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Pack logtalk -- logtalk-3.85.0/manuals/_sources/devtools/diagrams.rst.txt |
.. _library_diagrams:
diagrams
This tool generates library, directory, file, entity, and predicate diagrams for source files and for libraries of source files using the Logtalk reflection API to collect the relevant information and a graph language for representing the diagrams. Limited support is also available for generating diagrams for Prolog module applications. It's also possible in general to generate predicate cross-referencing diagrams for plain Prolog files.
Linking library diagrams to entity diagrams to predicate cross-referencing diagrams and linking directory diagrams to file diagrams is also supported when using SVG output. This feature allows using diagrams for understanding the architecture of applications by navigating complex code and zooming into details. SVG output can also easily link to both source code repositories and API documentation. This allows diagrams to be used for source code navigation.
Diagrams can also be used to uncover code issues. For example, comparing
loading diagrams with dependency diagrams can reveal implicit
dependencies. Loading diagrams can reveal circular dependencies that may
warrant code refactoring. Entity diagrams can provide a good overview of
code coupling. Predicate cross-referencing diagrams can be used to
visually access entity code complexity, complementing the
code_metrics
tool.
All diagrams support a comprehensive set of options, discussed below, to customize the final contents and appearance.
Diagram generation can be easily automated using the doclet
tool and
the logtalk_doclet
scripts. See the doclet
tool examples and
documentation for details. See also the diagrams
tool own
lgt2svg
Bash and PowerShell scripts.
A recent version of Graphviz is required for generating diagrams in the final formats. It can be installed using a Graphviz installer or e.g. the following per operating-system commands:
macOS - MacPorts
:: $ sudo port install graphviz macOS - Homebrew
::
$ brew install graphviz
Ubuntu ~~~~~~
::
$ sudo apt install graphviz
Windows - Chocolatey ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
::
choco install graphviz
Installers ~~~~~~~~~~
https://www.graphviz.org/download/
On Linux systems, use the distribution own package manager to install any missing command.
This tool API documentation is available at:
`../../docs/library_index.html#diagrams <../../docs/library_index.html#diagrams>`__
For sample queries, please see the SCRIPT.txt
file in the tool
directory.
This tool can be loaded using the query:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(diagrams(loader))
.
To test this tool, load the tester.lgt
file:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(diagrams(tester))
.
The following entity diagrams are supported:
The following library diagrams are supported:
The following file diagrams are supported:
File dependency diagrams are specially useful in revealing dependencies that are not represented in file loading diagrams due to files being loaded indirectly by files external to the libraries being documented.
The following directory diagrams are supported:
Comparing directory (or file) loading diagrams with directory (or file) dependency diagrams allows comparing what is explicitly loaded with the actual directory (or file) dependencies, which are inferred from the source code.
Library and directory dependency diagrams are specially useful for large applications where file diagrams would be too large and complex to be useful, specially when combined with the zoom option to link to, respectively, entity and file diagrams.
A utility object, diagrams
, is provided for generating all supported
diagrams in one step. This object provides an interface common to all
diagrams but note that some predicates that generate diagrams only make
sense for some types of diagrams. For best results and fine-grained
customization of each diagram, the individual diagram objects should be
used with the intended set of options.
Limitations in both the graph language and UML forces the invention of a modeling language that can represent all kinds of Logtalk entities and entity relations. Currently we use the following Graphviz DOT shapes (libraries, entities, predicates, and files) and arrows (entity, predicate, and file relations):
tab
(lightsalmon)normal
(arrow ending with a black triangle)box
(rectangle, yellow for instances/classes and beige for
prototypes)note
(aqua marine rectangle with folded right-upper corners)component
(light cyan rectangle with two small rectangles
intercepting the left side)tab
(plum rectangle with small tab at top)box
(springgreen)box
(skyblue)box
(yellow)box
(indianred)box
(beige)box
(springgreen)tab
(lightsalmon)normal
(arrow ending with a black triangle)box
(pale turquoise rectangle)normal
(arrow ending with a black triangle)onormal
(arrow ending with a white triangle)normal
(arrow ending with a black triangle)vee
(arrow ending with a "v")dot
(arrow ending with a black circle)box
(arrow ending with a black square)obox
(arrow ending with a white square)rdiamond
(arrow ending with a black half diamond)normal
(arrow ending with a black triangle)diamond
(arrow ending with a black diamond)
The library, directory, file, entity, and predicate nodes that are not part of the predicates, entities, files, or libraries for which we are generating a diagram use a dashed border, a darker color, and are described as external.
Note that all the elements above can have captions. See below the diagrams node_type_captions/1 and relation_labels/1 output options.
Currently only the DOT graph language is supported (tested with Graphviz version 10.0 on macOS; visit the http://www.graphviz.org/ website for more information). There's also preliminary support for Mermaid (which is not loaded by default as its current version lacks required features for parity with Graphviz).
The diagrams .dot
files are created on the current directory by
default. These files can be easily converted into a printable format
such as SVG, PDF, or Postscript. For example, using the dot
command-line executable we can simply type:
::
dot -Tpdf diagram.dot > diagram.pdf
This usually works fine for entity and predicate call cross-referencing
diagrams. For directory and file diagrams, the fdp
and circo
command-line executables may produce better results. For example:
::
fdp -Tsvg diagram.dot > diagram.svg circo -Tsvg diagram.dot > diagram.svg
It's also worth to experiment with different layouts to find the one that produces the best results (see the layout/1 option described below).
Some output formats such as SVG support tooltips and URL links, which can be used for showing e.g. entity types, relation types, file paths, and for navigating to files and directories of files (libraries) or to API documentation. See the relevant diagram options below in order to take advantage of these features (see the discussion below on "linking diagrams").
Sample helper scripts are provided for batch converting a directory of
.dot
files to .svg
files:
lgt2svg.sh
for POSIX systemslgt2svg.ps1
for Windows systemslgt2svg.js
and lgt2svg.bat
for Windows systems (deprecated)
The scripts assume that the Graphviz command-line executables are
available from the system path (the default is the dot
executable
but the scripts accept a command-line option to select in alternative
the circo
, fdp
, or neato
executables).
When generating diagrams for multiple libraries or directories, it's
possible to split a diagram with several disconnected library or
directory graphs using the ccomps
command-line executable. For
example:
::
ccomps -x -o subdiagram.dot diagram.dot
For more information on the DOT language and related tools see:
::
When using Windows, there are known issues with some Prolog compilers due to the internal representation of paths. If you encounter problems with a specific backend Prolog compiler, try if possible to use another supported backend Prolog compiler when generating diagrams.
For printing large diagrams, you will need to either use a tool to slice
the diagram in page-sized pieces or, preferably, use software capable of
tiled printing (e.g. Adobe Reader). You can also hand-edit the generated
.dot
files and play with settings such as aspect ratio for
fine-tuning the diagrams layout.
A set of options are available to specify the details to include in the generated diagrams. For entity diagrams the options are:
layout(Layout)
| diagram layout (one of the atoms
{top_to_bottom,bottom_to_top,left_to_right,right_to_left}
;
default is bottom_to_top
)title(Title)
| diagram title (an atom; default is ''
)date(Boolean)
| print current date and time (true
or false
; default is
true
)versions(Boolean)
| print Logtalk and backend version data (true
or false
;
default is false
)interface(Boolean)
| print public predicates (true
or false
; default is true
)file_labels(Boolean)
| print file labels (true
or false
; default is true
)file_extensions(Boolean)
| print file name extensions (true
or false
; default is
true
)relation_labels(Boolean)
| print entity relation labels (true
or false
; default is
true
)externals(Boolean)
| print external nodes (true
or false
; default is true
)node_type_captions(Boolean)
| print node type captions (true
or false
; default is
true
)inheritance_relations(Boolean)
| print inheritance relations (true
or false
; default is
true
for entity inheritance diagrams and false
for other
entity diagrams)provide_relations(Boolean)
| print provide relations (true
or false
; default is
false
)xref_relations(Boolean)
| print predicate call cross-reference relations (true
or
false
; default depends on the specific diagram)xref_calls(Boolean)
| print predicate cross-reference calls (true
or false
;
default depends on the specific diagram)output_directory(Directory)
| directory for the .dot files (an atom; default is './dot_dias'
)exclude_directories(Directories)
| list of directories to exclude (default is []
); all
sub-directories of the excluded directories are also excluded;
directories may be listed by full or relative pathexclude_files(Files)
| list of source files to exclude (default is []
); files may be
listed by full path or basename, with or without extensionexclude_libraries(Libraries)
| list of libraries to exclude (default is
[startup, scratch_directory]
)exclude_entities(Entities)
| list of entities to exclude (default is []
)path_url_prefixes(PathPrefix, CodeURLPrefix, DocURLPrefix)
| code and documenting URL prefixes for a path prefix used when
generating cluster, library, directory, file, and entity links
(atoms; no default; can be specified multiple times)url_prefixes(CodeURLPrefix, DocURLPrefix)
| default URL code and documenting URL prefixes used when generating
cluster, library, file, and entity links (atoms; no default)entity_url_suffix_target(Suffix, Target)
| extension for entity documenting URLs (an atom; default is
'.html'
) and target separating symbols (an atom; default is
'#'
)omit_path_prefixes(Prefixes)
| omit common path prefixes when printing directory paths and when
constructing URLs (a list of atoms; default is a list with the user
home directory)zoom(Boolean)
| generate sub-diagrams and add links and zoom icons to library and
entity nodes (true
or false
; default is false
)zoom_url_suffix(Suffix)
| extension for linked diagrams (an atom; default is '.svg'
)
In the particular case of cross-referencing diagrams, there are also the options:
recursive_relations(Boolean)
| print recursive predicate relations (true
or false
; default
is false
)url_line_references(Host)
| syntax for the URL source file line part (an atom; possible values
are {github,gitlab,bitbucket}
; default is github
); when
using this option, the CodeURLPrefix
should be a permanent link
(i.e. it should include the commit SHA1)predicate_url_target_format(Generator)
| documentation final format generator (an atom; default is
sphinx
)
For directory and file diagrams the options are:
layout(Layout)
| diagram layout (one of the atoms
{top_to_bottom,bottom_to_top,left_to_right,right_to_left}
;
default is top_to_bottom
)title(Title)
| diagram title (an atom; default is ''
)date(Boolean)
| print current date and time (true
or false
; default is
true
)versions(Boolean)
| print Logtalk and backend version data (true
or false
;
default is false
)directory_paths(Boolean)
| print file directory paths (true
or false
; default is
false
)file_extensions(Boolean)
| print file name extensions (true
or false
; default is
true
)path_url_prefixes(PathPrefix, CodeURLPrefix, DocURLPrefix)
| code and documenting URL prefixes for a path prefix used when
generating cluster, directory, file, and entity links (atoms; no
default; can be specified multiple times)url_prefixes(CodeURLPrefix, DocURLPrefix)
| default URL code and documenting URL prefixes used when generating
cluster, library, file, and entity links (atoms; no default)omit_path_prefixes(Prefixes)
| omit common path prefixes when printing directory paths and when
constructing URLs (a list of atoms; default is a list with the user
home directory)relation_labels(Boolean)
| print entity relation labels (true
or false
; default is
false
)externals(Boolean)
| print external nodes (true
or false
; default is true
)node_type_captions(Boolean)
| print node type captions (true
or false
; default is
false
)output_directory(Directory)
| directory for the .dot files (an atom; default is './dot_dias'
)exclude_directories(Directories)
| list of directories to exclude (default is []
)exclude_files(Files)
| list of source files to exclude (default is []
)zoom(Boolean)
| generate sub-diagrams and add links and zoom icons to library and
entity nodes (true
or false
; default is false
)zoom_url_suffix(Suffix)
| extension for linked diagrams (an atom; default is '.svg'
)
For library diagrams the options are:
layout(Layout)
| diagram layout (one of the atoms
{top_to_bottom,bottom_to_top,left_to_right,right_to_left}
;
default is top_to_bottom
)title(Title)
| diagram title (an atom; default is ''
)date(Boolean)
| print current date and time (true
or false
; default is
true
)versions(Boolean)
| print Logtalk and backend version data (true
or false
;
default is false
)directory_paths(Boolean)
| print file directory paths (true
or false
; default is
false
)path_url_prefixes(PathPrefix, CodeURLPrefix, DocURLPrefix)
| code and documenting URL prefixes for a path prefix used when
generating cluster, library, file, and entity links (atoms; no
default; can be specified multiple times)url_prefixes(CodeURLPrefix, DocURLPrefix)
| default URL code and documenting URL prefixes used when generating
cluster, library, file, and entity links (atoms; no default)omit_path_prefixes(Prefixes)
| omit common path prefixes when printing directory paths and when
constructing URLs (a list of atoms; default is a list with the user
home directory)relation_labels(Boolean)
| print entity relation labels (true
or false
; default is
false
)externals(Boolean)
| print external nodes (true
or false
; default is true
)node_type_captions(Boolean)
| print node type captions (true
or false
; default is
false
)output_directory(Directory)
| directory for the .dot files (an atom; default is './dot_dias'
)exclude_directories(Directories)
| list of directories to exclude (default is []
)exclude_files(Files)
| list of source files to exclude (default is []
)exclude_libraries(Libraries)
| list of libraries to exclude (default is
[startup, scratch_directory]
)zoom(Boolean)
| generate sub-diagrams and add links and zoom icons to library and
entity nodes (true
or false
; default is false
)zoom_url_suffix(Suffix)
| extension for linked diagrams (an atom; default is '.svg'
)
When using the zoom(true)
option, the layout(Layout)
option
applies only to the top diagram; sub-diagrams will use their own layout
default.
The option omit_path_prefixes(Prefixes)
with a non-empty list of
prefixes should preferably be used together with the option
directory_paths(true)
when generating library or file diagrams that
reference external libraries or files. To confirm the exact default
options used by each type of diagram, send the default_options/1
message to the diagram object.
Be sure to set the source_data
flag on
before compiling the
libraries or files for which you want to generated diagrams.
Support for displaying Prolog modules and Prolog module files in diagrams of Logtalk applications:
prolog_xref
library)prolog_xref
library)When using SVG output, it's possible to generate diagrams that link to other diagrams, to API documentation, to local files and directories, and to source code repositories.
For generating links between diagrams, use the zoom(true)
option.
This option allows (1) linking library diagrams to entity diagrams to
predicate cross-referencing diagrams and (2) linking directory diagrams
to file diagrams to entity diagrams to predicate cross-referencing
diagrams. The sub-diagrams are automatically generated. For example,
using the predicates that generate library diagrams will automatically
also generate the entity and predicate cross-referencing diagrams.
To generate local links for opening directories, files, and file locations in selected text editors, set the URL code prefix:
url_prefixes('vscode://file/', DocPrefix)
url_prefixes('vscodium://file/', DocPrefix)
url_prefixes('cursor://file/', DocPrefix)
url_prefixes('zed://file/', DocPrefix)
url_prefixes('x-bbedit://open?url=file://', DocPrefix)
url_prefixes('mvim://open?url=file://', DocPrefix)
url_prefixes('txmt://open?url=file://', DocPrefix)
In this case, the DocPrefix
argument should be the path to directory
containing the HTML version of the application APIs.
As most of the text editor URL scheme handlers require local links to use absolute paths, the omit_path_prefixes/1 option is ignored. Note that local links require text editor support for URL schemes that can handle both file and directory links.
To generate links to API documentation and source code repositories, use
the options path_url_prefixes/3 (or url_prefixes/2 for simpler
cases) and omit_path_prefixes/1. The idea is that the
omit_path_prefixes/1 option specifies local file prefixes that will
be cut and replaced by the URL prefixes (which can be path prefix
specific when addressing multiple code repositories). To generate local
file system URLs, define the empty atom, ''
, as a prefix. As an
example, consider the Logtalk library. Its source code is available from
a GitHub repository and its documentation is published in the Logtalk
website. The relevant URLs in this case are:
GitHub
variable bound
to the SHA1 commit URL we want to reference, an inheritance diagram can
be generated using the goal:
::
| ?- GitHub = 'https://github.com/LogtalkDotOrg/logtalk3/commit/eb156d46e135ac47ef23adcc5d20d49dd8b66abb',
APIDocs = 'https://logtalk.org/library/',
logtalk_load(diagrams(loader))
,
set_logtalk_flag(source_data, on)
,
logtalk_load(library(all_loader))
,
inheritance_diagram::rlibrary(library, [
title('Logtalk library'),
node_type_captions(true),
zoom(true),
path_url_prefixes('$LOGTALKUSER/', GitHub, APIDocs),
path_url_prefixes('$LOGTALKHOME/', GitHub, APIDocs),
omit_path_prefixes(['$LOGTALKUSER/', '$LOGTALKHOME/', '$HOME/'])
])
.
The two path_url_prefixes/3 options take care of source code and API
documentation for entities loaded either from the Logtalk installation
directory (whose location is given by the LOGTALKHOME
environment
variable) or from the Logtalk user directory (whose location is given by
the LOGTALKUSER
environment variable). As we also don't want any
local operating-system paths to be exposed in the diagram, we use the
omit_path_prefixes/1 option to suppress those path prefixes, Note
that all the paths and URLs must end with a slash for proper handling.
The git
library may be useful to retrieve the commit SHA1 from a
local repo directory.
For both path_url_prefixes/3 and omit_path_prefixes/1 options, when a path prefix is itself a prefix of another path, the shorter path must come last to ensure correct links.
See the SCRIPT.txt
file in the tool directory for additional
examples. To avoid retyping such complex goals when updating diagrams,
use the doclet
tool to save and reapply them easily (e.g. by using
the make
tool with the documentation
target).
Currently limited to SWI-Prolog and YAP Prolog module applications due to the lack of a comprehensive reflection API in other Prolog systems.
Simply load your Prolog module application and its dependencies and then
use diagram entity, directory, or file predicates. Library diagram
predicates are not supported. See the SCRIPT.txt
file in the tool
directory for some usage examples. Note that support for diagrams with
links to API documentation is quite limited, however, due to the lack of
Prolog standards.
This tool can also be used to create predicate cross-referencing
diagrams for plain Prolog files. For example, if the Prolog file is
named code.pl
, simply define an object including its code:
::
:- object(code)
.
:- include('code.pl')
.
:- end_object.
Save the object to an e.g. code.lgt
file in the same directory as
the Prolog file and then load it and create the diagram:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(code)
,
xref_diagram::entity(code)
.
An alternative is to use the object_wrapper_hook
provided by the
hook_objects
library:
::
| ?- logtalk_load(hook_objects(loader))
.
...
| ?- logtalk_load(code, [hook(object_wrapper_hook)])
,
xref_diagram::entity(code)
.
Generating complete diagrams requires that all referenced entities are loaded. When that is not the case, notably when generating cross-referencing diagrams, missing entities can result in incomplete diagrams.
For complex applications, diagrams can often be made simpler and more
readable by omitting external nodes (see the externals/1 option)
and/or using one of the alternatives to dot
provided by Graphviz
depending on the type of the diagram (see the section above on supported
graph languages for more details).
When generating entity predicate call cross-reference diagrams, caller
nodes are not created for auxiliary predicates. For example, if the
meta_compiler
library is used to optimize meta-predicates calls, the
diagrams may show predicates that are not apparently called by any other
predicate when the callers are from the optimized meta-predicate goals
(which are called via library generated auxiliary predicates). A
workaround in this case would be creating a dedicated loader file that
doesn't load (and apply) the meta_compiler
library when generating
the diagrams.
The zoom icons, zoom.png
and zoom.svg
have been designed by Xinh
Studio:
https://www.iconfinder.com/xinhstudio
Currently, only the zoom.png
file is used. A copy of this file must
exist in any directory used for publishing diagrams using it. The
lgt2svg
scripts take care of copying this file.
When generating diagrams in SVG format, a copy of the diagrams.css
file must exist in any directory used for publishing diagrams using it.
The lgt2svg
scripts also take care of copying this file.
The Graphviz command-line utilities, e.g. dot
, are notorious for
random crashes (segmentation faults usually), often requiring re-doing
conversions from .dot
files to other formats. A possible workaround
is to repeat the command until it completes without error. See for
example the lgt2svg.sh
script.