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157 lines
4.9 KiB
Markdown
157 lines
4.9 KiB
Markdown
# cquery
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[![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/cquery-project/Lobby](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/cquery-project/Lobby?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge)
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cquery is a highly-scalable, low-latency language server for C/C++. It is tested
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and designed for large code bases like
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[Chromium](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/). cquery provides
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accurate and fast semantic analysis without interrupting workflow.
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![Demo](/images/demo.png?raw=true)
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cquery implements almost the entire language server protocol and provides
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some extra features to boot:
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* code completion (with both signature help and snippets)
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* references
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* type hierarchy (parent type, derived types, expandable tree view)
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* calls to functions, calls to base and derived functions, call tree
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* symbol rename
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* goto definition, goto base method
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* document and global symbol search
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* hover tooltips showing symbol type
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* diagnostics
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* code actions (clang FixIts)
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* darken/fade code disabled by preprocessor
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* #include auto-complete, undefined type include insertion, include quick-jump
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(goto definition, document links)
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* auto-implement functions without a definition
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# Setup - build cquery, install extension, setup project
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There are three steps to get cquery up and running. Eventually, cquery will be
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published in the vscode extension marketplace which will reduce these three
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steps to only project setup.
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## Build cquery
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Building cquery is simple. The external dependencies are few:
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- relatively modern c++11 compiler (ie, clang 3.4 or greater)
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- python
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- git
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```bash
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$ clang --version # if missing, sudo apt-get install clang
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$ git clone https://github.com/jacobdufault/cquery --recursive
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$ cd cquery
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$ ./waf configure --prefix ~/.local/stow/cquery # --prefix is optional, it specifies install directory
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$ ./waf build # -g -O3, built build/release/bin/cquery
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$ ./waf install # optional, copies the executable to $PREFIX/bin/cquery
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```
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For a debug build:
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```bash
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$ ./waf configure --variant=debug
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$ ./waf build --variant=debug # -g -O0, built build/debug/bin/cquery
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```
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## Install extension
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cquery includes a vscode extension; it is part of the repository. Launch vscode
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and install the `vscode-extension.tsix` extension. To do this:
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- Hit `F1`; execute the command `Install from VSIX`.
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- Select `vscode-extension.vsix` in the file chooser.
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**IMPORTANT:** Please reinstall the extension when you sync the code base - it is
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still being developed.
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If you run into issues, you can view debug output by running the
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(`F1`) `View: Toggle Output` command and opening the `cquery` output section.
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## Project setup
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### `compile_commands.json` (Best)
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See [wiki](https://github.com/jacobdufault/cquery/wiki) for how to generate `compile_commands.json` with CMake, Build EAR, Ninja, ...
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If the `compile_commands.json` is not in the top-level workspace directory,
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then the `cquery.misc.compilationDatabaseDirectory` setting can be used to
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specify its location.
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### `cquery.index.extraClangArguments`
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If for whatever reason you cannot generate a `compile_commands.json` file, you
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can add the flags to the `cquery.index.extraClangArguments` configuration
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option.
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### `.cquery`
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If for whatever reason you cannot generate a `compile_commands.json` file, you
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can add the flags to a file called `.cquery` located in the top-level
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workspace directory.
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Each argument in that file is separated by a newline. Lines starting with `#`
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are skipped. Here's an example:
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```
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# Language
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-xc++
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-std=c++11
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# Includes
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-I/work/cquery/third_party
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```
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# Building extension
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If you wish to modify the vscode extension, you will need to build it locally.
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Luckily, it is pretty easy - the only dependency is npm.
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```bash
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# Build extension
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$ cd vscode-client
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$ npm install
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$ code .
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```
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When VSCode is running, you can hit `F5` to build and launch the extension
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locally.
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# Limitations
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cquery is able to respond to queries quickly because it caches a huge amount of
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information. When a request comes in, cquery just looks it up in the cache
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without running many computations. As a result, there's a large memory overhead.
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For example, a full index of Chrome will take about 10gb of memory. If you
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exclude v8, webkit, and third_party, it goes down to about 6.5gb.
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# Wiki
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For Emacs/Vim/other editors integration and some additional tips, see [wiki](https://github.com/jacobdufault/cquery/wiki).
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# Chromium tips
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Chromium is a very large codebase, so cquery benefits from a bit of tuning.
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Optionally add these to your settings:
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```js
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// Set slightly lower than your CPU core count to keep other tools responsive.
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"cquery.misc.indexerCount": 50,
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// Remove uncommonly used directories with large numbers of files.
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"cquery.index.blacklist": [
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".*/src/base/third_party/.*",
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".*/src/native_client/.*",
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".*/src/native_client_sdk/.*",
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".*/src/third_party/.*",
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".*/src/v8/.*",
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".*/src/webkit/.*"
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]
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```
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# License
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MIT
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