Use clang-tidy's readability-simplify-boolean-expr checker.
After applying the fix-its, revise all changes *very* carefully.
Be aware of false positives and invalid changes.
Use clang-tidy's performance-unnecessary-copy-initialization checker.
After applying the fix-its (which turns the copies into const&), revise
the changes and see whether the copies can be removed entirely by using
the original instead.
Use clang-tidy's performance-unnecessary-value-param checker to find
value parameter declarations of expensive to copy types that are not
modified inside the function. Ignore findings in kwsys.
After applying the fix-its, manually change `const T&` to `T const&`.
Run the `Utilities/Scripts/clang-format.bash` script to update
all our C++ code to a new style defined by `.clang-format`.
Use `clang-format` version 3.8.
* If you reached this commit for a line in `git blame`, re-run the blame
operation starting at the parent of this commit to see older history
for the content.
* See the parent commit for instructions to rebase a change across this
style transition commit.
Sort include directives within each block (separated by a blank line) in
lexicographic order (except to prioritize `sys/types.h` first). First
run `clang-format` with the config file:
---
SortIncludes: false
...
Commit the result temporarily. Then run `clang-format` again with:
---
SortIncludes: true
IncludeCategories:
- Regex: 'sys/types.h'
Priority: -1
...
Commit the result temporarily. Start a new branch and cherry-pick the
second commit. Manually resolve conflicts to preserve indentation of
re-ordered includes. This cleans up the include ordering without
changing any other style.
Use the following command to run `clang-format`:
$ git ls-files -z -- \
'*.c' '*.cc' '*.cpp' '*.cxx' '*.h' '*.hh' '*.hpp' '*.hxx' |
egrep -z -v '(Lexer|Parser|ParserHelper)\.' |
egrep -z -v '^Source/cm_sha2' |
egrep -z -v '^Source/(kwsys|CursesDialog/form)/' |
egrep -z -v '^Utilities/(KW|cm).*/' |
egrep -z -v '^Tests/Module/GenerateExportHeader' |
egrep -z -v '^Tests/RunCMake/CommandLine/cmake_depends/test_UTF-16LE.h' |
xargs -0 clang-format -i
This selects source files that do not come from a third-party.
Inspired-by: Daniel Pfeifer <daniel@pfeifer-mail.de>
When performing some other testing, the globs for Blanket.js and Delphi
code coverage are picking up unintended files. Change the query for the
Delphi coverage to follow the naming convention, and check the second line
of the found JSON files for certain text before parsing them as coverage files.
Change the Cobertura handler to look for an environment variable
called "COBERTURADIR" which contains the directory where the
coverage.xml file is found. If that variable doesn't exist,
continue to use the default of the binary directory.
Update the test to use an appropriate value in the environment
variables.
Do not ignore a coverage request if CTEST_EXTRA_COVERAGE_GLOB was
specified. Prior to this change, if no lines of code were covered by
any tests then CTest would neglect to generate a Coverage.xml file.
This change allows us to report uncovered files for a project with no
tests.
Add the ability to parse the XML output of the Jacoco tool.
Jacoco (www.eclemma.org/jacoco) is a Java coverage tool.
Add and integrate a class for the parser and
include a test which utilizes the new parser.
The coverage.py tool writes out an XML that conforms to the Cobertura
Coverage tool standard. Rename the cmParsePythonCoverage files to
instead be cmParseCoberturaCoverage.
By default, Intel compiler coverage tools generate HTML files as
reports, but the option -txtlcov can be given to codecov to output a
coverage file with LCov format.
To use Intel coverage:
* build the project with coverage flags
* run the application
* run profmerge
* run codecov
The output file will be "build_dir/CodeCoverage/SRCFILEDIR.LCOV".
Ask users to compile with -prof-dir${BUILD_DIR} instead of searching
the entire build tree recursively to find coverage files.
Use the clang RemoveCStrCalls tool to automatically migrate the
code. This was only run on linux, so does not have any positive or
negative effect on other platforms.
Casts from std::string -> cmStdString were high on the list of things
taking up time. Avoid such implicit casts across function calls by just
using std::string everywhere.
The comment that the symbol name is too long is no longer relevant since
modern debuggers alias the templates anyways and the size is a
non-issue since the underlying methods are generated since it's
inherited.
This assumes that coverage.py has been run in such a way to produce its
standard XML output. This uses the Cobertura schema and should be somewhat
generalizable.