pmccabe(1) pmccabe(1) HP-GJD NAME pmccabe - calculate McCabe cyclomatic complexity for C and C++ programs SYNOPSIS pmccabe [-vdCbtT?] [file(s)] DESCRIPTION pmccabe processes the named files, or standard input if none are named, calculating statistics including McCabe cyclomatic complexity for each function found. The files are expected to be either C (ANSI or K&R) or C++. -? Print an informative usage message. -v Print column headers -d Intended to help count non-commented source lines via something like: pmccabe -d *.c | grep -v '^[<blank><tab>]*$' | wc -l Comments and cpp directives are removed, string literals are replaced by STRINGLITERAL, character constants are replaced by CHARLITERAL. The resulting source code is much easier to parse. This is the first step performed by pmccabe so that its parser can be simpler. -C Custom output format - don't use it. -b Output format compatible with softbuild. Numerical sorting on this format is possible using: sort -n +1 -t% -t Print column totals. Note the total number of lines is *NOT* the number of non-commented source lines - in fact it may not be very useful at all. -T Print column totals *ONLY*. Parsing pmccabe ignores all cpp preprocessor directives - calculating the complexity of the appearance of the code rather than the complexity after the preprocessor mangles the code. This is especially important since simple things like getchar(3) expand into macros which increase complexity. - 1 - Formatted: June 29, 1998 pmccabe(1) pmccabe(1) HP-GJD Output Format A line is written to standard output for each function found of the form: 5 6 11 34 27 gettoken.c(35): matchparen Column 1 contains cyclomatic complexity calculated by adding 1 (for the function) to the occurences of for, if, while, switch, &&, ||, and ?. Unlike "normal" McCabe cyclomatic complexity, each case in a switch statement is not counted as additional complexity. This treatment of switch statements and complexity may be more useful than the "normal" measure for judging maintenance effort and code difficulty. Column 2 is the cyclomatic complexity calculated in the "usual" way with regard to switch statements. Specifically it is calculated as in column 1 but counting each case rather than the switch and may be more useful than column 1 for judging testing effort. Column 3 contains a statement count. It is calculated by adding each occurence of for,if,while, switch, and semicolon within the function. One possible surprise is that for statements have a minimum statement count of 3. This is realistic since for(A; B; C){...} is really shorthand for A; while (B) { ... C; } Column 4 contains the first line number in the function. This is not necessarily the same line on which the function name appears. Column 5 is the number of lines of the function, from the number in column 4 through the line containing the closing curly brace. The final column contains the file name, line number on which the function name occurs, and the name of the function. APPLICATIONS The obvious application of pmccabe is illustrated by the following which gives a list of the "top ten" most complex functions: pmccabe *.c | sort -nr | head -10 Many files contain more than one C function and sometimes it would be useful to extract each function separately. matchparen() (see example - 2 - Formatted: June 29, 1998 pmccabe(1) pmccabe(1) HP-GJD output above) can be extracted from gettoken.c by extracting 27 lines starting with line 34. This can form the basis of tools which operate on functions instead of files (e.g., use as a front-end for diff(1)). DIAGNOSTICS pmccabe returns a nonzero exit status if any errors occur during parsing. Error messages to standard error, usually explaining that the parser is confused about something, mimic normal C compiler error messages. WARNINGS pmccabe is confused by unmatched curly braces or parentheses which sometimes occur with hasty use of cpp directives. In these cases a diagnostic is printed and the complexity results for the files named may be unreliable. Most times the "#ifdef" directives may be modified such that the curly braces match. Note that if pmccabe is confused by a cpp directive, most pretty printers will be too. In some cases, preprocessing with unifdef(1) may be appropriate. Treatment of ? for statement counting could perhaps be improved. Statement counting could arguably be improved by: counting occurences of the comma operator, multiple assignments, assignments within conditional tests, and logical conjunction. Destructors implemented within class definitions have no '~' in their name. AUTHOR Paul Bame SEE ALSO sort(1), diff(1), softbuild(1), wc(1), grep(1), unifdef(1), head(1) - 3 - Formatted: June 29, 1998