Dead-code analyzer for OCaml
The tool assumes that .mli files are compiled with -keep-locs and .ml files with -bin-annot. Exported values are collected by reading .cmi or .cmt files (depending on the existence of an explicit .mli interface). References to such values are collected by reading typed trees from .cmt files
This tool scans a compiled OCaml project and reports various warnings about suspicious code:
-
Exported values never used. (The declaration can be dropped from the interface, and then from the implementation if there is no internal use -- which will be reported by standard OCaml warnings).
-
Types fields and constructors never used. (Can be dropped from the type)
-
Class fields never used. (Can be dropped from the signature)
-
Optional arguments for which either all call sites or none of them provide a value (other than
None
). (The argument can be made mandatory or dropped.) -
Other stylistic issues: patterns matching a value of type
unit
which are not()
(typically,_
or a variable); let-bindinglet () = ... in ...
(it's usually better to use sequencing); let-binding of the formlet x = ... in x
(the binding is useless); optional argument in argument's type:val f: ... -> (... -> ?_:_ -> ...) -> ...
- Currently tested and working on OCaml 4.05.0+trunk
opam install dead_code_analyzer
- Download the sources.
- Build by either
- running
make
to generate thedead_code_analyzer.byt
bytecode executable file; - running
make opt
to generate thedead_code_analyzer.opt
native-code executable file. Both will be produced in thebuild
directory.
dead_code_analyzer.<byt|opt> <options> <path>
The given paths can be files and directories. For more information about the usage, use the -help option.
To run the tests use make check
.
For each subset of the tests a file <subset>.out
is generated, containg the output
of the execution on it.
To run a subset of the tests call make -C check <subset>
.
Running make doc
will produce the documentation as html files in the doc
directory.
Running make man
will produce documentation as man pages in the man/man3
directory.
You are welcome to clone this repository and send us back pull requests.
Read CONTRIBUTING.md
at the root of this directory for more informations on how to contribute.
The project is used internally at LexiFi.
There has been no official release yet.
Tracking the optional arguments uses may consume a lot of memory. Tracking the methods uses may consume a lot of memory.
Source code is distributed under the conditions stated in file License
This project was initiated by LexiFi (http://www.lexifi.com) and is part of the SecurOCaml project.
Contact: alain.frisch@lexifi.com