Extra Clang Tools 5 documentation

Modularize Usage

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Modularize Usage

modularize [<modularize-options>] [<module-map>|<include-files-list>]* [<front-end-options>...]

<modularize-options> is a place-holder for options specific to modularize, which are described below in Modularize Command Line Options.

<module-map> specifies the path of a file name for an existing module map. The module map must be well-formed in terms of syntax. Modularize will extract the header file names from the map. Only normal headers are checked, assuming headers marked “private”, “textual”, or “exclude” are not to be checked as a top-level include, assuming they either are included by other headers which are checked, or they are not suitable for modules.

<include-files-list> specifies the path of a file name for a file containing the newline-separated list of headers to check with respect to each other. Lines beginning with ‘#’ and empty lines are ignored. Header file names followed by a colon and other space-separated file names will include those extra files as dependencies. The file names can be relative or full paths, but must be on the same line. For example:

header1.h
header2.h
header3.h: header1.h header2.h

Note that unless a -prefix (header path) option is specified, non-absolute file paths in the header list file will be relative to the header list file directory. Use -prefix to specify a different directory.

<front-end-options> is a place-holder for regular Clang front-end arguments, which must follow the <include-files-list>. Note that by default, modularize assumes .h files contain C++ source, so if you are using a different language, you might need to use a -x option to tell Clang that the header contains another language, i.e.: -x c

Note also that because modularize does not use the clang driver, you will likely need to pass in additional compiler front-end arguments to match those passed in by default by the driver.

Modularize Command Line Options

-prefix=<header-path>

Prepend the given path to non-absolute file paths in the header list file. By default, headers are assumed to be relative to the header list file directory. Use -prefix to specify a different directory.

-module-map-path=<module-map-path>

Generate a module map and output it to the given file. See the description in Module Map Generation.

-problem-files-list=<problem-files-list-file-name>

For use only with module map assistant. Input list of files that have problems with respect to modules. These will still be included in the generated module map, but will be marked as “excluded” headers.

-root-module=<root-name>

Put modules generated by the -module-map-path option in an enclosing module with the given name. See the description in Module Map Generation.

-block-check-header-list-only

Limit the #include-inside-extern-or-namespace-block check to only those headers explicitly listed in the header list. This is a work-around for avoiding error messages for private includes that purposefully get included inside blocks.

-no-coverage-check

Don’t do the coverage check for a module map.

-coverage-check-only

Only do the coverage check for a module map.

-display-file-lists

Display lists of good files (no compile errors), problem files, and a combined list with problem files preceded by a ‘#’. This can be used to quickly determine which files have problems. The latter combined list might be useful in starting to modularize a set of headers. You can start with a full list of headers, use -display-file-lists option, and then use the combined list as your intermediate list, uncommenting-out headers as you fix them.

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