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The output format described in previous chapters is called
GNU Output. Beside this, cflow
is also
able to produce output format defined in POSIX standard
(1).
In this format, each line of output
begins with a reference number, i.e. the ordinal number of this
line in the output, followed by indentation of fixed amount of columns
per level (see setting indentation). Following this are the
name of the function, a colon and the function definition, if
available. The function definition is followed by the location of the
definition (file name and line number). Both definition and location
are enclosed in angle brackets. If the function definition is not
found, the line ends with an empty pair of angle brackets.
This output format is used when either a command line option
‘--format=posix’ (‘-f posix’) has been given, or
the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT
was set.
The output graph in POSIX format for our sample ‘whoami.c’ file will look as follows:
$ cflow --format=posix whoami.c 1 main: int (int argc,char **argv), <whoami.c 26> 2 fprintf: <> 3 who_am_i: int (void), <whoami.c 8> 4 getpwuid: <> 5 geteuid: <> 6 getenv: <> 7 fprintf: <> 8 printf: <>
It is not clear from the POSIX specification whether
the output should contain argument lists in function declarations, or
not. By default cflow
will print them. However, some programs,
analyzing cflow
output expect them to be absent. If you use
such a program, add ‘--omit-arguments’ option to
cflow
command line (see omit signature parts).
To produce a graphical representation of the flowgraph, use the
‘-f dot’ (‘--format=dot’). This outputs a graph in DOT
format(2). To view the output on screen, use graphviz
(3) dot
program.
For example, you can create and view the flowgraph of the
whoami
example program with the following command:
cflow -f dot whoami.c | dot -Txlib
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