Provided by: clazy_1.6-2ubuntu5_amd64 bug

NAME

       clazy - a static source code analyzer for Qt5-based C++.

SYNOPSIS

       clazy [option] [clang++-options]

DESCRIPTION

       clazy scans C++/Qt source code looking for issues related to good coding practice with of
       Qt5.  In typical use, during code compilation with clazy you will see any such warnings
       printed to the output normally as you would find any compiler warnings.

       clazy has the ability to "fix" the offending code in some cases.  See the CLAZY_FIXIT
       environment variable description below for more information.

OPTIONS

       --help
           Print help message and exit.

       --version
           Print version information and exit.

       --list
           Print a list of all available checkers, arranged by level.

       --explain
           Print explanations for all checkers.

       --explain <regexp>
           Print explanations for the checkers matching the specified regular expression.

       Any of the options above will print the requested information and then exit.

       --qt4compat
           This option runs clazy in Qt4 compatibility mode.  Use this when your source code can
           build with Qt4 and Qt5 in order to easily suppress issues that cannot be fixed due to
           the requirement of the Qt4 API.

           This is a convenience option which is identical to directly passing:
             "-Xclang -plugin-arg-clazy -Xclang qt4-compat"

       --qtdeveloper
           For Qt developers only.  This option is special for running clazy on Qt itself.  Will
           result in fewer false positives being reported in Qt code.

           This is a convenience option which is identical to directly passing:
             "-Xclang -plugin-arg-clazy -Xclang qt-developer"

       All other options are passed directly to clang++ and handled from there.

       See the clang manual for a list of the very large set of options available, but in normal
       operation you "compile" your code with clazy just as you would with clang.

EXAMPLES

       Print a list of all available checkers, arranged by check level:
            % clazy --list

            List of available clazy checkers:

            Checks from level0. Very stable checks, 100% safe, no false-positives:
               connect-non-signal
               container-anti-pattern
               lambda-in-connect
               mutable-container-key
               qdatetime-utc
               qenums
               qfileinfo-exists
             ....

       Compile your CMake project with clazy default checkers:
            % cmake -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clazy <other_cmake_options>
            then make as normal

       Compile your CMake project with level2 checks only (non-Windows):
            % export CLAZY_CHECKS="level2"
            % cmake -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clazy <other_cmake_options>
            then make as normal

       Compile your qmake project with clazy default checkers:
            % qmake -spec linux-clang QMAKE_CXX=clazy <other_qmake_options>
            then make as normal

IN-CODE DIRECTIVES

       clazy supports the following list of in-code directives:

       clazy:skip
            Exempt an entire file from all checks.
            No clazy tests will run on the file.

       clazy:excludeall=<name1[,name2,...,nameN]>
            Exempt the entire file from the specified checks.
            The clazy checks name1, etc will not be run on this file.

       clazy:exclude=<name1[,name2,...,nameN]>
            Exclude individual lines from specific checks.
            The clazy checks tests name1, etc. will not be run on the line where
            this directive is found.

       Don't include the 'clazy-' prefix.  For example, to disable the "qstring-allocations"
       check, you would write:

           // clazy:exclude=qstring-allocations

       and not

           // clazy:exclude=clazy-qstring-allocations

       Also note that these directives must be C++ style comments; C style comments are ignored.

ENVIRONMENT

       CLAZY_CHECKS - a comma-separated list of checkers or check-sets to run.  By default, all
       checkers from the "level0" and "level1" check-sets will run.

       Examples:

       1. Enables the 2 checkers "unneeded-cast" and "virtual-call-ctor" only:
           % export CLAZY_CHECKS="unneeded-cast,virtual-call-ctor"

       2. Enables all checks from the "level0" check-set, except for "qenums":
           % export CLAZY_CHECKS="level0,no-qenums"

       3. Enables all checks from the "level0" check-set along with the "detaching-temporary"
       checker:
           % export CLAZY_CHECKS="level0,detaching-temporary"

       CLAZY_FIXIT - some checkers are able to automatically re-write your source code whenever
       it encounters code it can "fix".  Enable this "fixit" feature by setting this variable to
       the name of the checker with a "fixit" capability.

       Examples:

       1. Fix qlatin1string allocations:
           % export CLAZY_FIXIT="fix-qlatin1string-allocations"

       2. Fix old-style (simple cases) connect statements:
           % export CLAZY_FIXIT=fix-old-style-connect

           More documentation is provided when running clazy with the --explain command line
           option.

           Also note that only 1 fixit checker can be run at a time.

       CLAZY_EXTRA_OPTIONS - some checkers can adapt their behavior depending on the value of
       this environment variable.  More documentation is provided when running clazy with the
       --explain command line option.

       CLAZY_NO_WERROR - if this is variable is set, clazy will not treat warnings as errors,
       even if the -Werror compiler option is specified.  This is useful if you want to use
       -Werror only for the regular gcc/clang warnings but not for clazy warnings.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2015-2017 Klaralvdalens Datakonsult AB, a KDAB Group company,
       <info@kdab.com>

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
       version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

       This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
       without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
       See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this
       library.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

SEE ALSO

        clang(1)
        https://www.kdab.com/use-static-analysis-improve-performance

AUTHORS

        Sergio Martins <sergio.martins@kdab.com>
        Laurent Montel <laurent.montel@kdab.com>
        Allen Winter <allen.winter@kdab.com>
        Albert Astals Cid <aacid@kde.org>
        Aurelien Gateau <agateau@kde.org>
        Kevin Funk <kevin.funk@kdab.com>
        Hannah von Reth <hannah.vonreth@kdab.com>
        Volker Krause <volker.krause@kdab.com>
        Christian Ehrlicher <Ch.Ehrlicher@gmx.de>
        Mathias Hasselmann <mathias.hasselmann@kdab.com>