/******************************************************************************
*
* $Id$
*
* Copyright (C) 1997-1999 by Dimitri van Heesch.
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
* documentation under the terms of the GNU General Public License is hereby
* granted. No representations are made about the suitability of this software
* for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
* See the GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* All output generated with Doxygen is not covered by this license.
*
*/
/*! \page config
\section config Configuration
\subsection config_format Format
A configuration file is a free-form ASCII text file with a structure that
is similar to that of a Makefile. It is parsed by a
recursive-descent parser that is built into \c doxygen.
The file may contain tabs and newlines for formatting purposes.
The statements in the file are case-sensitive.
Comments may be placed anywhere within the file (except within quotes).
Comments begin with the \c # character and end at the end of the
line.
The file essentially consists of a list of assignment statements.
Each statement consists of a \c TAG_NAME written in capitals,
followed by the \c = character and one or more values.
Values are sequences of non-blanks. If the value should contain one or more
blanks it must be surrounded by quotes ("...").
Multiple lines can be concatenated by inserting a backslash (\\)
as the last character of a line.
Environment variables can expanded using the pattern \$(ENV_VARIABLE_NAME).
The configuration options can be divided into several categories.
Below is a list of tags that are recognized for each category.
\subsection config_general General options
- \c PROJECT_NAME
-
\addindex PROJECT_NAME
The \c PROJECT_NAME tag is a single word (or a sequence of words
surrounded by double-quotes) that should identify the project for which the
documentation is generated. This name is used in the title of most
generated pages and in a few other places.
- \c PROJECT_NUMBER
-
\addindex PROJECT_NUMBER
The \c PROJECT_NUMBER tag can be used to enter a project or revision number.
This could be handy for archiving the generated documentation or
if some version control system is used.
- \c OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
-
\addindex OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
The \c OUTPUT_DIRECTORY tag is used to specify the (relative or absolute)
path into which the generated HTML and Latex documentation will be written.
If a relative path is entered, it will be relative to the location
where doxygen was started. If left blank the current directory will be used.
- \c QUIET
-
\addindex QUIET
The \c QUIET tag can be used to turn on/off the messages that are generated
to standard output by doxygen. Possible values are \c YES and \c NO,
where \c YES implies that the messages are off.
If left blank \c NO is used.
- \c WARNINGS
-
\addindex WARNINGS
The \c WARNINGS tag can be used to turn on/off the warning messages that are
generated to standard error by doxygen. Possible values are \c YES and \c NO,
where \c YES implies that the warnings are on. If left blank \c NO is used.
\b Tip: Turn warnings on while writing the documentation.
- \c DISABLE_INDEX
-
\addindex DISABLE_INDEX
If you want full control over the layout of the generated HTML pages it
might be necessary to disable the index and replace it with your own.
The DISABLE_INDEX tag can be used to turn on/off the condensed index at
top of each page. A value of NO (the default) enables the index and the
value YES disables it.
- \c EXTRACT_ALL
-
\addindex EXTRACT_ALL
If the \c EXTRACT_ALL tag is set to \c YES all classes and functions will be
included in the documentation, even if no documentation was available.
\b Notice: This will also disable the warnings about undocumented members
that are normally produced when \c WARNINGS is set to \c YES
- \c EXTRACT_PRIVATE
-
\addindex EXTRACT_PRIVATE
If the \c EXTRACT_PRIVATE tag is set to \c YES all
documentation for private members will be extracted as well.
- \c HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS
-
\addindex HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS
If the \c HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS tag is set to \c YES, Doxygen will hide all
undocumented members inside documented classes or files.
If set to \c NO (the default) these members will be included in the
various overviews, but no documentation section is generated.
- \c HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES
-
\addindex HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES
If the \c HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSESS tag is set to \c YES, Doxygen will hide all
undocumented classes.
If set to \c NO (the default) these classes will be included in the
various overviews.
- \c BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC
-
\addindex BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC
If the \c BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
include brief member descriptions after the members that are listed in
the file and class documentation (similar to JavaDoc).
Set to NO to disable this.
- \c INTERNAL_DOCS
-
\addindex INTERNAL_DOCS
The \c INTERNAL_DOCS tag determines if documentation
that is typed after a \\internal command is included. If the tag is set
to \c NO (the default) then the documentation will be excluded.
Set it to \c YES to include the internal documentation.
- \c REPEAT_BRIEF
-
\addindex REPEAT_BRIEF
If the \c REPEAT_BRIEF tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
prepend the brief description of a member or function before the detailed
description
\par Notice:
If both \c HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS and \c BRIEF_MEMBER_DESC are set to \c NO, the
brief descriptions will be completely suppressed.
- \c FULL_PATH_NAMES
-
\addindex FULL_PATH_NAMES
If the \c FULL_PATH_NAMES tag is set to \c YES Doxygen will prepend the full
path before files name in the file list and in the header files. If set
to NO the shortest path that makes the file name unique will be used
- \c STRIP_FROM_PATH
-
\addindex STRIP_FROM_PATH
If the \c FULL_PATH_NAMES tag is set to \c YES then the \c STRIP_FROM_PATH tag
can be used to strip a user defined part of the path. Stripping is
only done if the specified string matches the left-hand part of the
path.
- \c CLASS_DIAGRAMS
-
\addindex CLASS_DIAGRAMS
If the \c CLASS_DIAGRAMS tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
generate a class diagram (in Html and LaTeX) for classes with base or
super classes. Setting the tag to \c NO turns the diagrams off.
- \c CASE_SENSE_NAMES
-
\addindex CASE_SENSE_NAMES
If the \c CASE_SENSE_NAMES tag is set to \c NO (the default) then Doxygen
will only generate file names in lower case letters. If set to
\c YES upper case letters are also allowed. This is useful if you have
classes or files whose names only differ in case and if your file system
supports case sensitive file names.
- \c VERBATIM_HEADERS
-
\addindex VERBATIM_HEADERS
If the VERBATIM_HEADERS tag is set the YES (the default) then Doxygen\n";
will generate a verbatim copy of the header file for each class for\n";
which an include is specified. Set to NO to disable this.\n";
\sa Section \ref cmdclass.
\subsection config_input Input related options
- \c INPUT
-
\addindex INPUT
The \c INPUT tag is used to specify the files and/or directories that contain
documented source files. You may enter file names like
\c myfile.cpp or directories like \c /usr/src/myproject.
Separate the files or directories with spaces.
\b Notice: This tag (and only this tag) is \e required.
- \c FILE_PATTERNS
-
\addindex FILE_PATTERNS
If the value of the \c INPUT tag contains directories, you can use the
\c FILE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard patterns
(like \c *.cpp and \c *.h ) to filter out the source-files
in the directories. If left blank all files are included
(i.e. wildcard *).
- \c RECURSIVE
-
\addindex RECURSIVE
The \c RECURSIVE tag can be used to specify whether or not subdirectories
should be searched for input files as well. Possible values are \c YES
and \c NO. If left blank \c NO is used.
- \c EXCLUDE
-
\addindex EXCLUDE
The \c EXCLUDE tag can be used to specify files and/or directories that should
excluded from the \c INPUT source files. This way you can easily exclude a
subdirectory from a directory tree whose root is specified with the \c INPUT tag.
- \c EXCLUDE_PATTERNS
-
\addindex EXCLUDE_PATTERNS
If the value of the INPUT tag contains directories, you can use the
\c EXCLUDE_PATTERNS tag to specify one or more wildcard patterns to exclude
certain files from those directories.
- \c EXAMPLE_PATH
-
\addindex EXAMPLE_PATH
The \c EXAMPLE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more files or
directories that contain example code fragments that are included (see
the \\include command in section \ref cmdinclude).
- \c INCLUDE_PATH
-
\addindex INCLUDE_PATH
The INCLUDE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more directories that
contain include files that are not input files but should be processed by
the preprocessor.
- \c INPUT_FILTER
-
\addindex INPUT_FILTER
The \c INPUT_FILTER tag can be used to specify a program that doxygen should
invoke to filter for each input file. Doxygen will invoke the filter program
by executing (via popen()) the command:
\verbatim
\endverbatim
where \
is the value of the \c INPUT_FILTER tag, and \ is the name of an
input file. Doxygen will then use the output that the filter program writes
to standard output.
\subsection html_output HTML related options
- \c GENERATE_HTML
-
\addindex GENERATE_HTML
If the \c GENERATE_HTML tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
generate HTML output
- \c HTML_OUTPUT
-
\addindex HTML_OUTPUT
The \c HTML_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the HTML docs will be put.
If a relative path is entered the value of \c OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be
put in front of it. If left blank `html' will be used as the default path.
- \c HTML_HEADER
-
\addindex HTML_HEADER
The \c HTML_HEADER tag can be used to specify a user defined HTML
header file for each generated HTML page. To get valid HTML the header file
should contain at least a \c and a \c tag. Example:
\verbatim
My title
\endverbatim
If the tag is left blank doxygen will generate a
standard header.
- \c HTML_FOOTER
-
\addindex HTML_FOOTER
The \c HTML_FOOTER tag can be used to specify a user defined HTML footer for
each generated HTML page. To get valid HTML the header file should contain
at least a \c and a \c tag. Example:
\verbatim
\endverbatim
If the tag is left blank doxygen will generate a standard footer.
\subsection latex_output LaTeX related options
- \c GENERATE_LATEX
-
\addindex GENERATE_LATEX
If the \c GENERATE_LATEX tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
generate Latex output.
- \c LATEX_OUTPUT
-
\addindex LATEX_OUTPUT
The \c LATEX_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the LaTeX docs will be put.
If a relative path is entered the value of \c OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be
put in front of it. If left blank `latex' will be used as the default path.
- \c COMPACT_LATEX
-
\addindex COMPACT_LATEX
If the \c COMPACT_LATEX tag is set to \c YES Doxygen generates more compact
LaTeX documents. This may be useful for small projects and may help to
save some trees in general.
- \c PAPER_TYPE
-
\addindex PAPER_TYPE
The PAPER_TYPE tag can be used to set the paper type that is used
by the printer. Possible values are:
a4
(210 x 297 mm).
a4wide
(same as a4, but including the a4wide package).
letter
(8.5 x 11 inches).
legal
(8.5 x 14 inches).
executive
(7.25 x 10.5 inches)
If left blank a4wide will be used.
- \c EXTRA_PACKAGES
-
\addindex EXTRA_PACKAGES
The EXTRA_PACKAGES tag can be used to specify one or more LaTeX
package names that should be included in the LaTeX output.
To get the times font for instance you can specify
\verbatim
EXTRA_PACKAGES = times
\endverbatim
If left blank no extra packages will be included.
\subsection man_output Man page related options
- \c GENERATE_MAN
-
\addindex GENERATE_MAN
If the \c GENERATE_MAN tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
generate man pages for classes and files.
- \c MAN_OUTPUT
-
\addindex MAN_OUTPUT
The \c MAN_OUTPUT tag is used to specify where the man pages will be put.
If a relative path is entered the value of \c OUTPUT_DIRECTORY will be
put in front of it. If left blank `man' will be used as the default path.
A directory man3 will be created inside the directory specified by
\c MAN_OUTPUT.
\subsection config_prepro Preprocessor related options
- \c ENABLE_PREPROCESSING
-
\addindex ENABLE_PREPROCESSING
If the \c ENABLE_PREPROCESSING tag is set to \c YES (the default) Doxygen will
evaluate all C-preprocessor directives found in the sources and include
files.
- \c MACRO_EXPANSION
-
\addindex MACRO_EXPANSION
If the \c MACRO_EXPANSION tag is set to \c YES Doxygen will expand all macro
names in the source code. If set to \c NO (the default) only conditional
compilation will be performed.
- \c SEARCH_INCLUDES
-
\addindex SEARCH_INCLUDES
If the \c SEARCH_INCLUDES tag is set to \c YES (the default) the includes files
in the \c INCLUDE_PATH (see below) will be search if a \#include is found.
- \c INCLUDE_PATH
-
\addindex INCLUDE_PATH
The \c INCLUDE_PATH tag can be used to specify one or more directories that
contain include files that are not input files but should be processed by
the preprocessor.
- \c PREDEFINED
-
\addindex PREDEFINED
The \c PREDEFINED tag can be used to specify one or more macro names that
are defined before the preprocessor is started (similar to the -D option of
gcc). The argument of the tag is a list of macros of the form:
name
or name=definition
(no spaces).
If the definition and the = are omitted =1 is assumed.
- \c EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF
-
\addindex EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF
If the \c EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF and \c MACRO_EXPANSION tags are both set to YES
then the macro expansion is limited to the macros specified with the
\c PREDEFINED tag.
\subsection config_extref External reference options
- \c TAGFILES
-
\addindex TAGFILES
The \c TAGFILES tag can be used to specify one or more tagfiles.
See section \ref doxytag_usage for more information about the usage of
tag files.
\par Notice:
Each tag file most have a unique name and if a tag file is not located
in the directory in which doxygen is run, you must also specify the
path to the tagfile here.
- \c GENERATE_TAGFILE
-
\addindex GENERATE_TAGFILE
When a file name is specified after \c GENERATE_TAGFILE, doxygen will create
a tag file that is based on the input files it reads.
See section \ref doxytag_usage for more information about the usage of
tag files.
- \c ALLEXTERNALS
-
\addindex ALLEXTERNALS
if the \c ALLEXTERNALS tag is set to \c YES all external class will be listed
in the class index. If set to \c NO only the inherited external classes
will be listed.
- \c PERL_PATH
-
\addindex PERL_PATH
The \c PERL_PATH should be the absolute path and name of the perl script
interpreter (i.e. the result of `which perl').
\subsection config_search Search engine options
- \c SEARCHENGINE
-
\addindex SEARCHENGINE
The \c SEARCHENGINE tag specifies whether or not a
search should be used. Possible values are \c YES and \c NO.
If set to \c NO or left blank, the values of all other tags in this section
will be ignored.
- \c CGI_NAME
-
\addindex CGI_NAME
The \c CGI_NAME tag should be the name of the CGI script that
starts the search engine (doxysearch) with the correct parameters.
A script with this name will be generated by doxygen.
- \c CGI_URL
-
\addindex CGI_URL
The \c CGI_URL tag should be the absolute URL to the directory where the
cgi binaries are located. See the documentation of your http daemon for
details.
- \c DOC_URL
-
\addindex DOC_URL
The \c DOC_URL tag should be the absolute URL to the directory where the
documentation is located. If left blank the absolute path to the
documentation, with file:// prepended to it, will be used.
This is correct for local viewing only.
- \c DOC_ABSPATH
-
\addindex DOC_ABSPATH
The \c DOC_ABSPATH tag should be the absolute path to the directory where the
documentation is located. If left blank the directory on the local machine
will be used.
- \c BIN_ABSPATH
-
\addindex BIN_ABSPATH
The \c BIN_ABSPATH tag must point to the directory where the doxysearch binary
is installed.
- \c EXT_DOC_PATHS
-
\addindex EXT_DOC_PATHS
The \c EXT_DOC_PATHS tag can be used to specify one or more paths to
documentation generated for other projects. This allows doxysearch to search
the documentation for these projects as well. All paths must be absolute.
Examples
Suppose you have a simple project consisting of two files: a source file
\c example.cc and a header file \c example.h.
Then a minimal configuration file is as simple as:
\verbatim
INPUT = example.cc example.h
\endverbatim
Assuming the example makes use of Qt classes and perl is located
in /usr/bin
, a more realistic configuration file would be:
\verbatim
PROJECT_NAME = Example
INPUT = example.cc example.h
WARNINGS = YES
TAGFILES = qt.tag
PERL_PATH = /usr/bin/perl
SEARCHENGINE = NO
\endverbatim
To generate the documentation for the
QdbtTabular package
I have used the following configuration file:
\verbatim
PROJECT_NAME = QdbtTabular
OUTPUT_DIRECTORY = html
WARNINGS = YES
INPUT = examples/examples.doc src
FILE_PATTERNS = *.cc *.h
INCLUDE_PATH = examples
TAGFILES = qt.tag
PERL_PATH = /usr/local/bin/perl
SEARCHENGINE = YES
CGI_NAME = search.cgi
CGI_URL = http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/cgi-bin
DOC_URL = http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/qdbttabular
DOC_ABSPATH = /home/dimitri/.html/qdbttabular
BIN_ABSPATH = /home/dimitri/bin
\endverbatim
To regenerate the Qt documentation from the sources, you could use the
following config file:
\verbatim
PROJECT_NAME = Qt
OUTPUT_DIRECTORY = qt_docs
HIDE_UNDOC_MEMBERS = YES
HIDE_UNDOC_CLASSES = YES
ENABLE_PREPROCESSING = YES
MACRO_EXPANSION = YES
EXPAND_ONLY_PREDEF = YES
SEARCH_INCLUDES = YES
FULL_PATH_NAMES = YES
STRIP_FROM_PATH = $(QTDIR)/
PREDEFINED = USE_TEMPLATECLASS Q_EXPORT= \
QArrayT=QArray \
QListT=QList \
QDictT=QDict \
QQueueT=QQueue \
QVectorT=QVector \
QPtrDictT=QPtrDict \
QIntDictT=QIntDict \
QStackT=QStack \
QDictIteratorT=QDictIterator \
QListIteratorT=QListIterator \
QCacheT=QCache \
QCacheIteratorT=QCacheIterator \
QIntCacheT=QIntCache \
QIntCacheIteratorT=QIntCacheIterator \
QIntDictIteratorT=QIntDictIterator \
QPtrDictIteratorT=QPtrDictIterator
INPUT = $(QTDIR)/doc \
$(QTDIR)/src/widgets \
$(QTDIR)/src/kernel \
$(QTDIR)/src/dialogs \
$(QTDIR)/src/tools
FILE_PATTERNS = *.cpp *.h q*.doc
INCLUDE_PATH = $(QTDIR)/include
RECURSIVE = YES
\endverbatim
Here Doxygen's preprocessor is used to substitute some
macro names that are normally substituted by the C preprocessor,
but without doing full macro expansion.
*/