@@ -127,14 +127,15 @@ Writing a clang-tidy Check
127127
128128So you have an idea of a useful check for :program: `clang-tidy `.
129129
130- First, if you're not familiar with LLVM development, read through the `Getting
131- Started with LLVM `_ document for instructions on setting up your workflow and
130+ First, if you're not familiar with LLVM development, read through the `Getting Started
131+ with the LLVM System `_ document for instructions on setting up your workflow and
132132the `LLVM Coding Standards `_ document to familiarize yourself with the coding
133- style used in the project. For code reviews we mostly use `LLVM Phabricator `_.
133+ style used in the project. For code reviews we currently use `LLVM Github `_,
134+ though historically we used Phabricator.
134135
135- .. _Getting Started with LLVM : https://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html
136+ .. _Getting Started with the LLVM System : https://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html
136137.. _LLVM Coding Standards : https://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html
137- .. _LLVM Phabricator : https://llvm.org/docs/Phabricator.html
138+ .. _LLVM Github : https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project
138139
139140Next, you need to decide which module the check belongs to. Modules
140141are located in subdirectories of `clang-tidy/
@@ -336,13 +337,24 @@ a starting point for your test cases. A rough outline of the process looks like
336337The quickest way to prototype your matcher is to use :program: `clang-query ` to
337338interactively build up your matcher. For complicated matchers, build up a matching
338339expression incrementally and use :program: `clang-query `'s ``let `` command to save named
339- matching expressions to simplify your matcher. Just like breaking up a huge function
340- into smaller chunks with intention-revealing names can help you understand a complex
341- algorithm, breaking up a matcher into smaller matchers with intention-revealing names
342- can help you understand a complicated matcher. Once you have a working matcher, the
343- C++ API will be virtually identical to your interactively constructed matcher. You can
344- use local variables to preserve your intention-revealing names that you applied to
345- nested matchers.
340+ matching expressions to simplify your matcher.
341+
342+ .. code-block :: console
343+ clang-query> let c1 cxxRecordDecl()
344+ clang-query> match c1
345+
346+ Alternatively, pressing the tab key after a previous matcher's open parentheses would also
347+ show which matchers can be chained with the previous matcher, though some matchers that work
348+ may not be listed.
349+
350+ Just like breaking up a huge function into smaller chunks with intention-revealing names
351+ can help you understand a complex algorithm, breaking up a matcher into smaller matchers
352+ with intention-revealing names can help you understand a complicated matcher.
353+
354+ Once you have a working clang-query matcher, the C++ API matchers will be the same or similar
355+ to your interactively constructed matcher (there can be cases where they differ slightly).
356+ You can use local variables to preserve your intention-revealing names that you applied
357+ to nested matchers.
346358
347359Creating private matchers
348360^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@@ -646,10 +658,13 @@ directory. The path to this directory is available in a lit test with the varia
646658Out-of-tree check plugins
647659-------------------------
648660
661+
649662Developing an out-of-tree check as a plugin largely follows the steps
650- outlined above. The plugin is a shared library whose code lives outside
663+ outlined above, including creating a new module and doing the hacks to
664+ register the module. The plugin is a shared library whose code lives outside
651665the clang-tidy build system. Build and link this shared library against
652- LLVM as done for other kinds of Clang plugins.
666+ LLVM as done for other kinds of Clang plugins. If using CMake, use the keyword
667+ ``MODULE `` while invoking ``add_library `` or ``llvm_add_library ``.
653668
654669The plugin can be loaded by passing `-load ` to `clang-tidy ` in addition to the
655670names of the checks to enable.
@@ -664,6 +679,19 @@ compiled against the version of clang-tidy that will be loading the plugin.
664679The plugins can use threads, TLS, or any other facilities available to in-tree
665680code which is accessible from the external headers.
666681
682+ Note that testing out-of-tree checks might involve getting ``llvm-lit `` from an LLVM
683+ installation compiled from source. See `Getting Started with the LLVM System `_ for ways
684+ to do so.
685+
686+ Alternatively, get `lit `_ following the `test-suite guide `_ and get the `FileCheck `_ binary,
687+ and write a version of `check_clang_tidy.py `_ to suit your needs.
688+
689+ .. _Getting Started with the LLVM System : https://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html
690+ .. _test-suite guide : https://llvm.org/docs/TestSuiteGuide.html
691+ .. _lit : https://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/lit.html
692+ .. _FileCheck : https://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/FileCheck.html
693+ .. _check_clang_tidy.py : https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/clang-tools-extra/test/clang-tidy/check_clang_tidy.py
694+
667695Running clang-tidy on LLVM
668696--------------------------
669697
@@ -688,10 +716,10 @@ warnings and errors. The script provides multiple configuration flags.
688716
689717* To restrict the files examined you can provide one or more regex arguments
690718 that the file names are matched against.
691- ``run-clang-tidy.py clang-tidy/.*Check\.cpp `` will only analyze clang-tidy
719+ ``run-clang-tidy.py clang-tidy/.*Check\.cpp `` will only analyze ` clang-tidy `
692720 checks. It may also be necessary to restrict the header files that warnings
693- are displayed from using the ``-header-filter `` flag. It has the same behavior
694- as the corresponding :program: `clang-tidy ` flag .
721+ are displayed from by using the ``-header-filter `` and `` -exclude-header-filter `` flags.
722+ They have the same behavior as the corresponding :program: `clang-tidy ` flags .
695723
696724* To apply suggested fixes ``-fix `` can be passed as an argument. This gathers
697725 all changes in a temporary directory and applies them. Passing ``-format ``
@@ -758,4 +786,4 @@ There is only one argument that controls profile storage:
758786
759787 * If you run :program: `clang-tidy ` from within ``/foo `` directory, and specify
760788 ``-store-check-profile=. ``, then the profile will still be saved to
761- ``/foo/<ISO8601-like timestamp>-example.cpp.json ``
789+ ``/foo/<ISO8601-like timestamp>-example.cpp.json ``
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