An automated documentation tool for visually exploring .NET assemblies (*.dll files) along type relations using rapid diagramming.
- What can it do for you and how?
- How does it work?
- Check out the demo
- Optimized for exploration and sharing
- Generate a HTML diagrammer using the console app
- Tips for using the HTML diagrammer
- Thanks to
- Disclaimer
Class diagrams and Entity/Relationship diagrams can be really helpful if done right. They let us see how types relate - handing us a ready-made mental map for a subdomain. At the same time they take a load of our minds, sparing us from having to remember all those relations correctly across frantic code symbol navigations in our IDE. And occasionally they can serve as safe and engaging fodder for big-brained busy-bodies to stay the heck out of our code base.
Drawing them takes way too long though - even in fancy designers. And what's the point? Like any other hand-crafted documentation, they're always outdated - often from the very beginning. After a while their usability becomes a function of how much time you want to spend maintaining them. Also, they're next to useless in conversations about the boundaries of whatever subdomain or Aggregate you're looking at - because they lack the interactivity to let you peek beyond the boundary.
netAmermaid helps you create useful on-the-fly class diagrams within seconds in two simple steps:
- Point the command line tool at an assembly to extract its type information and build a HTML5 diagramming app from it. To get it hot off your latest build, you can script this step and run it just before using the diagrammer - or hook it into your build pipeline to automate it for Continuous Integration.
- Open the HTML diagrammer to select types and render class diagrams from them within a couple of keystrokes - after which you can interact with the diagram directly to unfold the domain along type relations. At any point, familiar key commands will copy the diagram to your clipboard or export it as either SVG, PNG or in mermaid class diagram syntax. You can also just share the URL with anybody with access to the HTML diagrammer or paste it into your code where helpful.
If XML documentation comments are available for the source assembly, they're used to annotate types and members on the generated diagrams. Commented symbols show up highlighted, making the documentation accessible on hover.
Dealing with .Net assemblies, you've probably come across ILSpy and can appreciate how useful it is to explore and understand even the most poorly documented library. Think of netAmermaid as a visual version of that - minus geeky details like code decompilation and symbol usage analysis. Instead,
What netAmermaid offers is an overview over types, their members and relations and the ability to unfold the domain along them until you have enough context to make an informed decision. Use it as
- a mental mapping tool to get your bearings in an unknown domain.
- a communication tool for your own domain - when talking about the bigger picture with your team mates or even non-technical shareholders like product owners and users.
To extract the type info from the source assembly, the netAmermaid CLI side-loads it including all its dependencies. The current implementation actually uses ILSpy under the hood for that because it's really good at figuring out which runtime, GAC or private bin path to load referenced assemblies from.
The extracted type info is structured into a model optimized for the HTML diagrammer and serialized to JSON. The model is a mix between drop-in type definitions in mermaid class diagram syntax and destructured metadata about relations, inheritance and documentation comments.
The JSON type info is injected into the
template.html
alongside other resources like thescript.js
at corresponding{{placeholders}}
. It comes baked into the HTML diagrammer to enable
- accessing the data and
- importing the mermaid module from a CDN
locally without running a web server while also avoiding CORS restrictions.
Note that you can
- customize the
template.html
,script.js
andstyles.css
used in this process, e.g. for rewording or branding the UI.- build a stand-alone offline diagrammer with mermaid baked in instead of loading it from a CDN. All you have to do is replace the
import
statetment for/dist/mermaid.esm.min.mjs
at the top ofscript.js
with the contents of/dist/mermaid.min.js
from the mermaid package of your choice.
In the final step, the HTML diagrammer app re-assembles the type info based on the in-app type selection and rendering options to generate mermaid class diagrams with the types, their relations and as much inheritance detail as you need.
Have a look at the diagrammer generated for SubTubular: It's got some type relations and inheritance going on that offer a decent playground.
Wouldn't it be great to show off netAmermaid's capabilities applied to itself? Sure - but with the console app being as simple as it is, its class diagrams are pretty boring and don't get the benefit across. As with any documentation, netAmermaid starts to shine at higher complexity. So you could say it offers little value to itself - but it rather likes to call that selfless and feel good about it.
It is not the goal of the HTML diagrammer to create the perfect diagram - so you'll find few options to customize the layout. This is - to some degree - due to the nature of generative diagramming itself, while at other times the mermaid API poses the limiting factor. Having said that, you can usually choose a direction in which the automated layout works reasonably well.
Instead, think of the diagrammer as
- a browser for exploring domains
- a visual design aid for reasoning about type relations and inheritance
- a communication tool for contributors and users to share aspects of a model
- a documentation you don't have to write.
You'll find controls and key bindings to help you get those things done as quickly and efficiently as possible.
Once you have an output folder in mind, you can adopt either of the following strategies to generate a HTML diagrammer from a .Net assembly using the console app.
Create the output folder in your location of choice and inside it a new shell script.
Using the CMD shell in a Windows environment for example, you'd create a regenerate.cmd
looking somewhat like this:
..\..\path\to\netAmermaid.exe --assembly ..\path\to\your\assembly.dll --output-folder .
With this script in place, run it to (re-)generate the HTML diagrammer at your leisure. Note that --output-folder .
directs the output to the current directory.
If you want to deploy an up-to-date HTML diagrammer as part of your live documentation, you'll want to automate its regeneration to keep it in sync with your codebase.
For example, you might like to share the diagrammer on a web server or - in general - with users who cannot or may not regenerate it; lacking either access to the netAmermaid console app or permission to use it.
In such cases, you can dangle the regeneration off the end of either your build or deployment pipeline. Note that the macros used here apply to MSBuild for Visual Studio and your mileage may vary with VS for Mac or VS Code.
To regenerate the HTML diagrammer from your output assembly after building,
add something like the following to your project file.
Note that the Condition
here is optional and configures this step to only run after Release
builds.
<Target Name="PostBuild" AfterTargets="PostBuildEvent" Condition="'$(Configuration)' == 'Release'">
<Exec Command="$(SolutionDir)..\path\to\netAmermaid.exe --assembly $(TargetPath) --output-folder $(ProjectDir)netAmermaid" />
</Target>
If you'd rather regenerate the diagram after publishing instead of building, all you have to do is change the AfterTargets
to Publish
.
Note that the Target
Name
doesn't matter here and that the diagrammer is generated into a folder in the PublishDir
instead of the ProjectDir
.
<Target Name="GenerateHtmlDiagrammer" AfterTargets="Publish">
<Exec Command="$(SolutionDir)..\path\to\netAmermaid.exe --assembly $(TargetPath) --output-folder $(PublishDir)netAmermaid" />
</Target>
The command line app exposes the following parameters.
shorthand, name | |
---|---|
-a , --assembly |
Required. The path or file:// URI of the .NET assembly to generate a HTML diagrammer for. |
-o , --output-folder |
The path of the folder to generate the HTML diagrammer into. This defaults to a 'netAmermaid' folder in the directory of the assembly , which will be created if required. |
-i , --include |
A regular expression matching Type.FullName used to whitelist types. |
-e , --exclude |
A regular expression matching Type.FullName used to blacklist types. |
-r , --report-excluded |
Outputs a report of types excluded from the HTML diagrammer - whether by default because compiler-generated, explicitly by --exclude or implicitly by --include . You may find this useful to develop and debug your regular expressions. |
-n , --strip-namespaces |
Space-separated namespace names that are removed for brevity from XML documentation comments. Note that the order matters: e.g. replace 'System.Collections' before 'System' to remove both of them completely. |
-d , --docs |
The path or file:// URI of the XML file containing the assembly 's documentation comments. You only need to set this if a) you want your diagrams annotated with them and b) the file name differs from that of the assembly . To enable XML documentation output for your assembly see https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/language-reference/xmldoc/#create-xml-documentation-output . |
Compiler-generated types and their nested types are excluded by default.
Consider sussing out big source assemblies using ILSpy first to get an idea about which subdomains to include in your diagrammers. Otherwise you may experience long build times and large file sizes for the diagrammer as well as a looong type selection opening it. At some point, mermaid may refuse to render all types in your selection because their definitions exceed the maximum input size. If that's where you find yourself, you may want to consider
- using
--include
and--exclude
to limit the scope of the individual diagrammer to a certain subdomain - generating multiple diagrammers for different subdomains.
Above examples show how the most important options are used. Let's have a quick look at the remaining ones, which allow for customization in your project setup and diagrams.
Sometimes the source assembly contains way more types than are sensible to diagram. Types with metadata for validation or mapping for exmaple. Or auto-generated types. Especially if you want to tailor a diagrammer for a certain target audience and hide away most of the supporting type system to avoid noise and unnecessary questions.
In these scenarios you can supply Regular Expressions for types to --include
(white-list) and --exclude
(black-list).
A third option option --report-excluded
will output a .txt
containting the list of effectively excluded types next to the HTML diagrammer containing the effectively included types.
netAmermaid.exe --include Your\.Models\..+ --exclude .+\+Metadata|.+\.Data\..+Map --report-excluded --assembly ..\path\to\your\assembly.dll --output-folder .
This example
- includes all types in the top-level namespace
Your.Models
- while excluding
- nested types called
Metadata
and - types ending in
Map
in a descendant.Data.
namespaces.
- nested types called
You can reduce the noise in the member lists of classes on your diagrams by supplying a space-separated list of namespaces to omit from the output like so:
netAmermaid.exe --strip-namespaces System.Collections.Generic System --assembly ..\path\to\your\assembly.dll --output-folder .
Note how System
is replaced after other namespaces starting with System.
to achieve complete removal.
Otherwise System.Collections.Generic
wouldn't match the Collections.Generic
left over after removing System.
, resulting in partial removal only.
If - for whatever reason - you have customized your XML documentation file output name, you can specify a custom path to pick it up from.
netAmermaid.exe --docs ..\path\to\your\docs.xml --assembly ..\path\to\your\assembly.dll --output-folder .
On Mac, use the Command key ⌘ instead of
Ctrl
.
- The type selection is focused by default. That means you can immediately start typing to select the type you want to use as a starting point for your diagram and hit Enter to render it.
- Don't forget that you can hold [Shift] to ↕ range-select and [Ctrl] to ± add to or subtract from your selection.
- With a big type selection, you'll want to use the pre-filter often. Focus it with [Ctrl + k]. Use plain text or an EcmaScript flavored RegEx to filter the selection.
- After rendering, you can explore the domain along type relations by clicking related types on the diagram to toggle them in the filter and trigger re-rendering.
- Changing the type selection or rendering options updates the URL in the location bar. That means you can
- 🔖 bookmark or 📣 share the URL to your diagram with whoever has access to this diagrammer,
- access 🕔 earlier diagrams recorded in your 🧾 browser history and
- ⇥ restore your type selection to the picker from the URL using ⟳ Refresh [F5] if you lose it.
- The diagram has a layout direction, i.e. rendering depends on the order of your selection! Use [Alt] + [Arrow Up|Down] to sort selected types.
- You can zoom the rendered diagram using [Ctrl + mouse wheel] and grab and drag to pan it. Reset zoom and pan with [Ctrl + 0].
- Need more space? Adjust the sidebar size by grabbing and dragging its edge or hide it completely with [Ctrl + b] to zen out on the diagram alone.
- You can copy and save your diagrams using [Ctrl + c] or [Ctrl + s] resptectively. The first time you try to quick-save will open the export options for you to choose the format.
- Showing off the diagrammer remotely? Enter presentation mode using [Ctrl + i] to emphasize your mouse pointer location, visualize clicks and display pressed keys for your audience to learn the commands while watching you.
- Look out for tooltips to give you more help where necessary, like useful key bindings to help you get stuff done ASAP. You can also highlight all tooltipped elements with [Alt + i].
in the order they're used in netAmermaid's pipeline:
- Command Line Parser for parsing shell arguments and making validation and help text display easy.
- ILSpy for reliably retrieving type information from anything that runs with half a broken limb and a dozen broken references. You can have an assembly and a dream and it'll still figure out where to load the dependencies from. In .Net Framework version hell, that is nothing short of amazing.
- mermaid for abstracting the capabilites of d3 to a degree that allows the rest of us to build useful stuff without hurting our smol brains more than necessary.
No mermaids were harmed in the writing of this software and you shouldn't interpret the name as inciting capture of or violence against magical creatures. We would never - they're doing a great job and we love and respect them for it.