whouses - impact analysis in a clearmake build environment
``You give me a clean CR, I'll give you a clean impact analysis.''
Run this script with the -help
option for usage details. Here are
some additional sample usages with explanations:
whouses foobar.h
Shows all DOs that make use of any file matching /foobar.h/.
whouses -recurse foobar.h
Same as above but follows the chain of derived files recursively.
whouses -exact foobar.h
Shows all DOs that make use of the specified file. The -exact
flag
suppresses pattern matching and shows only DOs which reference the
exact file.
Whouses provides a limited form of ``impact analysis'' in a clearmake build environment. This is different from traditional impact analysis (see TRUE CODE ANALYSIS COMPARED below for details). In particular, it operates at the granularity of files rather than language elements.
Whouses is best described by example. Imagine you have a VOB
/vobs_sw in which you build the incredibly simple application foo
from foo.c
. You have a Makefile which compiles foo.c
to foo.o
and then links it to produce foo
. And let's further assume you've
just done a build using clearmake.
Thus, foo
is a derived object (DO) which has a config record
(CR) showing how it was made. Whouses analyzes that CR and prints
the data in easy-to-read indented textual format. For instance:
% whouses -do foo foo.c /vobs_sw/src/foo.c => /vobs_sw/src/foo.o
The -do foo
points to the derived object from which to extract and
analyze the CR; it will be implicit in the remaining examples. The
output indicates that foo.o uses foo.c
, or in other words that
foo.c
is a contributor to foo.o
. If we add the -recurse
flag:
% whouses -r foo.c /vobs_sw/src/foo.c => /vobs_sw/src/foo.o /vobs_sw/src/foo
We see all files to which foo.c
contributes, indented according to
how many generations removed they are. If we now add -terminals
% whouses -r -t foo.c /vobs_sw/src/foo.c => /vobs_sw/src/foo
Intermediate targets such as foo.o
are suppressed so we see only the
``final'' targets descended from foo.c
.
We can also go in the other direction using -backward
:
% whouses -b -e foo /vobs_sw/src/foo <= /vobs_sw/src/foo.o
Which shows foo.o
as a progenitor of foo
. Note that the arrow
(<=) is turned around to indicate -backward
mode. We also
introduced the -exact
flag here. By default, arguments to whouses
are treated as patterns, not file names, and since foo
has no
extension it would have matched foo.c
and foo.o
as well. Use of
-exact
suppresses pattern matching.
Of course we can go backward recursively as well:
% whouses -back -exact -recurse foo /vobs_sw/src/foo <= /vobs_sw/src/foo.o /vobs_sw/src/foo.c /vobs_sw/src/foo.h /vobs_sw/src/bar.h
And discover that foo.h
and bar.h
were also used.
When used recursively in the forward direction, this script answers the question ``if I change file X, which derived files will need to be rebuilt''? This is the classic use, the one for which it was written. When used recursively in the backward direction it can depict the entire dependency tree in an easily readable format.
Because extracting a recursive CR can be quite slow for large build
systems, whouses provides ways of dumping the CR data to a file
representation for speed. Use of -save
:
% whouses -do foo -save ...
will write out the data to foo.crdb. Subsequently, if foo.crdb
exists it will be used unless a new the -do
flag is used. See also
the -db
and -fmt
flags.
The default save format is that of Data::Dumper. It was chosen because it results in a nicely indented, human-readable text format file.
If a -do
flag is given, the CRs are taken from the specified derived
object(s). Multiple DOs may be specified with multiple -do
flags
or as a comma-separated list. Alternatively, if the CRDB_DO
environment variable exists, its value is used as if specified with
-do
.
If no DOs are specified directly, whouses
will look for stored DO
data in files specified with -db
or the CRDB_DB
EV. The format is
the same as above.
Failing that, whouses
will search for files named *.crdb
along a
path specified with -dir
or CRDB_PATH
, defaulting to the current
directory.
As a special case, derived objects matching the Perl regular expression
/\.AUDIT/i
are ignored while traversing the recursive config spec.
These are presumed to be meta-DOs by convention, which aren't part
of the production build per se but rather pseudo-targets whose only
purpose is to hold CRs referring back to all real deliverables. Thus
if you construct your Makefile to create a meta-DO, you might want to
name it .AUDIT
or .prog.AUDIT
or something.
Most of the logic is actually in the ClearCase::CRDB
module; the
whouses
program is just a wrapper which uses the module. It's done
this way so ClearCase::CRDB can provide an API for other potential
tools which need to do CR analysis.
Whouses is somewhat different from ``real'' impact analysis products. There are a number of such tools on the market, for example SNiFF+ from WindRiver. Typically these work by parsing the source code into some database representation which they can then analyze. It's a powerful technique but entails some tradeoffs:
The minuses above are not design flaws but inherent tradeoffs. For true code impact analysis you must buy one of these tools and accept the costs.
Whouses doesn't attempt code analysis per se. As noted above, true code analysis programs are tied to language but not to an SCM system. Whouses flips this around; it doesn't care about language but it only works with build systems that use clearmake within a ClearCase VOB.
Whouses takes the config records generated by clearmake, analyzes them, and tells you which files depend on which other files according to the CRs. Both techniques have fuzziness of different kinds: code analysis predicts what the real compiler will do based on what the analysis compiler found; divergence is possible. Whouses predicts what the next build will do based on what the last build did. If changes have taken place since, divergence is possible here too.
David Boyce <dsbperl AT boyski.com>
Copyright (c) 2000-2006 David Boyce. All rights reserved. This Perl program is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This is currently ALPHA code and thus I reserve the right to change the UI incompatibly. At some point I'll bump the version suitably and remove this warning, which will constitute an (almost) ironclad promise to leave the interface alone.
I've tried to write this in a platform independent style but it hasn't
been heavily tested on Windows (actually it hasn't been all that
heavily tested anywhere). It does pass make test
on Windows and
appears to work fine in limited testing.
perl(1), ClearCase::CRDB(3), cleartool man catcr