cproto - generate C function prototypes and convert function definitions
cproto [ option ... ] [ file
... ]
Cproto generates function prototypes for functions defined in the
specified C source files to the standard output. The function definitions may
be in the old style or ANSI C style. Optionally, cproto also outputs
declarations for variables defined in the files. If no file argument is
given, cproto reads its input from the standard input.
By giving a command line option, cproto will also convert
function definitions in the specified files from the old style to the ANSI C
style. The original source files along with files specified by
#include "file"
directives appearing in the source code will be overwritten with the converted
code. If no file names are given on the command line, then the program reads
the source code from the standard input and outputs the converted source to
the standard output.
If any comments appear in the parameter declarations for a
function definition, such as in the example,
main (argc, argv)
int argc; /* number of arguments */
char *argv[]; /* arguments */
{
}
then the converted function definition will have the form
int
main (
int argc, /* number of arguments */
char *argv[] /* arguments */
)
{
}
Otherwise, the converted function definition will look like
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
}
Cproto can optionally convert function definitions from the
ANSI style to the old style. In this mode, the program also converts
function declarators and prototypes that appear outside function bodies.
This is not a complete ANSI C to old C conversion. The program does not
change anything within function bodies.
Cproto can optionally generate source in lint-library
format. This is useful in environments where the lint utility is used
to supplement prototype checking of your program.
- -e
- Output the keyword extern in front of every generated prototype or
declaration that has global scope.
- -f n
- Set the style of generated function prototypes where n is a number
from 0 to 3. For example, consider the function definition
main (argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv[];
{
}
If the value is 0, then no prototypes are generated. When set to 1, the
output is:
int main(/*int argc, char *argv[]*/);
For a value of 2, the output has the form:
int main(int /*argc*/, char */*argv*/[]);
The default value is 3. It produces the full function prototype:
int main(int argc, char *argv[]);
- -l
- Generate text for a lint-library (overrides the "-f"
option). The output includes the comment
/* LINTLIBRARY */
Special comments LINT_EXTERN and LINT_PREPRO (a la "VARARGS")
respectively turn on the "-x" option and copy comment-text to
the output (for preprocessing in lint). Use the comment
/* LINT_EXTERN2 */
to include externs defined in the first level of include-files. Use the
comment
/* LINT_SHADOWED */
to cause cproto to put "#undef" directives before each lint
library declaration (i.e., to avoid conflicts with macros that happen to
have to have the same name as the functions, thus causing syntax
errors).
Note that these special comments are not supported under VAX/VMS,
since there is no equivalent for the "-C" option of cpp with
VAX-C.
- -c
- The parameter comments in the prototypes generated by the -f1 and -f2
options are omitted by default. Use this option to enable the output of
these comments.
- -m
- Put a macro around the parameter list of every generated prototype. For
example:
int main P_((int argc, char *argv[]));
- -M name
- Set the name of the macro used to surround prototype parameter lists when
option -m is selected. The default is "P_".
- -d
- Omit the definition of the prototype macro used by the -m option.
- -o file
- Specify the name of the output file (default: standard output).
- -O file
- Specify the name of the error file (default: standard error).
- -p
- Disable promotion of formal parameters in old style function definitions.
By default, parameters of type char or short in old style
function definitions are promoted to type int in the function
prototype or converted ANSI C function definition. Parameters of type
float get promoted to double as well.
- -q
- Do not output any error messages when the program cannot read the file
specified in an #include directive.
- -s
- By default, cproto only generates declarations for functions and
variables having global scope. This option will output static
declarations as well.
- -S
- Output only static declarations.
- -i
- By default, cproto only generates declarations for functions and
variables having global scope. This option will output inline
declarations as well.
- -T
- Copy type definitions from each file. (Definitions in included-files are
copied, unlike the "-l" option).
- -v
- Also output declarations for variables defined in the source.
- -x
- This option causes procedures and variables which are declared
"extern" to be included in the output.
- -X level
- This option limits the include-file level from which declarations are
extracted by examining the preprocessor output.
- -a
- Convert function definitions from the old style to the ANSI C style.
- -t
- Convert function definitions from the ANSI C style to the traditional
style.
- -b
- Rewrite function definition heads to include both old style and new style
declarations separated by a conditional compilation directive. For
example, the program can generate this function definition:
#ifdef ANSI_FUNC
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
#else
int
main (argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv[]
#endif
{
}
- -B directive
- Set the conditional compilation directive to output at the beginning of
function definitions generated by the -b option. The default is
#ifdef ANSI_FUNC
-P template
-F template
-C template
Set the output format for generated prototypes, function definitions, and
function definitions with parameter comments respectively. The format is
specified by a template in the form
" int f ( a, b )"
but you may replace each space in this string with any number of whitespace
characters. For example, the option
-F"int f(\n\ta,\n\tb\n\t)"
will produce
int main(
int argc,
char *argv[]
)
- -D name[=value]
- This option is passed through to the preprocessor and is used to define
symbols for use with conditionals such as #ifdef.
- -U name
- This option is passed through to the preprocessor and is used to remove
any definitions of this symbol.
- -I directory
- This option is passed through to the preprocessor and is used to specify a
directory to search for files that are referenced with
#include.
- -E cpp
- Pipe the input files through the specified C preprocessor command when
generating prototypes. By default, the program uses /lib/cpp.
- -E 0
- Do not run the C preprocessor.
- -V
- Print version information.
The environment variable CPROTO is scanned for a list of options in the same
format as the command line options. Options given on the command line override
any corresponding environment option.
If an un-tagged struct, union or enum declaration appears in a generated
function prototype or converted function definition, the content of the
declaration between the braces is empty.
The program does not pipe the source files through the C
preprocessor when it is converting function definitions. Instead, it tries
to handle preprocessor directives and macros itself and can be confused by
tricky macro expansions. The conversion also discards some comments in the
function definition head.
The -v option does not generate declarations for variables defined
with the extern specifier. This doesn't strictly conform to the C
language standard but this rule was implemented because include files
commonly declare variables this way.
When the program encounters an error, it usually outputs the not
very descriptive message "syntax error". (Your configuration may
allow the extended error reporting in yyerror.c).
Options that take string arguments only interpret the following
character escape sequences:
\n newline
\s space
\t tab
VARARGS comments don't get passed through on systems whose C
preprocessors don't support this (e.g., VAX/VMS, MS-DOS).
Chin Huang
cthuang@vex.net
cthuang@interlog.com
Thomas Dickey
dickey@invisible-island.net
modifications to support lint library, type-copying, and port to VAX/VMS.