Clang-Tidy¶
Contents
See also:
clang-tidy is a clang-based C++ “linter” tool. Its purpose is to provide an extensible framework for diagnosing and fixing typical programming errors, like style violations, interface misuse, or bugs that can be deduced via static analysis. clang-tidy is modular and provides a convenient interface for writing new checks.
Using clang-tidy¶
clang-tidy is a LibTooling-based tool, and it’s easier to work
with if you set up a compile command database for your project (for an example
of how to do this see How To Setup Tooling For LLVM). You can also specify
compilation options on the command line after --
:
$ clang-tidy test.cpp -- -Imy_project/include -DMY_DEFINES ...
clang-tidy has its own checks and can also run Clang static analyzer
checks. Each check has a name and the checks to run can be chosen using the
-checks=
option, which specifies a comma-separated list of positive and
negative (prefixed with -
) globs. Positive globs add subsets of checks,
negative globs remove them. For example,
$ clang-tidy test.cpp -checks=-*,clang-analyzer-*,-clang-analyzer-cplusplus*
will disable all default checks (-*
) and enable all clang-analyzer-*
checks except for clang-analyzer-cplusplus*
ones.
The -list-checks
option lists all the enabled checks. When used without
-checks=
, it shows checks enabled by default. Use -checks=*
to see all
available checks or with any other value of -checks=
to see which checks are
enabled by this value.
There are currently the following groups of checks:
Name prefix | Description |
---|---|
android- |
Checks related to Android. |
boost- |
Checks related to Boost library. |
bugprone- |
Checks that target bugprone code constructs. |
cert- |
Checks related to CERT Secure Coding Guidelines. |
cppcoreguidelines- |
Checks related to C++ Core Guidelines. |
clang-analyzer- |
Clang Static Analyzer checks. |
google- |
Checks related to Google coding conventions. |
hicpp- |
Checks related to High Integrity C++ Coding Standard. |
llvm- |
Checks related to the LLVM coding conventions. |
misc- |
Checks that we didn’t have a better category for. |
modernize- |
Checks that advocate usage of modern (currently “modern” means “C++11”) language constructs. |
mpi- |
Checks related to MPI (Message Passing Interface). |
performance- |
Checks that target performance-related issues. |
readability- |
Checks that target readability-related issues that don’t relate to any particular coding style. |
Clang diagnostics are treated in a similar way as check diagnostics. Clang
diagnostics are displayed by clang-tidy and can be filtered out using
-checks=
option. However, the -checks=
option does not affect
compilation arguments, so it can not turn on Clang warnings which are not
already turned on in build configuration. The -warnings-as-errors=
option
upgrades any warnings emitted under the -checks=
flag to errors (but it
does not enable any checks itself).
Clang diagnostics have check names starting with clang-diagnostic-
.
Diagnostics which have a corresponding warning option, are named
clang-diagnostic-<warning-option>
, e.g. Clang warning controlled by
-Wliteral-conversion
will be reported with check name
clang-diagnostic-literal-conversion
.
The -fix
flag instructs clang-tidy to fix found errors if
supported by corresponding checks.
An overview of all the command-line options:
$ clang-tidy -help
USAGE: clang-tidy [options] <source0> [... <sourceN>]
OPTIONS:
Generic Options:
-help - Display available options (-help-hidden for more)
-help-list - Display list of available options (-help-list-hidden for more)
-version - Display the version of this program
clang-tidy options:
-analyze-temporary-dtors -
Enable temporary destructor-aware analysis in
clang-analyzer- checks.
This option overrides the value read from a
.clang-tidy file.
-checks=<string> -
Comma-separated list of globs with optional '-'
prefix. Globs are processed in order of
appearance in the list. Globs without '-'
prefix add checks with matching names to the
set, globs with the '-' prefix remove checks
with matching names from the set of enabled
checks. This option's value is appended to the
value of the 'Checks' option in .clang-tidy
file, if any.
-config=<string> -
Specifies a configuration in YAML/JSON format:
-config="{Checks: '*',
CheckOptions: [{key: x,
value: y}]}"
When the value is empty, clang-tidy will
attempt to find a file named .clang-tidy for
each source file in its parent directories.
-dump-config -
Dumps configuration in the YAML format to
stdout. This option can be used along with a
file name (and '--' if the file is outside of a
project with configured compilation database).
The configuration used for this file will be
printed.
Use along with -checks=* to include
configuration of all checks.
-enable-check-profile -
Enable per-check timing profiles, and print a
report to stderr.
-explain-config -
For each enabled check explains, where it is
enabled, i.e. in clang-tidy binary, command
line or a specific configuration file.
-export-fixes=<filename> -
YAML file to store suggested fixes in. The
stored fixes can be applied to the input source
code with clang-apply-replacements.
-extra-arg=<string> - Additional argument to append to the compiler command line
-extra-arg-before=<string> - Additional argument to prepend to the compiler command line
-fix -
Apply suggested fixes. Without -fix-errors
clang-tidy will bail out if any compilation
errors were found.
-fix-errors -
Apply suggested fixes even if compilation
errors were found. If compiler errors have
attached fix-its, clang-tidy will apply them as
well.
-format-style=<string> -
Style for formatting code around applied fixes:
- 'none' (default) turns off formatting
- 'file' (literally 'file', not a placeholder)
uses .clang-format file in the closest parent
directory
- '{ <json> }' specifies options inline, e.g.
-format-style='{BasedOnStyle: llvm, IndentWidth: 8}'
- 'llvm', 'google', 'webkit', 'mozilla'
See clang-format documentation for the up-to-date
information about formatting styles and options.
This option overrides the 'FormatStyle` option in
.clang-tidy file, if any.
-header-filter=<string> -
Regular expression matching the names of the
headers to output diagnostics from. Diagnostics
from the main file of each translation unit are
always displayed.
Can be used together with -line-filter.
This option overrides the 'HeaderFilter' option
in .clang-tidy file, if any.
-line-filter=<string> -
List of files with line ranges to filter the
warnings. Can be used together with
-header-filter. The format of the list is a
JSON array of objects:
[
{"name":"file1.cpp","lines":[[1,3],[5,7]]},
{"name":"file2.h"}
]
-list-checks -
List all enabled checks and exit. Use with
-checks=* to list all available checks.
-p=<string> - Build path
-quiet -
Run clang-tidy in quiet mode. This suppresses
printing statistics about ignored warnings and
warnings treated as errors if the respective
options are specified.
-system-headers - Display the errors from system headers.
-warnings-as-errors=<string> -
Upgrades warnings to errors. Same format as
'-checks'.
This option's value is appended to the value of
the 'WarningsAsErrors' option in .clang-tidy
file, if any.
-p <build-path> is used to read a compile command database.
For example, it can be a CMake build directory in which a file named
compile_commands.json exists (use -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON
CMake option to get this output). When no build path is specified,
a search for compile_commands.json will be attempted through all
parent paths of the first input file . See:
http://clang.llvm.org/docs/HowToSetupToolingForLLVM.html for an
example of setting up Clang Tooling on a source tree.
<source0> ... specify the paths of source files. These paths are
looked up in the compile command database. If the path of a file is
absolute, it needs to point into CMake's source tree. If the path is
relative, the current working directory needs to be in the CMake
source tree and the file must be in a subdirectory of the current
working directory. "./" prefixes in the relative files will be
automatically removed, but the rest of a relative path must be a
suffix of a path in the compile command database.
Configuration files:
clang-tidy attempts to read configuration for each source file from a
.clang-tidy file located in the closest parent directory of the source
file. If any configuration options have a corresponding command-line
option, command-line option takes precedence. The effective
configuration can be inspected using -dump-config:
$ clang-tidy -dump-config
---
Checks: '-*,some-check'
WarningsAsErrors: ''
HeaderFilterRegex: ''
AnalyzeTemporaryDtors: false
FormatStyle: none
User: user
CheckOptions:
- key: some-check.SomeOption
value: 'some value'
...
Getting Involved¶
clang-tidy has several own checks and can run Clang static analyzer checks, but its power is in the ability to easily write custom checks.
Checks are organized in modules, which can be linked into clang-tidy with minimal or no code changes in clang-tidy.
Checks can plug into the analysis on the preprocessor level using PPCallbacks or on the AST level using AST Matchers. When an error is found, checks can report them in a way similar to how Clang diagnostics work. A fix-it hint can be attached to a diagnostic message.
The interface provided by clang-tidy makes it easy to write useful and precise checks in just a few lines of code. If you have an idea for a good check, the rest of this document explains how to do this.
- There are a few tools particularly useful when developing clang-tidy checks:
add_new_check.py
is a script to automate the process of adding a new check, it will create the check, update the CMake file and create a test;rename_check.py
does what the script name suggests, renames an existing check;- clang-query is invaluable for interactive prototyping of AST matchers and exploration of the Clang AST;
- clang-check with the
-ast-dump
(and optionally-ast-dump-filter
) provides a convenient way to dump AST of a C++ program.
Choosing the Right Place for your Check¶
If you have an idea of a check, you should decide whether it should be implemented as a:
- Clang diagnostic: if the check is generic enough, targets code patterns that most probably are bugs (rather than style or readability issues), can be implemented effectively and with extremely low false positive rate, it may make a good Clang diagnostic.
- Clang static analyzer check: if the check requires some sort of control flow analysis, it should probably be implemented as a static analyzer check.
- clang-tidy check is a good choice for linter-style checks, checks that are related to a certain coding style, checks that address code readability, etc.
Preparing your Workspace¶
If you are new to LLVM development, you should read the Getting Started with the LLVM System, Using Clang Tools and How To Setup Tooling For LLVM documents to check out and build LLVM, Clang and Clang Extra Tools with CMake.
Once you are done, change to the llvm/tools/clang/tools/extra
directory, and
let’s start!
The Directory Structure¶
clang-tidy source code resides in the
llvm/tools/clang/tools/extra
directory and is structured as follows:
clang-tidy/ # Clang-tidy core.
|-- ClangTidy.h # Interfaces for users and checks.
|-- ClangTidyModule.h # Interface for clang-tidy modules.
|-- ClangTidyModuleRegistry.h # Interface for registering of modules.
...
|-- google/ # Google clang-tidy module.
|-+
|-- GoogleTidyModule.cpp
|-- GoogleTidyModule.h
...
|-- llvm/ # LLVM clang-tidy module.
|-+
|-- LLVMTidyModule.cpp
|-- LLVMTidyModule.h
...
|-- tool/ # Sources of the clang-tidy binary.
...
test/clang-tidy/ # Integration tests.
...
unittests/clang-tidy/ # Unit tests.
|-- ClangTidyTest.h
|-- GoogleModuleTest.cpp
|-- LLVMModuleTest.cpp
...
Writing a clang-tidy Check¶
So you have an idea of a useful check for clang-tidy.
First, if you’re not familiar with LLVM development, read through the Getting Started with LLVM document for instructions on setting up your workflow and the LLVM Coding Standards document to familiarize yourself with the coding style used in the project. For code reviews we mostly use LLVM Phabricator.
Next, you need to decide which module the check belongs to. Modules are located in subdirectories of clang-tidy/ and contain checks targeting a certain aspect of code quality (performance, readability, etc.), certain coding style or standard (Google, LLVM, CERT, etc.) or a widely used API (e.g. MPI). Their names are same as user-facing check groups names described above.
After choosing the module and the name for the check, run the
clang-tidy/add_new_check.py
script to create the skeleton of the check and
plug it to clang-tidy. It’s the recommended way of adding new checks.
If we want to create a readability-awesome-function-names, we would run:
$ clang-tidy/add_new_check.py readability awesome-function-names
- The
add_new_check.py
script will: - create the class for your check inside the specified module’s directory and register it in the module and in the build system;
- create a lit test file in the
test/clang-tidy/
directory; - create a documentation file and include it into the
docs/clang-tidy/checks/list.rst
.
Let’s see in more detail at the check class definition:
...
#include "../ClangTidy.h"
namespace clang {
namespace tidy {
namespace readability {
...
class AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck : public ClangTidyCheck {
public:
AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck(StringRef Name, ClangTidyContext *Context)
: ClangTidyCheck(Name, Context) {}
void registerMatchers(ast_matchers::MatchFinder *Finder) override;
void check(const ast_matchers::MatchFinder::MatchResult &Result) override;
};
} // namespace readability
} // namespace tidy
} // namespace clang
...
Constructor of the check receives the Name
and Context
parameters, and
must forward them to the ClangTidyCheck
constructor.
In our case the check needs to operate on the AST level and it overrides the
registerMatchers
and check
methods. If we wanted to analyze code on the
preprocessor level, we’d need instead to override the registerPPCallbacks
method.
In the registerMatchers
method we create an AST Matcher (see AST Matchers
for more information) that will find the pattern in the AST that we want to
inspect. The results of the matching are passed to the check
method, which
can further inspect them and report diagnostics.
using namespace ast_matchers;
void AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck::registerMatchers(MatchFinder *Finder) {
Finder->addMatcher(functionDecl().bind("x"), this);
}
void AwesomeFunctionNamesCheck::check(const MatchFinder::MatchResult &Result) {
const auto *MatchedDecl = Result.Nodes.getNodeAs<FunctionDecl>("x");
if (MatchedDecl->getName().startswith("awesome_"))
return;
diag(MatchedDecl->getLocation(), "function %0 is insufficiently awesome")
<< MatchedDecl
<< FixItHint::CreateInsertion(MatchedDecl->getLocation(), "awesome_");
}
(If you want to see an example of a useful check, look at clang-tidy/google/ExplicitConstructorCheck.h and clang-tidy/google/ExplicitConstructorCheck.cpp).
Registering your Check¶
(The add_new_check.py
takes care of registering the check in an existing
module. If you want to create a new module or know the details, read on.)
The check should be registered in the corresponding module with a distinct name:
class MyModule : public ClangTidyModule {
public:
void addCheckFactories(ClangTidyCheckFactories &CheckFactories) override {
CheckFactories.registerCheck<ExplicitConstructorCheck>(
"my-explicit-constructor");
}
};
Now we need to register the module in the ClangTidyModuleRegistry
using a
statically initialized variable:
static ClangTidyModuleRegistry::Add<MyModule> X("my-module",
"Adds my lint checks.");
When using LLVM build system, we need to use the following hack to ensure the module is linked into the clang-tidy binary:
Add this near the ClangTidyModuleRegistry::Add<MyModule>
variable:
// This anchor is used to force the linker to link in the generated object file
// and thus register the MyModule.
volatile int MyModuleAnchorSource = 0;
And this to the main translation unit of the clang-tidy binary (or
the binary you link the clang-tidy
library in)
clang-tidy/tool/ClangTidyMain.cpp
:
// This anchor is used to force the linker to link the MyModule.
extern volatile int MyModuleAnchorSource;
static int MyModuleAnchorDestination = MyModuleAnchorSource;
Configuring Checks¶
If a check needs configuration options, it can access check-specific options
using the Options.get<Type>("SomeOption", DefaultValue)
call in the check
constructor. In this case the check should also override the
ClangTidyCheck::storeOptions
method to make the options provided by the
check discoverable. This method lets clang-tidy know which options
the check implements and what the current values are (e.g. for the
-dump-config
command line option).
class MyCheck : public ClangTidyCheck {
const unsigned SomeOption1;
const std::string SomeOption2;
public:
MyCheck(StringRef Name, ClangTidyContext *Context)
: ClangTidyCheck(Name, Context),
SomeOption(Options.get("SomeOption1", -1U)),
SomeOption(Options.get("SomeOption2", "some default")) {}
void storeOptions(ClangTidyOptions::OptionMap &Opts) override {
Options.store(Opts, "SomeOption1", SomeOption1);
Options.store(Opts, "SomeOption2", SomeOption2);
}
...
Assuming the check is registered with the name “my-check”, the option can then
be set in a .clang-tidy
file in the following way:
CheckOptions:
- key: my-check.SomeOption1
value: 123
- key: my-check.SomeOption2
value: 'some other value'
If you need to specify check options on a command line, you can use the inline YAML format:
$ clang-tidy -config="{CheckOptions: [{key: a, value: b}, {key: x, value: y}]}" ...
Testing Checks¶
To run tests for clang-tidy use the command:
$ ninja check-clang-tools
clang-tidy checks can be tested using either unit tests or lit tests. Unit tests may be more convenient to test complex replacements with strict checks. Lit tests allow using partial text matching and regular expressions which makes them more suitable for writing compact tests for diagnostic messages.
The check_clang_tidy.py
script provides an easy way to test both
diagnostic messages and fix-its. It filters out CHECK
lines from the test
file, runs clang-tidy and verifies messages and fixes with two
separate FileCheck invocations: once with FileCheck’s directive
prefix set to CHECK-MESSAGES
, validating the diagnostic messages,
and once with the directive prefix set to CHECK-FIXES
, running
against the fixed code (i.e., the code after generated fix-its are
applied). In particular, CHECK-FIXES:
can be used to check
that code was not modified by fix-its, by checking that it is present
unchanged in the fixed code. The full set of FileCheck directives
is available (e.g., CHECK-MESSAGES-SAME:
, CHECK-MESSAGES-NOT:
), though
typically the basic CHECK
forms (CHECK-MESSAGES
and CHECK-FIXES
)
are sufficient for clang-tidy tests. Note that the FileCheck
documentation mostly assumes the default prefix (CHECK
), and hence
describes the directive as CHECK:
, CHECK-SAME:
, CHECK-NOT:
, etc.
Replace CHECK
by either CHECK-FIXES
or CHECK-MESSAGES
for
clang-tidy tests.
An additional check enabled by check_clang_tidy.py
ensures that
if CHECK-MESSAGES: is used in a file then every warning or error
must have an associated CHECK in that file.
To use the check_clang_tidy.py
script, put a .cpp file with the
appropriate RUN
line in the test/clang-tidy
directory. Use
CHECK-MESSAGES:
and CHECK-FIXES:
lines to write checks against
diagnostic messages and fixed code.
It’s advised to make the checks as specific as possible to avoid checks matching
to incorrect parts of the input. Use [[@LINE+X]]
/[[@LINE-X]]
substitutions and distinct function and variable names in the test code.
Here’s an example of a test using the check_clang_tidy.py
script (the full
source code is at test/clang-tidy/google-readability-casting.cpp):
// RUN: %check_clang_tidy %s google-readability-casting %t
void f(int a) {
int b = (int)a;
// CHECK-MESSAGES: :[[@LINE-1]]:11: warning: redundant cast to the same type [google-readability-casting]
// CHECK-FIXES: int b = a;
}
There are many dark corners in the C++ language, and it may be difficult to make your check work perfectly in all cases, especially if it issues fix-it hints. The most frequent pitfalls are macros and templates:
- code written in a macro body/template definition may have a different meaning depending on the macro expansion/template instantiation;
- multiple macro expansions/template instantiations may result in the same code being inspected by the check multiple times (possibly, with different meanings, see 1), and the same warning (or a slightly different one) may be issued by the check multiple times; clang-tidy will deduplicate _identical_ warnings, but if the warnings are slightly different, all of them will be shown to the user (and used for applying fixes, if any);
- making replacements to a macro body/template definition may be fine for some macro expansions/template instantiations, but easily break some other expansions/instantiations.
Running clang-tidy on LLVM¶
To test a check it’s best to try it out on a larger code base. LLVM and Clang
are the natural targets as you already have the source code around. The most
convenient way to run clang-tidy is with a compile command database;
CMake can automatically generate one, for a description of how to enable it see
How To Setup Tooling For LLVM. Once compile_commands.json
is in place and
a working version of clang-tidy is in PATH
the entire code base
can be analyzed with clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py
. The script executes
clang-tidy with the default set of checks on every translation unit
in the compile command database and displays the resulting warnings and errors.
The script provides multiple configuration flags.
- The default set of checks can be overridden using the
-checks
argument, taking the identical format as clang-tidy does. For example-checks=-*,modernize-use-override
will run themodernize-use-override
check only. - To restrict the files examined you can provide one or more regex arguments
that the file names are matched against.
run-clang-tidy.py clang-tidy/.*Check\.cpp
will only analyze clang-tidy checks. It may also be necessary to restrict the header files warnings are displayed from using the-header-filter
flag. It has the same behavior as the corresponding clang-tidy flag. - To apply suggested fixes
-fix
can be passed as an argument. This gathers all changes in a temporary directory and applies them. Passing-format
will run clang-format over changed lines.