polyspaceConfigure
Create Polyspace project from your build system at the MATLAB command line
Description
polyspaceConfigure
traces your build
system and creates a Polyspace® project with information gathered from your build system. You can run
an analysis on a Polyspace project only in the user interface of the Polyspace desktop products.buildCommand
polyspaceConfigure
traces your build system and uses -option
value
buildCommand
-option value
to modify the
default operation of polyspaceConfigure
. Specify the modifiers
before buildCommand
, otherwise they are considered as options in
the build command itself.
Note
Before you run Polyspace from MATLAB®, you must link your Polyspace and MATLAB installations. See Integrate Polyspace with MATLAB and Simulink or Integrate Polyspace Server Products with MATLAB.
Examples
Create Polyspace Project from Makefile
This example shows how to create a Polyspace project if you use the command make
to build your source code. The
example creates a Polyspace project that can be opened only in the user interface of the
Polyspace desktop products.targetName
buildOptions
Create a Polyspace project specifying a unique project
name. Use the -B
or -W
option
with makefileName
make
so that the all
prerequisite targets in the makefile are remade.
polyspaceConfigure -prog myProject ... make -B targetName buildOptions
Open the Polyspace project in the Project Browser.
polyspaceCodeProver('myProject.psprj')
Create Projects That Have Different Source Files from Same Build Trace
This example shows how to create different Polyspace projects from the same trace of your build system. You can specify which source files to include for each project. The example creates a Polyspace project that can be opened only in the user interface of the Polyspace desktop products.
Trace your build system without creating a Polyspace project by specifying the option -no-project
. To
ensure that all the prerequisite targets in your makefile are remade, use the
appropriate make
build command option, for instance
-B
.
polyspaceConfigure -no-project make -B;
polyspace-configure
stores the cache information and the
build trace in default locations inside the current folder. To store the cache
information and build trace in a different location, specify the options
-cache-path
and -build-trace
.
Generate Polyspace projects by using the build trace information from the previous
step. Specify a project name and use the -include-sources
or
-exclude-sources
option to select which files to include for
each project.
polyspaceConfigure -no-build -prog myProject ... -include-sources "glob_pattern";
glob_pattern
is a glob pattern that corresponds to
folders or files you filter in or out of your project. To ensure the shell does
not expand the glob patterns you pass to polysapce-configure
,
enclose them in double quotes.For more information on the supported syntax for
glob patterns, see Select Files for Polyspace Analysis Using Pattern Matching.
If you specified the options -build-trace
and
-cache-path
in the previous step, specify them again.
Delete the trace file and cache folder.
rmdir('polyspace_configure_cache', 's'); delete polyspace_configure_built_trace;
-build-trace
and
-cache-path
, use the paths and file names from those
options.Run Command-Line Polyspace Analysis from Makefile
This example shows how to run Polyspace analysis if you use a build command such as make
to build your source code. In
this example, you use targetName
buildOptions
polyspaceConfigure
to trace your build
system but do not create a Polyspace project. Instead you create an options file that you can use to run
Polyspace analysis from the command-line.
Create a Polyspace options file specifying the -output-options-file
command.
Use the -B
or -W
option
with makefileName
make
so that all
prerequisite targets in the makefile are remade.
polyspaceConfigure -output-options-file ... myOptions make -B targetName buildOptions
Use the options file that you created to run a Polyspace analysis at the command line:
polyspaceCodeProver -options-file myOptions
Input Arguments
buildCommand
— Command for building source code
build command
Build command specified exactly as you use to build your source code.
Example: make -B
, make -W
makefileName
-option value
— Options for changing default operation of polyspaceConfigure
single option starting with -
, followed
by argument | multiple space-separated option-argument pairs
Basic Options
— Options for output and debugging
string
Option | Description |
---|---|
-prog
| Project name that appears in the Polyspace user interface. The default is
If you do not
use the option Example:
|
-author
| Name of project author. Example:
|
-output-project
| Path to Polyspace project file. The default is the file Example:
|
-output-platform-project
| Path to Polyspace Platform project file or workspace file (if you use one of the options Example: Example: For more information on Polyspace Platform projects, see:
|
-update-platform-project
| Use this option to update the build configuration of a Polyspace Platform project ( If the specified project does not exist, the command creates a new project. Example:
|
-output-options-file
| Path of analysis options file that Polyspace generates. Use this file for command-line analysis using one of these commands:
|
-allow-build-error | Option to create a Polyspace project even if an error occurs in the build process. If an error occurs, the build trace log shows the following message: polyspace-configure (polyspaceConfigure) ERROR: build command command_name fail [status=status_value] command_name
is the build command name that you use and
status_value is the non-zero
exit status or error level that indicates which error
occurred in your build process.This option can create
a useful project if your build command builds the source files
but exits with a non-zero exit status. If your source files do
not compile and the build fails, resolve your build failure
before using polyspace-configure
again.This option is ignored when you use
|
-allow-overwrite | Option to overwrite a project with the same name, if it exists. By default, |
| Option to suppress or display additional messages from
running
If you specify more than one of these options, the most verbose option is applied. Polyspace ignores these options when
you use them in combination with
|
-help | Option to display the full list of
|
-debug | Option to store debug information for use by MathWorks® technical support. This option has
been superseded by the option
|
-easy-debug
| Path of folder where Polyspace stores debug information for use by MathWorks technical support. After a |
Multiple Modules Creation Options
— Create separate output per module
string
These options are not compatible with
-compilation-database
Option | Description |
---|---|
-module | Option to create a separate analysis module for each binary that you create in a build system. What constitutes an analysis module depends on the output of the
This option is supported only in the following cases:
Note that when you create a separate options file for each binary in this way, each options file contains source files directly involved in the binary and not through shared objects. For more information, see Modularize Polyspace Analysis by Using Build Command. |
-modules-list | Option to create a separate output for each root folder you state in the text file What constitutes an analysis module depends on the output of the
This option is supported whether you create a project or options file from a build command or a JSON compilation database. |
-module-output-pattern | Option to create a separate output for each root folder captured by the regular expression
What constitutes an analysis module depends on the output of the
This option is supported whether you create a project or options file from a build command or a JSON compilation database. |
-output-options-path
| Path to folder where generated options files are saved. Use this option together with the option The options files are named after the binaries created in the build system. |
-project-root | Path to folder with respect to which root folder paths are resolved. Use this option together with the option -module-list . If you omit this option, root folder paths in the text file provided with -module-list are resolved with respect to the current working folder. |
Advanced Options
— Specify advanced configuration options
string
Option | Description |
---|---|
-compilation-database
| Path of JSON compilation database (JSON CDB) file. You
generate this file from your build system, for instance by
using the flag
You do not specify a build command when you use this option. These build systems and compilers support the generation of a JSON CDB:
This option is not compatible
with Polyspace ignores the
cache control options |
-compiler-config
| Path of compiler configuration file. The
file must be in a specific format. For guidance, see the
existing configuration files in Example:
|
-no-project | Option to trace your build system without creating a Polyspace project and save the build trace information. Use this option to save your build
trace information for a later run of
This
option is not compatible with
|
-no-build | Option to create a Polyspace project using previously saved build trace information. To use this option, you must have
the build trace information saved from an earlier run of
If
you use this option, you do not need to specify the
This option is ignored when you use
|
-no-sources | Option to create a Polyspace options file that does not contain the source file specifications. Use this option when you intend to specify the source files by other means. For instance, you can use this option when:
|
-extra-project-options
| Options that are used for subsequent Polyspace analysis. Once a Polyspace project is created, you can change some of the
default options in the project. Alternatively, you can pass
these options when tracing your build command. The flag
Specify multiple
options in a space separated list, for instance
Suppose
you have to set the option
For the list of options available, see:
If you are creating an options file instead of a Polyspace project from your build command, do not use this flag. Instead, add the extra analysis options manually in the generated options file, in a separate options file, or at the command-line when you start the analysis. |
-tmp-path
| Path of folder where temporary files are stored. |
-build-trace
| Path of file where build information is stored. The
default is
Example:
|
-log | Path of log file where the output of the
polyspace-configure command is stored.
The use of this option does not suppress the console
output. |
| Option to specify which source files
A source file is included if the file
path matches the A
source file is excluded if the file path matches the
|
| Option to print the list of source files that
Use this option to troubleshoot
the glob patterns that you pass to
|
-compiler-cache-path
| Specify a folder path where
By default, Polyspace looks for and stores compiler caches under these folder paths:
|
-no-compiler-cache | Use this option if you do not want Polyspace to cache your compiler configuration information or to use an existing cache for your compiler configuration. By default, the first time you
run |
-reset-compiler-cache-entry | Use this option to query the compiler for the current configuration and to refresh the entry in the cache file that corresponds to this configuration. Other compiler configuration entries in the cache are not updated. |
-clear-compiler-cache | Use this option to delete all compiler configurations stored in the cache file. If you also specify
a build command or |
-import-macro-definitions none | from-allowlist |
from-source-tokens | from-compiler | Typically, you do not need to specify this option. Polyspace attempts to automatically determine the best strategy to query your compiler for macro definitions in this order of priority:
If you prefer to specify macro definitions
manually, use this option with the If the macro import strategy that Polyspace uses is not the one that you expect, try specifying this option manually to troubleshoot the issue. |
-options-for-sources-delimiter
| Specify the character to use as a separator between
analysis options when Polyspace generates an options file
associated with one source file using the option
See also |
Cache Control Options
— Generate cache options for debugging
string
These options are primarily useful for debugging. Use the options if
polyspace-configure (polyspaceConfigure)
fails and
MathWorks Technical Support asks you to use the option and provide the
cached files. Starting R2020a, the option -easy-debug
provides an easier way to provide debug information. See Contact Technical Support About Issues with Running Polyspace.
Polyspace ignores these options when you use
-compilation-database
.
Option | Description |
---|---|
| Option to perform one of the following:
Typically, you cache temporary files created by your build command to debug issues in tracing the command. |
-cache-path
| Path of folder where cache information is stored. When tracing a Visual Studio build
( path is too long Example:
|
| Option to preserve or clean up cache information after
If |
Version History
Introduced in R2013b
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