Bear is a tool that generates a compilation database for clang tooling.
The JSON compilation database is used in the clang project to provide information on how a single compilation unit is processed. With this, it is easy to re-run the compilation with alternate programs.
One way to get a compilation database is to use cmake
as the build
tool. Passing -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON
to cmake generates
the compile_commands.json
file into the current directory.
For non-cmake projects, use Bear. Bear generates the json file during the build process.
The concept behind Bear is to execute the original build command and
intercept the exec
calls issued by the build tool. To achieve that, Bear uses the
LD_PRELOAD
or DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
mechanisms provided by the dynamic
linker.
Bear has two components: the library and the binary. The library
redefines the exec
methods to be used by all child processes. The
executable enables the use of the library for child processes and
writes the output file.
Bear should be quite portable on UNIX operating systems. It has been tested on FreeBSD, GNU/Linux and OS X.
- an ANSI C compiler, to compile the sources.
- cmake, to configure the build process.
- make, to run the build. The makefiles are generated by
cmake
. - python is a runtime dependency. The
bear
command is written in Python. (version >= 2.7)
Ideally, you should build Bear in a separate build directory.
cmake $BEAR_SOURCE_DIR
make all
make install # to install
make check # to run tests
make package # to make packages
You can configure the build process with passing arguments to cmake.
After installation the usage is like this:
bear make
The output file called compile_commands.json
found in current directory.
For more options you can check the man page or pass --help
parameter.
Because Bear uses LD_PRELOAD
or DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
environment variables,
it does not append to it, but overrides it. So builds which are using these
variables might not work. (I don't know any build tool which does that, but
please let me know if you do.)
Security extension/modes on different operating systems might disable library
preloads. This case Bear behaves normaly, but the result compilation database
will be empty. (Please make sure it's not the case when reporting bugs.)
Notable examples for enabled security modes are: OS X 10.11 (check with
csrutil status | grep 'System Integrity Protection'
), and Fedora, CentOS, RHEL
(check with sestatus | grep 'SELinux status'
).
Workaround could be to disable the security feature while running Bear. (This
might involve reboot of your computer, so might be heavy workaround.) The other
option could be to use tools which are using compiler wrappers. (It inject a
fake compiler which does record the compiler invocation and calls the real
compiler too.) An example for such tool might be scan-build. The
build system shall respect CC
and CXX
environment variables.
If you find a bug in this documentation or elsewhere in the program or would like to propose an improvement, please use the project's github issue tracker. Please describing the bug and where you found it. If you have a suggestion how to fix it, include that as well. Patches are also welcome.