PySonar2 is a static analyzer for Python, which does sophisticated interprocedural analysis to infer types. To understand it, please refer to my blog posts:
- http://yinwang0.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/pysonar
- http://yinwang0.wordpress.com/2013/06/21/pysonar-slides
mvn clean package
I haven't set up releases, so I push working copies of the builds that I don't
see problems so far to the target
directory as a "stable" version. If the
current build is broken or buggy, please grab that snapshot instead. And of
course, filing an issue is appreciated.
PySonar2 uses CPython interpreter to parse Python code, so please make sure you
have python
or python3
installed and pointed to by the PATH
environment
variable.
PYTHONPATH
environment variable is used for locating the Python standard
libraries. It is important to point it to the correct Python library, for
example
export PYTHONPATH=/usr/lib/python2.7
If this is not set up correctly, you may find suboptimal results.
PySonar2 is mainly designed as a library for Python IDEs and other developer tools, so its interface may not be as appealing as an end-user tool, but for your understanding of the library's capabilities, a reasonably nice demo program has been built (all features added by Steve Yegge, all bugs added by Yin Wang).
Now you can build a simple "code-browser" of the Python 2.7 standard library with the following command line:
java -jar target/pysonar-2.0-SNAPSHOT.jar /usr/lib/python2.7 ./html
This will take a few minutes. You should find some interactive HTML files inside the html directory after this process.
All serious static analysis tools require a lot of memory to run. PySonar2 doesn't need much memory to do analysis. 1GB is probably enough for analyzing a medium sized project such as the standard library or Django. But for generating the HTML files, you may need quite some memory (~2.5GB for Python 2.7 standard lib). This is due to the highlighting code I added to the demo not using sophisticated ways of doing it. The situation may change soon.
PySonar used to use Jython's parser and was part of Jython. If you want to try that version, please checkout the jython branch. You may also want to look at PySonar 1.0 code inside Jython project. But keep in mind that the new code here is much better, and those old versions are no longer supported or developed by me.
Copyright (c) 2013 Yin Wang
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