cscope - interactively examine a C program
cscope [-bCcdehkLlqRTUuVvX]
[-Fsymfile] [-freffile]
[-Iincdir] [-inamefile]
[-0123456789pattern] [-pn]
[-sdir] [files]
cscope is an interactive, screen-oriented tool that allows
the user to browse through C source files for specified elements of
code.
By default, cscope examines the C (.c and .h), lex (.l),
and yacc (.y) source files in the current directory. cscope may also
be invoked for source files named on the command line. In either case,
cscope searches the standard directories for #include files that it
does not find in the current directory. cscope uses a symbol
cross-reference, called cscope.out by default, to locate functions, function
calls, macros, variables, and preprocessor symbols in the files.
cscope builds the symbol cross-reference the first time it
is used on the source files for the program being browsed. On a subsequent
invocation, cscope rebuilds the cross-reference only if a source file
has changed or the list of source files is different. When the
cross-reference is rebuilt, the data for the unchanged files are copied from
the old cross-reference, which makes rebuilding faster than the initial
build.
Some command line arguments can only occur as the only argument in
the execution of cscope. They cause the program to just print out some
output and exit immediately:
- -h
- View the long usage help display.
- -V
- Print on the first line of screen the version number of cscope.
- --help
- Same as -h
- --version
- Same as -V
The following options can appear in any combination:
- -b
- Build the cross-reference only.
- -C
- Ignore letter case when searching.
- -c
- Use only ASCII characters in the cross-reference file, that is, do not
compress the data.
- -d
- Do not update the cross-reference.
- -e
- Suppress the <Ctrl>-e command prompt between files.
- -Fsymfile
- Read symbol reference lines from symfile. (A symbol reference file
is created by > and >>, and can also be read using the <
command, described under ``Issuing Subsequent Requests'', below.)
- -freffile
- Use reffile as the cross-reference file name instead of the default
"cscope.out".
- -Iincdir
- Look in incdir (before looking in $INCDIR, the standard place for
header files, normally /usr/include) for any #include files whose names do
not begin with ``/'' and that are not specified on the command line or in
namefile below. (The #include files may be specified with either
double quotes or angle brackets.) The incdir directory is searched in
addition to the current directory (which is searched first) and the
standard list (which is searched last). If more than one occurrence of -I
appears, the directories are searched in the order they appear on the
command line.
- -inamefile
- Browse through all source files whose names are listed in namefile
(file names separated by spaces, tabs, or new-lines) instead of the
default name list file, which is called cscope.files. If this option is
specified, cscope ignores any file names appearing on the command line.
The argument namefile can be set to ``-'' to accept a list of files from
the standard input. Filenames in the namefile that contain whitespace have
to be enclosed in "double quotes". Inside such quoted filenames,
any double-quote and backslash characters have to be escaped by
backslashes.
- -k
- ``Kernel Mode'', turns off the use of the default include dir (usually
/usr/include) when building the database, since kernel source trees
generally do not use it.
- -L
- Do a single search with line-oriented output when used with the -num
pattern option.
- -l
- Line-oriented interface (see ``Line-Oriented Interface'' below).
- -[0-9]pattern
- Go to input field num (counting from 0) and find
pattern.
- -Ppath
- Prepend path to relative file names in a pre-built cross-reference
file so you do not have to change to the directory where the
cross-reference file was built. This option is only valid with the -d
option.
- -pn
- Display the last n file path components instead of the default (1).
Use 0 not to display the file name at all.
- -q
- Enable fast symbol lookup via an inverted index. This option causes cscope
to create 2 more files (default names ``cscope.in.out'' and
``cscope.po.out'') in addition to the normal database. This allows a
faster symbol search algorithm that provides noticeably faster lookup
performance for large projects.
- -R
- Recurse subdirectories during search for source files.
- -sdir
- Look in dir for additional source files. This option is ignored if
source files are given on the command line.
- -T
- Use only the first eight characters to match against C symbols. A regular
expression containing special characters other than a period (.) will not
match any symbol if its minimum length is greater than eight
characters.
- -U
- Check file time stamps. This option will update the time stamp on the
database even if no files have changed.
- -u
- Unconditionally build the cross-reference file (assume that all files have
changed).
- -v
- Be more verbose in line-oriented mode. Output progress updates during
database building and searches.
- -X
- Remove the cscope reference file and inverted indexes when exiting
- files
- A list of file names to operate on.
The -I, -c, -k, -p, -q, and -T options can also be in the
cscope.files file.
If the search is successful, any of these single-character
commands can be used:
- 0-9a-zA-Z
- Edit the file referenced by the given line number.
- <Space>
- Display next set of matching lines.
- <Tab>
- Alternate between the menu and the list of matching lines
- <Up>
- Move to the previous menu item (if the cursor is in the menu) or move to
the previous matching line (if the cursor is in the matching line
list.)
- <Down>
- Move to the next menu item (if the cursor is in the menu) or move to the
next matching line (if the cursor is in the matching line list.)
- +
- Display next set of matching lines.
- -
- Display previous set of matching lines.
- ^e
- Edit displayed files in order.
- >
- Write the displayed list of lines to a file.
- >>
- Append the displayed list of lines to a file.
- <
- Read lines from a file that is in symbol reference format (created by >
or >>), just like the -F option.
- ^
- Filter all lines through a shell command and display the resulting lines,
replacing the lines that were already there.
- |
- Pipe all lines to a shell command and display them without changing
them.
At any time these single-character commands can also be used:
- <Return>
- Move to next input field.
- ^n
- Move to next input field.
- ^p
- Move to previous input field.
- ^y
- Search with the last text typed.
- ^b
- Move to previous input field and search pattern.
- ^f
- Move to next input field and search pattern.
- ^c
- Toggle ignore/use letter case when searching. (When ignoring letter case,
search for ``FILE'' will match ``File'' and ``file''.)
- ^r
- Rebuild the cross-reference.
- !
- Start an interactive shell (type ^d to return to cscope).
- ^l
- Redraw the screen.
- ?
- Give help information about cscope commands.
- ^d
- Exit cscope.
NOTE: If the first character of the text to be searched for
matches one of the above commands, escape it by typing a (backslash)
first.
Substituting new text for old text
After the text to be changed has been typed, cscope will prompt
for the new text, and then it will display the lines containing the old
text. Select the lines to be changed with these single-character
commands:
- 0-9a-zA-Z
- Mark or unmark the line to be changed.
- *
- Mark or unmark all displayed lines to be changed.
- <Space>
- Display next set of lines.
- +
- Display next set of lines.
- -
- Display previous set of lines.
- a
- Mark or unmark all lines to be changed.
- ^d
- Change the marked lines and exit.
- <Esc>
- Exit without changing the marked lines.
- !
- Start an interactive shell (type ^d to return to cscope).
- ^l
- Redraw the screen.
- ?
- Give help information about cscope commands.
- Special
keys
- If your terminal has arrow keys that work in vi, you can use them to move
around the input fields. The up-arrow key is useful to move to the
previous input field instead of using the <Tab> key repeatedly. If
you have <CLEAR>, <NEXT>, or <PREV> keys they will act
as the ^l, +, and - commands, respectively.
The -l option lets you use cscope where a screen-oriented
interface would not be useful, for example, from another screen-oriented
program.
cscope will prompt with >> when it is ready for an input
line starting with the field number (counting from 0) immediately followed
by the search pattern, for example, ``lmain'' finds the definition of the
main function.
If you just want a single search, instead of the -l option use the
-L and -num pattern options, and you won't get the >> prompt.
For -l, cscope outputs the number of reference lines cscope: 2
lines
For each reference found, cscope outputs a line consisting of the
file name, function name, line number, and line text, separated by spaces,
for example, main.c main 161 main(argc, argv)
Note that the editor is not called to display a single reference,
unlike the screen-oriented interface.
You can use the c command to toggle ignore/use letter case when
searching. (When ignoring letter case, search for ``FILE'' will match
``File'' and ``file''.)
You can use the r command to rebuild the database.
cscope will quit when it detects end-of-file, or when the first
character of an input line is ``^d'' or ``q''.
- CSCOPE_EDITOR
- Overrides the EDITOR and VIEWER variables. Use this if you wish to use a
different editor with cscope than that specified by your EDITOR/VIEWER
variables.
- CSCOPE_LINEFLAG
- Format of the line number flag for your editor. By default, cscope invokes
your editor via the equivalent of ``editor +N file'', where ``N'' is the
line number that the editor should jump to. This format is used by both
emacs and vi. If your editor needs something different, specify it in this
variable, with ``%s'' as a placeholder for the line number. Ex: if your
editor needs to be invoked as ``editor -#103 file'' to go to line 103, set
this variable to ``-#%s''.
- CSCOPE_LINEFLAG_AFTER_FILE
- Set this variable to ``yes'' if your editor needs to be invoked with the
line number option after the filename to be edited. To continue the
example from CSCOPE_LINEFLAG, above: if your editor needs to see ``editor
file -#number'', set this environment variable. Users of most standard
editors (vi, emacs) do not need to set this variable.
- EDITOR
- Preferred editor, which defaults to vi.
- HOME
- Home directory, which is automatically set at login.
- INCLUDEDIRS
- Colon-separated list of directories to search for #include files.
- SHELL
- Preferred shell, which defaults to sh.
- SOURCEDIRS
- Colon-separated list of directories to search for additional source
files.
- TERM
- Terminal type, which must be a screen terminal.
- TERMINFO
- Terminal information directory full path name. If your terminal is not in
the standard terminfo directory, see curses and terminfo for how to make
your own terminal description.
- TMPDIR
- Temporary file directory, which defaults to /var/tmp.
- VIEWER
- Preferred file display program (such as less), which overrides EDITOR (see
above).
- VPATH
- A colon-separated list of directories, each of which has the same
directory structure below it. If VPATH is set, cscope searches for source
files in the directories specified; if it is not set, cscope searches only
in the current directory.
- cscope.files
- Default files containing -I, -p, -q, and -T options and the list of source
files (overridden by the -i option).
- cscope.out
- Symbol cross-reference file (overridden by the -f option), which is put in
the home directory if it cannot be created in the current directory.
- cscope.in.out
- cscope.po.out
- Default files containing the inverted index used for quick symbol
searching (-q option). If you use the -f option to rename the
cross-reference file (so it's not cscope.out), the names for these
inverted index files will be created by adding
.in and .po to the name you supply with -f. For example, if you indicated
-f xyz, then these files would be named xyz.in and xyz.po.
- INCDIR
- Standard directory for #include files (usually /usr/include).
cscope recognizes function definitions of the form:
- fname blank ( args ) white
arg_decs white {
- where:
- fname is the function name
- blank
- is zero or more spaces, tabs, vtabs, form feeds or carriage returns, not
including newlines
- args
- is any string that does not contain a ``"'' or a newline
- white
- is zero or more spaces, tabs, vtabs, form feeds, carriage returns or
newlines
- arg_decs
- are zero or more argument declarations (arg_decs may include comments and
white space)
It is not necessary for a function declaration to start at the
beginning of a line. The return type may precede the function name; cscope
will still recognize the declaration. Function definitions that deviate from
this form will not be recognized by cscope.
The ``Function'' column of the search output for the menu option
Find functions called by this function: input field will only display the
first function called in the line, that is, for this function
e()
{
return (f() + g());
}
the display would be
Functions called by this function: e
File Function Line
a.c f 3 return(f() + g());
Occasionally, a function definition or call may not be recognized
because of braces inside #if statements. Similarly, the use of a variable
may be incorrectly recognized as a definition.
A typedef name preceding a preprocessor statement will be
incorrectly recognized as a global definition, for example,
LDFILE *
#if AR16WR
Preprocessor statements can also prevent the recognition of a
global definition, for example,
char flag
#ifdef ALLOCATE_STORAGE
= -1
#endif
;
A function declaration inside a function is incorrectly recognized
as a function call, for example,
f()
{
void g();
}
is incorrectly recognized as a call to g.
cscope recognizes C++ classes by looking for the class
keyword, but doesn't recognize that a struct is also a class, so it doesn't
recognize inline member function definitions in a structure. It also doesn't
expect the class keyword in a typedef , so it incorrectly recognizes
X as a definition in
typedef class X * Y;
It also doesn't recognize operator function definitions
Bool Feature::operator==(const Feature & other)
{
...
}
Nor does it recognize function definitions with a function pointer
argument
ParseTable::Recognize(int startState, char *pattern,
int finishState, void (*FinalAction)(char *))
{
...
}