cppcheck/tools/triage
Oliver Stöneberg 1388e9385b
cleaned up setting of compiler options and a few more things in CMake (#2599)
* cleaned up compiler options related code in CMake

* moved cmake_minimum_required() and raised to latest 2.8.x version

* use proper compiler version check / print compiler version

* fixed linking of sanitized builds

* added proper version checks to newer Clang warnings and enabled them / moved tinyxml_objs flags to proper compiler

* disabled -Wdeprecated-declarations for Clang

* compileroptions.cmake: removed unnecessary check for clang++ existence - CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID is determined by CMake

* printInfo.cmake: removed unnecessary message for ANALYZE_ADDRESS - LSAN is part of ASAN and enabled by default

* cleaned up if() comparisons in CMake

* added/adjusted TODOs
2020-04-22 11:04:19 +02:00
..
.gitignore
CMakeLists.txt cleaned up setting of compiler options and a few more things in CMake (#2599) 2020-04-22 11:04:19 +02:00
main.cpp triage: Implement Clang-Tidy and Clazy hints (#1674) 2019-02-16 17:52:36 +01:00
mainwindow.cpp Make triage work with log-files from test-my-pr.py (#2468) 2020-01-03 19:33:42 +01:00
mainwindow.h
mainwindow.ui
readme.txt
triage.pro

readme.txt

triage tool
This tool lets you comfortably look at Cppcheck analysis results for daca packages. It automatically
downloads the package, extracts it and jumps to the corresponding source code for a Cppcheck
message.

triage uses "wget" and "tar"
On Linux the tool can be directly run since the programs should be installed.
On Windows something like Cygwin is necessary and the directory containing the executables must be
in the PATH environment variable (for example "C:\cygwin\bin").

Usage:
After triage has been started you have to load daca results from a file via the "Load from file"
button or from the clipboard via the "Load from clipboard" button.
The file or clipboard text must contain the package URL line beginning with "ftp://" and the
Cppcheck messages.
When the results data has been parsed successfully you can see a list of Cppcheck messages directly
beneath the "Load ..." buttons. Double-click any entry to let the tool show the source code and jump
to and mark the corresponding line. If the package is not found it is downloaded and extracted
automatically. So after the first double-click it is normal that it takes some time until the
source code is shown.