A tool to analyze #includes in C and C++ source files
"Include what you use" means this: for every symbol (type, function, variable, or macro) that you use in foo.cc (or foo.cpp), either foo.cc or foo.h should include a .h file that exports the declaration of that symbol. The include-what-you-use program is a tool to analyze includes of source files to find include-what-you-use violations, and suggest fixes for them.
The main goal of include-what-you-use is to remove superfluous includes. It does this both by figuring out what includes are not actually needed for this file (for both .cc and .h files), and replacing includes with forward declarations when possible.
- Devel package for openSUSE:Factory
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- Links to openSUSE:Factory / include-what-you-use
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osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout devel:tools:compiler/include-what-you-use && cd $_
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
_link | 0000000124 124 Bytes | |
fix-shebang.patch | 0000000524 524 Bytes | |
include-what-you-use-0.22.src.tar.gz | 0000795880 777 KB | |
include-what-you-use.changes | 0000013557 13.2 KB | |
include-what-you-use.spec | 0000003566 3.48 KB | |
iwyu_include_picker.patch | 0000050320 49.1 KB |
Revision 46 (latest revision is 49)
Aaron Puchert (aaronpuchert)
committed
(revision 46)
- Remove fix-test-driver-offload-openmp.patch again, instead disable test entirely. It produces different errors on different platforms, and the test infrastructure doesn't seem to have any facilities for that.
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