint_state.SetOutputFormat(output_format)
def _VerboseLevel():
"""Returns the module's verbosity setting."""
return _cpplint_state.verbose_level
def _SetVerboseLevel(level):
"""Sets the module's verbosity, and returns the previous setting."""
return _cpplint_state.SetVerboseLevel(level)
def _SetCountingStyle(level):
"""Sets the module's counting options."""
_cpplint_state.SetCountingStyle(level)
def _Filters():
"""Returns the module's list of output filters, as a list."""
return _cpplint_state.filters
def _SetFilters(filters):
"""Sets the module's error-message filters.
These filters are applied when deciding whether to emit a given
error message.
Args:
filters: A string of comma-separated filters (eg "whitespace/indent").
Each filter should start with + or -; else we die.
"""
_cpplint_state.SetFilters(filters)
class _FunctionState(object):
"""Tracks current function name and the number of lines in its body."""
_NORMAL_TRIGGER = 250 # for --v=0, 500 for --v=1, etc.
_TEST_TRIGGER = 400 # about 50% more than _NORMAL_TRIGGER.
def __init__(self):
self.in_a_function = False
self.lines_in_function = 0
self.current_function = ''
def Begin(self, function_name):
"""Start analyzing function body.
Args:
function_name: The name of the function being tracked.
"""
self.in_a_function = True
self.lines_in_function = 0
self.current_function = function_name
def Count(self):
"""Count line in current function body."""
if self.in_a_function:
self.lines_in_function += 1
def Check(self, error, filename, linenum):
"""Report if too many lines in function body.
Args:
error: The function to call with any errors found.
filename: The name of the current file.
linenum: The number of the line to check.
"""
if Match(r'T(EST|est)', self.current_function):
base_trigger = self._TEST_TRIGGER
else:
base_trigger = self._NORMAL_TRIGGER
trigger = base_trigger * 2**_VerboseLevel()
if self.lines_in_function > trigger:
error_level = int(math.log(self.lines_in_function / base_trigger, 2))
# 50 => 0, 100 => 1, 200 => 2, 400 => 3, 800 => 4, 1600 => 5, ...
if error_level > 5:
error_level = 5
error(filename, linenum, 'readability/fn_size', error_level,
'Small and focused functions are preferred:'
' %s has %d non-comment lines'
' (error triggered by exceeding %d lines).' % (
self.current_function, self.lines_in_function, trigger))
def End(self):
"""Stop analizing function body."""
self.in_a_function = False
class _IncludeError(Exception):
"""Indicates a problem with the include order in a file."""
pass
class FileInfo:
"""Provides utility functions for filenames.
FileInfo provides easy access to the components of a file's path
relative to the project root.
"""
def __init__(self, filename):
self._filename = filename
def FullName(self):
"""Make Windows paths like Unix."""
return os.path.abspath(self._filename).replace('\\', '/')
def RepositoryName(self):
"""FullName after removing the local path to the repository.
If we have a real absolute path name here we can try to do something smart:
detecting the root of the checkout and truncating /path/to/checkout from
the name so that we get header guards that don't include things like
"C:\Documents and Settings\..." or "/home/username/..." in them and thus
people on different computers who have checked the source out to different
locations won't see bogus errors.
"""
fullname = self.FullName()
if os.path.exists(fullname):
project_dir = os.path.dirname(fullname)
if os.path.exists(os.path.join(project_dir, ".svn")):
# If there's a .svn file in the current directory, we recursively look
# up the directory tree for the top of the SVN checkout
root_dir = project_dir
one_up_dir = os.path.dirname(root_dir)
while os.path.exists(os.path.join(one_up_dir, ".svn")):
root_dir = os.path.dirname(root_dir)
one_up_dir = os.path.dirname(one_up_dir)
prefix = os.path.commonprefix([root_dir, project_dir])
return fullname[len(prefix) + 1:]
# Not SVN? Try to find a git top level directory by searching up from the
# current path.
root_dir = os.path.dirname(fullname)
while (root_dir != os.path.dirname(root_dir) and
not os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".git"))):
root_dir = os.path.dirname(root_dir)
if os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".git")):
prefix = os.path.commonprefix([root_dir, project_dir])
return fullname[len(prefix) + 1:]
# Don't know what to do; header guard warnings may be wrong...
return fullname
def Split(self):
"""Splits the file into the directory, basename, and extension.
For 'chrome/browser/browser.cc', Split() would
return ('chrome/browser', 'browser', '.cc')
Returns:
A tuple of (directory, basename, extension).
"""
googlename = self.RepositoryName()
project, rest = os.path.split(googlename)
return (project,) + os.path.splitext(rest)
def BaseName(self):
"""File base name - text after the final slash, before the final period."""
return self.Split()[1]
def Extension(self):
"""File extension - text following the final period."""
return self.Split()[2]
def NoExtension(self):
"""File has no source file extension."""
return '/'.join(self.Split()[0:2])
def IsSource(self):
"""File has a source file extension."""
return self.Extension()[1:] in ('c', 'cc', 'cpp', 'cxx')
def _ShouldPrintError(category, confidence):
"""Returns true iff confidence >= verbose, and category passes filter."""
# There are two ways we might decide not to print an error message:
# the verbosity level isn't high enough, or the filters filter it out.
if confidence < _cpplint_state.verbose_level:
return False
is_filtered = False
for one_filter in _Filters():
if one_filter.startswith('-'):
if category.startswith(one_filter[1:]):
is_filtered = True
elif one_filter.startswith('+'):
if category.startswith(one_filter[1:]):
is_filtered = False
else:
assert False # should have been checked for in SetFilter.
if is_filtered:
return False
return True
def Error(filename, linenum, category, confidence, message):
"""Logs the fact we've found a lint error.
We log where the error was found, and also our confidence in the error,
that is, how certain we are this is a legitimate style regression, and
not a misidentification or a use that's sometimes justified.
Args:
filename: The name of the file containing the error.
linenum: The number of the line containing the error.
category: A string used to describe the "category" this bug
falls under: "whitespace", say, or "runtime". Categories
may have a hierarchy separated by slashes: "whitespace/indent".
confidence: A number from 1-5 representing a confidence score for
the error, with 5 meaning that we are certain of the problem,
and 1 meaning that it could be a legitimate construct.
message: The error message.
"""
# There are two ways we might decide not to print an error message:
# the verbosity level isn't high enough, or the filters filter it out.
if _ShouldPrintError(category, confidence):
_cpplint_state.IncrementErrorCount(category)
if _cpplint_state.output_format == 'vs7':
sys.stderr.write('%s(%s): %s [%s] [%d]\n' % (
filename, linenum, message, category, confidence))
else:
sys.stderr.write('%s:%s: %s [%s] [%d]\n' % (
filename, linenum, message, category, confidence))
# Matches standard C++ escape esequences per 2.13.2.3 of the C++ standard.
_RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_ESCAPES = re.compile(
r'\\([abfnrtv?"\\\']|\d+|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)')
# Matches strings. Escape codes should already be removed by ESCAPES.
_RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_DOUBLE_QUOTES = re.compile(r'"[^"]*"')
# Matches characters. Escape codes should already be removed by ESCAPES.
_RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_SINGLE_QUOTES = re.compile(r"'.'")
# Matches multi-line C++ comments.
# This RE is a little bit more complicated than one might expect, because we
# have to take care of space removals tools so we can handle comments inside
# statements better.
# The current rule is: We only clear spaces from both sides when we're at the
# end of the line. Otherwise, we try to remove spaces from the right side,
# if this doesn't work we try on left side but only if there's a non-character
# on the right.
_RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_C_COMMENTS = re.compile(
r"""(\s*/\*.*\*/\s*$|
/\*.*\*/\s+|
\s+/\*.*\*/(?=\W)|
/\*.*\*/)""", re.VERBOSE)
def IsCppString(line):
"""Does line terminate so, that the next symbol is in string constant.
This function does not consider single-line nor multi-line comments.
Args:
line: is a partial line of code starting from the 0..n.
Returns:
True, if next character appended to 'line' is inside a
string constant.
"""
line = line.replace(r'\\', 'XX') # after this, \\" does not match to \"
return ((line.count('"') - line.count(r'\"') - line.count("'\"'")) & 1) == 1
def FindNextMultiLineCommentStart(lines, lineix):
"""Find the beginning marker for a multiline comment."""
while lineix < len(lines):
if lines[lineix].strip().startswith('/*'):
# Only return this marker if the comment goes beyond this line
if lines[lineix].strip().find('*/', 2) < 0:
return lineix
lineix += 1
return len(lines)
def FindNextMultiLineCommentEnd(lines, lineix):
"""We are inside a comment, find the end marker."""
while lineix < len(lines):
if lines[lineix].strip().endswith('*/'):
return lineix
lineix += 1
return len(lines)
def RemoveMultiLineCommentsFromRange(lines, begin, end):
"""Clears a range of lines for multi-line comments."""
# Having // dummy comments makes the lines non-empty, so we will not get
# unnecessary blank line warnings later in the code.
for i in range(begin, end):
lines[i] = '// dummy'
def RemoveMultiLineComments(filename, lines, error):
"""Removes multiline (c-style) comments from lines."""
count = 0
lineix = 0
while lineix < len(lines):
lineix_begin = FindNextMultiLineCommentStart(lines, lineix)
if lineix_begin >= len(lines):
return
lineix_end = FindNextMultiLineCommentEnd(lines, lineix_begin)
if lineix_end >= len(lines):
error(filename, lineix_begin + 1, 'readability/multiline_comment', 5,
'Could not find end of multi-line comment')
return
#if count == 1:
# if r'\file' not in lines[lineix_begin + 1]:
# error(filename, lineix_begin + 1, 'readability/multiline_comment',
# 5, r'Second comment in file should be Doxygen \file comment.')
RemoveMultiLineCommentsFromRange(lines, lineix_begin, lineix_end + 1)
lineix = lineix_end + 1
count += 1
def CleanseComments(line):
"""Removes //-comments and single-line C-style /* */ comments.
Args:
line: A line of C++ source.
Returns:
The line with single-line comments removed.
"""
commentpos = line.find('//')
if commentpos != -1 and not IsCppString(line[:commentpos]):
line = line[:commentpos]
# get rid of /* ... */
return _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_C_COMMENTS.sub('', line)
class CleansedLines(object):
"""Holds 3 copies of all lines with different preprocessing applied to them.
1) elided member contains lines without strings and comments,
2) lines member contains lines without comments, and
3) raw member contains all the lines without processing.
All these three members are of <type 'list'>, and of the same length.
"""
def __init__(self, lines):
self.elided = []
self.lines = []
self.raw_lines = lines
self.num_lines = len(lines)
for linenum in range(len(lines)):
self.lines.append(CleanseComments(lines[linenum]))
elided = self._CollapseStrings(lines[linenum])
self.elided.append(CleanseComments(elided))
def NumLines(self):
"""Returns the number of lines represented."""
return self.num_lines
@staticmethod
def _CollapseStrings(elided):
"""Collapses strings and chars on a line to simple "" or '' blocks.
We nix strings first so we're not fooled by text like '"http://"'
Args:
elided: The line being processed.
Returns:
The line with collapsed strings.
"""
if not _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE.match(elided):
# Remove escaped characters first to make quote/single quote collapsing
# basic. Things that look like escaped characters shouldn't occur
# outside of strings and chars.
elided = _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_ESCAPES.sub('', elided)
elided = _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_SINGLE_QUOTES.sub("''", elided)
elided = _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_DOUBLE_QUOTES.sub('""', elided)
return elided
def CloseExpression(clean_lines, linenum, pos):
"""If input points to ( or { or [, finds the position that closes it.
If lines[linenum][pos] points to a '(' or '{' or '[', finds the the
linenum/pos that correspond to the closing of the expression.
Args:
clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file.
linenum: The number of the line to check.
pos: A position on the line.
Returns:
A tuple (line, linenum, pos) pointer *past* the closing brace, or
(line, len(lines), -1) if we never find a close. Note we ignore
strings and comments when matching; and the line we return is the
'cleansed' line at linenum.
"""
line = clean_lines.elided[linenum]
startchar = line[pos]
if startchar not in '({[':
return (line, clean_lines.NumLines(), -1)
if startchar == '(': endchar = ')'
if startchar == '[': endchar = ']'
if startchar == '{': endchar = '}'
num_open = line.count(startchar) - line.count(endchar)
while linenum < clean_lines.NumLines() and num_open > 0:
linenum += 1
line = clean_lines.elided[linenum]
num_open += line.count(startchar) - line.count(endchar)
# OK, now find the endchar that actually got us back to even
endpos = len(line)
while num_open >= 0:
endpos = line.rfind(')', 0, endpos)
num_open -= 1 # chopped off another )
return (line, linenum, endpos + 1)
def CheckForCopyright(filename, lines, error):
"""Logs an error if no Copyright message appears at the top of the file."""
# We'll say it should occur by line 10. Don't forget there's a
# dummy line at the front.
for line in xrange(1, min(len(lines), 11)):
if re.search(r'Copyright', lines[line], re.I): break
else: # means no copyright line was found
error(filename, 0, 'legal/copyright', 5,
'No copyright message found. '
'You should have a line: "Copyright [year] <Copyright Owner>"')
def GetHeaderGuardCPPVariable(filename):
"""Returns the CPP variable that should be used as a header guard.
Args:
filename: The name of a C++ header file.
Returns:
The CPP variable that should be used as a header guard in the
named file.
"""
fileinfo = FileInfo(filename).RepositoryName()
fileinfo = re.sub(r'^src', 'ramcloud', fileinfo)
return re.sub(r'[-./\s]', '_', fileinfo).upper()
def CheckForHeaderGuard(filename, lines, error):
"""Checks that the file contains a header guard.
Logs an error if no #ifndef header guard is present. For other
headers, checks that the full pathname is used.
Args:
filename: The name of the C++ header file.
lines: An array of strings, each representing a line of the file.
error: The function to call with any errors found.
"""
cppvar = GetHeaderGuardCPPVariable(filename)
ifndef = None
ifndef_linenum = 0
define = None
endif = None
endif_linenum = 0