Release coccinelle-0.2.2-rc1
[bpt/coccinelle.git] / docs / manual / spatch_options.tex
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1\section{Introduction}
2
3This document describes the options provided by Coccinelle. The options
4have an impact on various phases of the semantic patch application
5process. These are:
6
7\begin{enumerate}
8\item Selecting and parsing the semantic patch.
9\item Selecting and parsing the C code.
10\item Application of the semantic patch to the C code.
11\item Transformation.
12\item Generation of the result.
13\end{enumerate}
14
15\noindent
16One can either initiate the complete process from step 1, or
17to perform step 1 or step 2 individually.
18
19Coccinelle has quite a lot of options. The most common usages are as
20follows, for a semantic match {\tt foo.cocci}, a C file {\tt foo.c}, and a
21directory {\tt foodir}:
22
23\begin{itemize}
24\item {\tt spatch -parse\_cocci foo.cocci}: Check that the semantic patch
25 is syntactically correct.
26\item {\tt spatch -parse\_c foo.c}: Check that the C file
27 is syntactically correct. The Coccinelle C parser tries to recover
28 during the parsing process, so if one function does not parse, it will
29 start up again with the next one. Thus, a parse error is often not a
30 cause for concern, unless it occurs in a function that is relevant to the
31 semantic patch.
32\item {\tt spatch -sp\_file foo.cocci foo.c}: Apply the semantic patch {\tt
33 foo.cocci} to the file {\tt foo.c} and print out any transformations as a
34 diff.
35\item {\tt spatch -sp\_file foo.cocci foo.c -debug}: The same as the
36 previous case, but print out some information about the matching process.
37\item {\tt spatch -sp\_file foo.cocci -dir foodir}: Apply the semantic
38 patch {\tt foo.cocci} to all of the C files in the directory {\tt foodir}.
39\item {\tt spatch -sp\_file foo.cocci -dir foodir -include\_headers}: Apply
40 the semantic patch {\tt foo.cocci} to all of the C files and header files
41 in the directory {\tt foodir}.
42\end{itemize}
43
44In the rest of this document, the options are annotated as follows:
45\begin{itemize}
46\item \FilledBigDiamondshape: a basic option, that is most likely of
47 interest to all users.
48\item \BigLowerDiamond: an option that is frequently used, often for better
49understanding the effect of a semantic patch.
50\item \BigDiamondshape: an option that is likely to be rarely used, but
51 whose effect is still comprehensible to a user.
52\item An option with no annotation is likely of interest only to
53 developers.
54\end{itemize}
55
56\section{Selecting and parsing the semantic patch}
57
58\subsection{Standalone options}
59
60\normal{-parse\_cocci $\langle$file$\rangle$}{ Parse a semantic
61patch file and print out some information about it.}
62
63\subsection{The semantic patch}
64
65\minimum{-sp\_file $\langle$file$\rangle$, -c $\langle$file$\rangle$,
66-cocci\_file $\langle$file$\rangle$}{ Specify the name of the file
67 containing the semantic patch. The file name should end in {\tt .cocci}.
68All three options do the same thing; the last two are deprecated.}
69
70\subsection{Isomorphisms}
71
72\rare{-iso, -iso\_file}{ Specify a file containing isomorphisms to be used in
73place of the standard one. Normally one should use the {\tt using}
74construct within a semantic patch to specify isomorphisms to be used {\em
75 in addition to} the standard ones.}
76
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77\rare{-iso\_limit $\langle$int$\rangle$} Limit the depth of application of
78isomorphisms to the specified integer.
79
80\rare{-no\_iso\_limit} Put no limit on the number of times that
81isomorphisms can be applied. This is the default.
82
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83\developer{-track\_iso}{ Gather information about isomorphism usage.}
84
85\developer{-profile\_iso}{ Gather information about the time required for
86isomorphism expansion.}
87
88\subsection{Display options}
89
90\rare{-show\_cocci}{Show the semantic patch that is being processed before
91 expanding isomorphisms.}
92
93\rare{-show\_SP}{Show the semantic patch that is being processed after
94 expanding isomorphisms.}
95
96\rare{-show\_ctl\_text}{ Show the representation
97of the semantic patch in CTL.}
98
99\rare{-ctl\_inline\_let}{ Sometimes {\tt let} is used to name
100intermediate terms CTL representation. This option causes the let-bound
101terms to be inlined at the point of their reference.
102This option implicitly sets {\bf -show\_ctl\_text}.}
103
104\rare{-ctl\_show\_mcodekind}{ Show
105transformation information within the CTL representation
106of the semantic patch. This option implicitly sets {\bf -show\_ctl\_text}.}
107
108\rare{-show\_ctl\_tex}{ Create a LaTeX files showing the representation
109of the semantic patch in CTL.}
110
111\section{Selecting and parsing the C files}
112
113\subsection{Standalone options}
114
115\normal{-parse\_c $\langle$file/dir$\rangle$}{ Parse a {\tt .c} file or all
116 of the {\tt .c} files in a directory. This generates information about
117 any parse errors encountered.}
118
119\normal{-parse\_h $\langle$file/dir$\rangle$}{ Parse a {\tt .h} file or all
120 of the {\tt .h} files in a directory. This generates information about
121 any parse errors encountered.}
122
123\normal{-parse\_ch $\langle$file/dir$\rangle$}{ Parse a {\tt .c} or {\tt
124 .h} file or all of the {\tt .c} or {\tt .h} files in a directory. This
125 generates information about any parse errors encountered.}
126
127\normal{-control\_flow $\langle$file$\rangle$, -control\_flow
128$\langle$file$\rangle$:$\langle$function$\rangle$}{ Print a control-flow
129graph for all of the functions in a file or for a specific function in a
130file. This requires {\tt dot} (http://www.graphviz.org/) and {\tt gv}.}
131
132\rare{-type\_c $\langle$file$\rangle$}{ Parse a C file and pretty-print a
133version including type information.}
134
135\developer{-tokens\_c $\langle$file$\rangle$}{Prints the tokens in a C
136 file.}
137
138\developer{-parse\_unparse $\langle$file$\rangle$}{Parse and then reconstruct
139 a C file.}
140
141\developer{-compare\_c $\langle$file$\rangle$ $\langle$file$\rangle$,
142 -compare\_c\_hardcoded}{Compares one C file to another, or compare the
143file tests/compare1.c to the file tests/compare2.c.}
144
145\developer{-test\_cfg\_ifdef $\langle$file$\rangle$}{Do some special
146processing of \#ifdef and display the resulting control-flow graph. This
147requires {\tt dot} and {\tt gv}.}
148
149\developer{-test\_attributes $\langle$file$\rangle$,
150 -test\_cpp $\langle$file$\rangle$}{
151Test the parsing of cpp code and attributes, respectively.}
152
153\subsection{Selecting C files}
154
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155An argument that ends in {\tt .c} is assumed to be a C file to process.
156Normally, only one C file or one directory is specified. If multiple C
157files are specified, they are treated in parallel, {\em i.e.}, the first
158semantic patch rule is applied to all functions in all files, then the
159second semantic patch rule is applied to all functions in all files, etc.
160If a directory is specified then no files may be specified and only the
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161rightmost directory specified is used.
162
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163\normal{-include\_headers}{ This option causes header files to be processed
164independently. This option only makes sense if a directory is specified
165using {\bf -dir}.}
166
167\normal{-use\_glimpse}{ Use a glimpse index to select the files to which
168a semantic patch may be relevant. This option requires that a directory is
169specified. The index may be created using the script {\tt
170 coccinelle/scripts/ glimpseindex\_cocci.sh}. Glimpse is available at
171http://webglimpse.net/. In conjunction with the option {\bf -patch\_cocci}
172this option prints the regular expression that will be passed to glimpse.}
173
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174\rare{-dir}{ Specify a directory containing C files to process. A trailing
175 {\tt /} is permitted on the directory name and has no impact on the
176 result. By default, the include path will be set to the ``include''
177 subdirectory of this directory. A different include path can be
178 specified using the option {\bf -I}. {\bf -dir} only considers the
179 rightmost directory in the argument list. This behavior is convenient
180 for creating a script that always works on a single directory, but allows
181 the user of the script to override the provided directory with another
182 one. Spatch collects the files in the directory using {\tt find} and
183 does not follow symbolic links.}
708f4980 184
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185\developer{-kbuild\_info $\langle$file$\rangle$}{ The specified file
186 contains information about which sets of files should be considered in
187 parallel.}
188
189\developer{-disable\_worth\_trying\_opt}{Normally, a C file is only
190 processed if it contains some keywords that have been determined to be
191 essential for the semantic patch to match somewhere in the file. This
192 option disables this optimization and tries the semantic patch on all files.}
193
194\developer{-test $\langle$file$\rangle$}{ A shortcut for running Coccinelle
195on the semantic patch ``file{\tt{.cocci}}'' and the C file ``file{\tt{.c}}''.}
196
197\developer{-testall}{A shortcut for running Coccinelle on all files in a
198 subdirectory {\tt tests} such that there are all of a {\tt .cocci} file, a {\tt
199 .c} file, and a {\tt .res} file, where the {\tt .res} contains the
200 expected result.}
201
202\developer{-test\_okfailed, -test\_regression\_okfailed} Other options for
203keeping track of tests that have succeeded and failed.
204
205\developer{-compare\_with\_expected}{Compare the result of applying
206 Coccinelle to file{\tt{.c}} to the file file{\tt{.res}} representing the
207 expected result.}
208
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209\developer{-expected\_score\_file $\langle$file$\rangle$}{
210which score file to compare with in the testall run}
211
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212\subsection{Parsing C files}
213
214\rare{-show\_c}{Show the C code that is being processed.}
215
216\rare{-parse\_error\_msg}{Show parsing errors in the C file.}
217
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218\rare{-verbose\_parsing}{Show parsing errors in the C file, as well as
219 information about attempts to accomodate such errors. This implicitly
220 sets -parse\_error\_msg.}
221
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222\rare{-type\_error\_msg}{Show information about where the C type checker
223 was not able to determine the type of an expression.}
224
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225\rare{-int\_bits $\langle$n$\rangle$, -long\_bits
226$\langle$n$\rangle$}{Provide integer size information. n is the number of
227bits in an unsigned integer or unsigned long, respectively. If only the
228option {\bf -int\_bits} is used, unsigned longs will be assumed to have
229twice as many bits as unsigned integers. If only the option {\bf
230-long\_bits} is used, unsigned ints will be assumed to have half as many
231bits as unsigned integers. This information is only used in determining
232the types of integer constants, according to the ANSI C standard (C89). If
233neither is provided, the type of an integer constant is determined by the
234sequence of ``u'' and ``l'' annotations following the constant. If there
235is none, the constant is assumed to be a signed integer. If there is only
236``u'', the constant is assumed to be an unsigned integer, etc.}
237
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238\rare{-no\_loops}{Drop back edges for loops. This may make a semantic
239 patch/match run faster, at the cost of not finding matches that wrap
240 around loops.}
241
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242\developer{-use\_cache} Use preparsed versions of the C files that are
243stored in a cache.
244
245\developer{-debug\_cpp, -debug\_lexer, -debug\_etdt,
246 -debug\_typedef}{Various options for debugging the C parser.}
247
248\developer{-filter\_msg, -filter\_define\_error,
249 -filter\_passed\_level}{Various options for debugging the C parser.}
250
251\developer{-only\_return\_is\_error\_exit}{In matching ``{\tt{\ldots}}'' in
252 a semantic patch or when forall is specified, a rule must match all
253 control-flow paths starting from a node matching the beginning of the
254 rule. This is relaxed, however, for error handling code. Normally, error
255 handling code is considered to be a conditional with only a then branch
256 that ends in goto, break, continue, or return. If this option is set,
257 then only a then branch ending in a return is considered to be error
258 handling code. Usually a better strategy is to use {\tt when strict} in
259 the semantic patch, and then match explicitly the case where there is a
260 conditional whose then branch ends in a return.}
261
262\subsubsection*{Macros and other preprocessor code}
263
708f4980 264\normal{-macro\_file $\langle$file$\rangle$}{
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265 Extra macro definitions to be taken into account when parsing the C
266 files.}
267
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268\normal{-macro\_file\_builtins $\langle$file$\rangle$}{
269 Builtin macro definitions to be taken into account when parsing the C
270 files.}
271
272\rare{-ifdef\_to\_if,-no\_ifdef\_to\_if}{
273The option {\bf -ifdef\_to\_if}
274represents an {\tt \#ifdef} in the source code as a conditional in the
275control-flow graph when doing so represents valid code. {\bf
276-no\_ifdef\_to\_if} disables this feature. {\bf -ifdef\_to\_if} is the
277default.
278}
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279
280\rare{-use\_if0\_code}{ Normally code under \#if 0 is ignored. If this
281option is set then the code is considered, just like the code under any
282other \#ifdef.}
283
284\developer{-noadd\_typedef\_root}{This seems to reduce the scope of a
285 typedef declaration found in the C code.}
286
287\subsubsection*{Include files}
288
289\normal{-all\_includes, -local\_includes, -no\_includes}{
290These options control which include files mentioned in a C file are taken into
291account. {\bf -all\_includes} indicates that all included files will be
292processed. {\bf -local\_includes} indicates that only included files in
293the current directory will be processed. {\bf -no\_includes} indicates
294that no included files will be processed. If the semantic patch contains
295type specifications on expression metavariables, then the default is {\bf
296-local\_includes}. Otherwise the default is {\bf -no\_includes}. At most
297one of these options can be specified.}
298
299\normal{-I $\langle$path$\rangle$}{ This option specifies the directory in
300 which to find non-local include files. This option should be used only
301 once, as each use will overwrite the preceding one.}
302
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303\rare{-relax\_include\_path}{This option when combined with -all\_includes
304 causes the search for local
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305 include files to consider the directory specified using {\bf -I} if the
306 included file is not found in the current directory.}
307
308\section{Application of the semantic patch to the C code}
309
310\subsection{Feedback at the rule level during the application of the
311 semantic patch}
312
313\normal{-show\_bindings}{
314Show the environments with respect to which each rule is applied and the
315bindings that result from each such application.}
316
317\normal{-show\_dependencies}{ Show the status (matched or unmatched) of the
318rules on which a given rule depends. {\bf -show\_dependencies} implicitly
319sets {\bf -show\_bindings}, as the values of the dependencies are
320environment-specific.}
321
322\normal{-show\_trying}{
323Show the name of each program element to which each rule is applied.}
324
325\normal{-show\_transinfo}{
326Show information about each transformation that is performed.
327The node numbers that are referenced are the number of the nodes in the
328control-flow graph, which can be seen using the option {\bf -control\_flow}
329(the initial control-flow graph only) or the option {\bf -show\_flow} (the
330control-flow graph before and after each rule application).}
331
332\normal{-show\_misc}{Show some miscellaneous information.}
333
334\rare{-show\_flow $\langle$file$\rangle$, -show\_flow
335 $\langle$file$\rangle$:$\langle$function$\rangle$} Show the control-flow
336graph before and after the application of each rule.
337
338\developer{-show\_before\_fixed\_flow}{This is similar to {\bf
339 -show\_flow}, but shows a preliminary version of the control-flow graph.}
340
341\subsection{Feedback at the CTL level during the application of the
342 semantic patch}
343
344\normal{-verbose\_engine}{Show a trace of the matching of atomic terms to C
345 code.}
346
347\rare{-verbose\_ctl\_engine}{Show a trace of the CTL matching process.
348 This is unfortunately rather voluminous and not so helpful for someone
349 who is not familiar with CTL in general and the translation of SmPL into
350 CTL specifically. This option implicitly sets the option {\bf
351 -show\_ctl\_text}.}
352
353\rare{-graphical\_trace}{Create a pdf file containing the control flow
354 graph annotated with the various nodes matched during the CTL matching
355 process. Unfortunately, except for the most simple examples, the output
356 is voluminous, and so the option is not really practical for most
357 examples. This requires {\tt dot} (http://www.graphviz.org/) and {\tt
358 pdftk}.}
359
360\rare{-gt\_without\_label}{The same as {\bf -graphical\_trace}, but the PDF
361 file does not contain the CTL code.}
362
363\rare{-partial\_match}{
364Report partial matches of the semantic patch on the C file. This can
365 be substantially slower than normal matching.}
366
367\rare{-verbose\_match}{
368Report on when CTL matching is not applied to a function or other program
369unit because it does not contain some required atomic pattern.
370This can be viewed as a simpler, more efficient, but less informative
371version of {\bf -partial\_match}.}
372
373\subsection{Actions during the application of the semantic patch}
374
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375\normal{-D rulename}{Run the patch considering that the virtual rule
376 ``rulename'' is satisfied. Virtual rules should be declared at the
377 beginning of the semantic patch in a comma separated list following the
378 keyword virtual. Other rules can depend on the satisfaction or non
379 satifaction of these rules using the keyword {\tt depends on} in the
380 usual way.}
381
382\normal{-D variable=value}{Run the patch considering that the virtual
383 identifier metavariable ``variable'' is bound to ``value''. Any
384 identifier metavariable can be designated as being virtual by giving it
385 the rule name {\tt virtual}. An example is in demos/vm.coci}
386
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387\rare{-allow\_inconsistent\_paths}{Normally, a term that is transformed
388 should only be accessible from other terms that are matched by the
389 semantic patch. This option removes this constraint. Doing so, is
390 unsafe, however, because the properties that hold along the matched path
391 might not hold at all along the unmatched path.}
392
393\rare{-disallow\_nested\_exps}{In an expression that contains repeated
394 nested subterms, {\em e.g.} of the form {\tt f(f(x))}, a pattern can
395 match a single expression in multiple ways, some nested inside others.
396 This option causes the matching process to stop immediately at the
397 outermost match. Thus, in the example {\tt f(f(x))}, the possibility
398 that the pattern {\tt f(E)}, with metavariable {\tt E}, matches with {\tt
399 E} as {\tt x} will not be considered.}
400
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401\rare{-no\_safe\_expressions}{normally, we check that an expression does
402 not match something earlier in the disjunction. But for large
403 disjunctions, this can result in a very big CTL formula. So this
404 option give the user the option to say he doesn't want this feature,
405 if that is the case.}
406
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407\rare{-pyoutput coccilib.output.Gtk, -pyoutput coccilib.output.Console}{
408This controls whether Python output is sent to Gtk or to the console. {\bf
409 -pyoutput coccilib.output.Console} is the default. The Gtk option is
410currently not well supported.}
411
412\developer{-loop}{When there is ``{\tt{\ldots}}'' in the semantic patch,
413 the CTL operator {\sf AU} is used if the current function does not
414 contain a loop, and {\sf AW} may be used if it does. This option causes
415 {\sf AW} always to be used.}
416
417\developer{-steps $\langle$int$\rangle$}{
418This limits the number of steps performed by the CTL engine to the
419specified number. This option is unsafe as it might cause a rule to fail
420due to running out of steps rather than due to not matching.}
421
422\developer{-bench $\langle$int$\rangle$}{This collects various information
423 about the operations performed during the CTL matching process.}
424
425\developer{-popl, -popl\_mark\_all, -popl\_keep\_all\_wits}{
426These options use a simplified version of the SmPL language. {\bf
427 -popl\_mark\_all} and {\bf -popl\_keep\_all\_wits} implicitly set {\bf
428 -popl}.}
429
430\section{Generation of the result}
431
432Normally, the only output is a diff printed to standard output.
433
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434\normal{-keep\_comments}{Don't remove comments adjacent to removed code.}
435
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436\normal{-linux\_spacing, -smpl\_spacing}{Control the spacing within the code
437 added by the semantic patch. The option {\bf -linux\_spacing} causes
438 spatch to follow the conventions of Linux, regardless of the spacing in
439 the semantic patch. This is the default. The option {\bf
440 -smpl\_spacing} causes spatch to follow the spacing given in the semantic
441 patch, within individual lines.}
442
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443\rare{-o $\langle$file$\rangle$}{ The output file.}
444
445\rare{-inplace}{ Modify the input file.}
446
447\rare{-outplace}{ Store modifications in a .cocci\_res file.}
448
449\rare{-no\_show\_diff}{ Normally, a diff between the original and transformed
450code is printed on the standard output. This option causes this not to be
451done.}
452
453\rare{-U}{ Set number of diff context lines.}
454
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455\rare{-patch $\langle$path$\rangle$}{The prefix of the pathname of the
456 directory or file name that should dropped from the diff line in the
457 generated patch. This is useful if you want to apply a patch only to a
458 subdirectory of a source code tree but want to create a patch that can be
459 applied at the root of the source code tree. An example could be {\tt
460 spatch -sp\_file foo.cocci -dir /var/linuxes/linux-next/drivers -patch
461 /var/linuxes/linux-next}. A trailing {\tt /} is permitted on the
462 directory name and has no impact on the result.}
463
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464\rare{-save\_tmp\_files}{Coccinelle creates some temporary
465 files in {\tt /tmp} that it deletes after use. This option causes these
466 files to be saved.}
467
468\developer{-debug\_unparsing}{Show some debugging information about the
469 generation of the transformed code. This has the side-effect of
470 deleting the transformed code.}
471
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472
473\section{Other options}
474
475\subsection{Version information}
476
477\normal{-version}{ The version of Coccinelle. No other options are
478allowed.}
479
480\normal{-date}{ The date of the current version of Coccinelle. No other
481options are allowed.}
482
483\subsection{Help}
484
485\minimum{-h, -shorthelp}{ The most useful commands.}
486
487\minimum{-help, --help, -longhelp}{ A complete listing of the available
488commands.}
489
490\subsection{Controlling the execution of Coccinelle}
491
492\normal{-timeout $\langle$int$\rangle$}{ The maximum time in seconds for
493 processing a single file.}
494
495\rare{-max $\langle$int$\rangle$}{This option informs Coccinelle of the
496 number of instances of Coccinelle that will be run concurrently. This
497 option requires {\bf -index}. It is usually used with {\bf -dir}.}
498
499\rare{-index $\langle$int$\rangle$}{This option informs Coccinelle of
500 which of the concurrent instances is the current one. This option
501 requires {\bf -max}.}
502
503\rare{-mod\_distrib}{When multiple instances of Coccinelle are run in
504 parallel, normally the first instance processes the first $n$ files, the
505 second instance the second $n$ files, etc. With this option, the files
506 are distributed among the instances in a round-robin fashion.}
507
508\developer{-debugger}{Option for running Coccinelle from within the OCaml
509 debugger.}
510
511\developer{-profile}{ Gather timing information about the main Coccinelle
512functions.}
513
514\developer{-disable\_once}{Print various warning messages every time some
515condition occurs, rather than only once.}
516
517\subsection{Miscellaneous}
518
519\rare{-quiet}{Suppress most output. This is the default.}
520
521\developer{-pad, -hrule $\langle$dir$\rangle$, -xxx, -l1}{}
522