annotate toolboxes/graph_visualisation/share/man/man3/cgraph.3 @ 0:e9a9cd732c1e tip

first hg version after svn
author wolffd
date Tue, 10 Feb 2015 15:05:51 +0000
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wolffd@0 1 .de P0
wolffd@0 2 .nf
wolffd@0 3 \f5
wolffd@0 4 ..
wolffd@0 5 .de P1
wolffd@0 6 \fP
wolffd@0 7 .fi
wolffd@0 8 ..
wolffd@0 9 .de Ss
wolffd@0 10 .fl
wolffd@0 11 .ne 2
wolffd@0 12 .SS "\\$1"
wolffd@0 13 ..
wolffd@0 14 .TH LIBCGRAPH 3 "30 JULY 2007"
wolffd@0 15 .SH "NAME"
wolffd@0 16 \fBlibcgraph\fR \- abstract graph library
wolffd@0 17 .SH "SYNOPSIS"
wolffd@0 18 ."ta .75i 1.5i 2.25i 3i 3.75i 4.5i 5.25i 6i
wolffd@0 19 .PP
wolffd@0 20 .nf
wolffd@0 21 .P0
wolffd@0 22 #include <graphviz/cgraph.h>
wolffd@0 23 .P1
wolffd@0 24 .SS "TYPES"
wolffd@0 25 .P0
wolffd@0 26 Agraph_t;
wolffd@0 27 Agnode_t;
wolffd@0 28 Agedge_t;
wolffd@0 29 Agdesc_t;
wolffd@0 30 Agdisc_t;
wolffd@0 31 Agsym_t;
wolffd@0 32 .P1
wolffd@0 33 .SS "GRAPHS"
wolffd@0 34 .P0
wolffd@0 35 Agraph_t *agopen(char *name, Agdesc_t kind, Agdisc_t *disc);
wolffd@0 36 int agclose(Agraph_t *g);
wolffd@0 37 Agraph_t *agread(void *channel, Agdisc_t *);
wolffd@0 38 void agreadline(int line_no);
wolffd@0 39 void agsetfile(char *file_name);
wolffd@0 40 Agraph_t *agconcat(Agraph_t *g, void *channel, Agdisc_t *disc)
wolffd@0 41 int agwrite(Agraph_t *g, void *channel);
wolffd@0 42 int agnnodes(Agraph_t *g),agnedges(Agraph_t *g);
wolffd@0 43 int agisdirected(Agraph_t * g),agisundirected(Agraph_t * g),agisstrict(Agraph_t * g), agissimple(Agraph_t * g);
wolffd@0 44 .SS "SUBGRAPHS"
wolffd@0 45 .P0
wolffd@0 46 Agraph_t *agsubg(Agraph_t *g, char *name, int createflag);
wolffd@0 47 Agraph_t *agidsubg(Agraph_t * g, unsigned long id, int cflag);
wolffd@0 48 Agraph_t *agfstsubg(Agraph_t *g), agnxtsubg(Agraph_t *);
wolffd@0 49 Agraph_t *agparent(Agraph_t *g);
wolffd@0 50 int agdelsubg(Agraph_t * g, Agraph_t * sub); /* same as agclose() */
wolffd@0 51 .P1
wolffd@0 52 .SS "NODES"
wolffd@0 53 .P0
wolffd@0 54 Agnode_t *agnode(Agraph_t *g, char *name, int createflag);
wolffd@0 55 Agnode_t *agidnode(Agraph_t *g, ulong id, int createflag);
wolffd@0 56 Agnode_t *agsubnode(Agraph_t *g, Agnode_t *n, int createflag);
wolffd@0 57 Agnode_t *agfstnode(Agraph_t *g);
wolffd@0 58 Agnode_t *agnxtnode(Agraph_t *g, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 59 Agnode_t *agprvnode(Agraph_t *g, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 60 Agnode_t *aglstnode(Agraph_t *g);
wolffd@0 61 int agdelnode(Agraph_t *g, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 62 int agdegree(Agnode_t *n, int use_inedges, int use_outedges);
wolffd@0 63 .P1
wolffd@0 64 .SS "EDGES"
wolffd@0 65 .P0
wolffd@0 66 Agedge_t *agedge(Agraph_t* g, Agnode_t *t, Agnode_t *h, char *name, int createflag);
wolffd@0 67 Agedge_t *agidedge(Agraph_t * g, Agnode_t * t, Agnode_t * h, unsigned long id, int createflag);
wolffd@0 68 Agedge_t *agsubedge(Agraph_t *g, Agedge_t *e, int createflag);
wolffd@0 69 Agnode_t *aghead(Agedge_t *e), *agtail(Agedge_t *e);
wolffd@0 70 Agedge_t *agfstedge(Agraph_t* g, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 71 Agedge_t *agnxtedge(Agraph_t* g, Agedge_t *e, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 72 Agedge_t *agfstin(Agraph_t* g, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 73 Agedge_t *agnxtin(Agraph_t* g, Agedge_t *e);
wolffd@0 74 Agedge_t *agfstout(Agraph_t* g, Agnode_t *n);
wolffd@0 75 Agedge_t *agnxtout(Agraph_t* g, Agedge_t *e);
wolffd@0 76 int agdeledge(Agraph_t *g, Agedge_t *e);
wolffd@0 77 .SS "STRING ATTRIBUTES"
wolffd@0 78 .P0
wolffd@0 79 Agsym_t *agattr(Agraph_t *g, int kind, char *name, char *value);
wolffd@0 80 Agsym_t *agattrsym(void *obj, char *name);
wolffd@0 81 Agsym_t *agnxtattr(Agraph_t *g, int kind, Agsym_t *attr);
wolffd@0 82 char *agget(void *obj, char *name);
wolffd@0 83 char *agxget(void *obj, Agsym_t *sym);
wolffd@0 84 int agset(void *obj, char *name, char *value);
wolffd@0 85 int agxset(void *obj, Agsym_t *sym, char *value);
wolffd@0 86 int agsafeset(void *obj, char *name, char *value, char *def);
wolffd@0 87 .P1
wolffd@0 88 .SS "RECORDS"
wolffd@0 89 .P0
wolffd@0 90 void *agbindrec(void *obj, char *name, unsigned int size, move_to_front);
wolffd@0 91 Agrec_t *aggetrec(void *obj, char *name, int move_to_front);
wolffd@0 92 int agdelrec(Agraph_t *g, void *obj, char *name);
wolffd@0 93 int agcopyattr(void *, void *);
wolffd@0 94 void aginit(Agraph_t * g, int kind, char *rec_name, int rec_size, int move_to_front);
wolffd@0 95 void agclean(Agraph_t * g, int kind, char *rec_name);
wolffd@0 96 .P1
wolffd@0 97 .SS "CALLBACKS"
wolffd@0 98 .P0
wolffd@0 99 Agcbdisc_t *agpopdisc(Agraph_t *g);
wolffd@0 100 void agpushdisc(Agraph_t *g, Agcbdisc_t *disc);
wolffd@0 101 void agmethod(Agraph_t *g, void *obj, Agcbdisc_t *disc, int initflag);
wolffd@0 102 .P1
wolffd@0 103 .SS "MEMORY"
wolffd@0 104 .P0
wolffd@0 105 void *agalloc(Agraph_t *g, size_t request);
wolffd@0 106 void *agrealloc(Agraph_t *g, void *ptr, size_t oldsize, size_t newsize);
wolffd@0 107 void agfree(Agraph_t *g, void *ptr);
wolffd@0 108 .P1
wolffd@0 109 .SS "STRINGS"
wolffd@0 110 .P0
wolffd@0 111 char *agstrdup(Agraph_t *, char *);
wolffd@0 112 char *agstrdup_html(Agraph_t *, char *);
wolffd@0 113 int aghtmlstr(char *);
wolffd@0 114 char *agstrbind(Agraph_t * g, char *);
wolffd@0 115 int strfree(Agraph_t *, char *);
wolffd@0 116 char *agcanonStr(char *);
wolffd@0 117 char *agstrcanon(char *, char *);
wolffd@0 118 .P1
wolffd@0 119 .SS "GENERIC OBJECTS"
wolffd@0 120 .P0
wolffd@0 121 Agraph_t *agraphof(void*);
wolffd@0 122 Agraph_t *agroot(void*);
wolffd@0 123 int agcontains(Agraph_t*, void*);
wolffd@0 124 char *agnameof(void*);
wolffd@0 125 void agdelete(Agraph_t *g, void *obj);
wolffd@0 126 int agobjkind(void *obj);
wolffd@0 127 Agrec_t *AGDATA(void *obj);
wolffd@0 128 ulong AGID(void *obj);
wolffd@0 129 int AGTYPE(void *obj);
wolffd@0 130 .P1
wolffd@0 131 .SH "DESCRIPTION"
wolffd@0 132 Libcgraph supports graph programming by maintaining graphs in memory
wolffd@0 133 and reading and writing graph files.
wolffd@0 134 Graphs are composed of nodes, edges, and nested subgraphs.
wolffd@0 135 These graph objects may be attributed with string name-value pairs
wolffd@0 136 and programmer-defined records (see Attributes).
wolffd@0 137 .PP
wolffd@0 138 All of Libcgraph's global symbols have the prefix \fBag\fR (case varying).
wolffd@0 139 .SH "GRAPH AND SUBGRAPHS"
wolffd@0 140 .PP
wolffd@0 141 A ``main'' or ``root'' graph defines a namespace for a collection of
wolffd@0 142 graph objects (subgraphs, nodes, edges) and their attributes.
wolffd@0 143 Objects may be named by unique strings or by 32-bit IDs.
wolffd@0 144 .PP
wolffd@0 145 \fBagopen\fP creates a new graph with the given name and kind.
wolffd@0 146 (Graph kinds are \fBAgdirected\fP, \fBAgundirected\fP,
wolffd@0 147 \fBAgstrictdirected\fP, and \fBAgstrictundirected\fP.
wolffd@0 148 A strict graph cannot have multi-edges or self-arcs.)
wolffd@0 149 \fBagclose\fP deletes a graph, freeing its associated storage.
wolffd@0 150 \fBagread\fP, \fBagwrite\fP, and \fBagconcat\fP perform file I/O
wolffd@0 151 using the graph file language described below. \fBagread\fP
wolffd@0 152 constructs a new graph while \fBagconcat\fP merges the file
wolffd@0 153 contents with a pre-existing graph. Though I/O methods may
wolffd@0 154 be overridden, the default is that the channel argument is
wolffd@0 155 a stdio FILE pointer. \fBagsetfile\fP and \fBagreadline\fP
wolffd@0 156 are helper functions that simply set the current file name
wolffd@0 157 and input line number for subsequent error reporting.
wolffd@0 158 .PP
wolffd@0 159 \fBagsubg\fP finds or creates
wolffd@0 160 a subgraph by name. A new subgraph is is initially empty and
wolffd@0 161 is of the same kind as its parent. Nested subgraph trees may be created.
wolffd@0 162 A subgraph's name is only interpreted relative to its parent.
wolffd@0 163 A program can scan subgraphs under a given graph
wolffd@0 164 using \fBagfstsubg\fP and \fRagnxtsubg\fP. A subgraph is
wolffd@0 165 deleted with \fBagdelsubg\fP (or \fBagclose\fP).
wolffd@0 166 .PP
wolffd@0 167 By default, nodes are stored in ordered sets for efficient random
wolffd@0 168 access to insert, find, and delete nodes.
wolffd@0 169 The edges of a node are also stored in ordered sets.
wolffd@0 170 The sets are maintained internally as splay tree dictionaries
wolffd@0 171 using Phong Vo's cdt library.
wolffd@0 172 .PP
wolffd@0 173 \fBagnnodes\fP, \fBagnedges\fP, and \fBagdegree\fP return the
wolffd@0 174 sizes of node and edge sets of a graph. The \fBagdegree\fP returns
wolffd@0 175 the size of the edge set of a nodes, and takes flags
wolffd@0 176 to select in-edges, out-edges, or both.
wolffd@0 177 .PP
wolffd@0 178 An \fBAgdisc_t\fP defines callbacks to be invoked by libcgraph when
wolffd@0 179 initializing, modifying, or finalizing graph objects. (Casual users can ignore
wolffd@0 180 the following.) Disciplines are kept on a stack. Libcgraph automatically
wolffd@0 181 calls the methods on the stack, top-down. Callbacks are installed
wolffd@0 182 with \fBagpushdisc\fP, uninstalled with \fBagpopdisc\fP, and
wolffd@0 183 can be held pending or released via \fBagcallbacks\fP.
wolffd@0 184 .PP
wolffd@0 185 (Casual users may ignore the following.
wolffd@0 186 When Libcgraph is compiled with Vmalloc (which is not the default),
wolffd@0 187 each graph has its own heap.
wolffd@0 188 Programmers may allocate application-dependent data within the
wolffd@0 189 same heap as the rest of the graph. The advantage is that
wolffd@0 190 a graph can be deleted by atomically freeing its entire heap
wolffd@0 191 without scanning each individual node and edge.
wolffd@0 192 .SH "NODES"
wolffd@0 193 A node is created by giving a unique string name or
wolffd@0 194 programmer defined 32-bit ID, and is represented by a
wolffd@0 195 unique internal object. (Node equality can checked
wolffd@0 196 by pointer comparison.)
wolffd@0 197 .PP
wolffd@0 198 \fBagnode\fP searches in a graph or subgraph for a node
wolffd@0 199 with the given name, and returns it if found.
wolffd@0 200 If not found, if \fBcreateflag\fP is boolean true
wolffd@0 201 a new node is created and returned, otherwise a nil
wolffd@0 202 pointer is returned.
wolffd@0 203 \fBagidnode\fP allows a programmer to specify the node
wolffd@0 204 by a unique 32-bit ID.
wolffd@0 205 \fBagsubnode\fP performs a similar operation on
wolffd@0 206 an existing node and a subgraph.
wolffd@0 207 .Pp
wolffd@0 208 \fBagfstnode\fP and \fBagnxtnode\fP scan node lists.
wolffd@0 209 \fBagprvnode\fP and \fPaglstnode\fP are symmetric but scan backward.
wolffd@0 210 The default sequence is order of creation (object timestamp.)
wolffd@0 211 \fBagdelnode\fP removes a node from a graph or subgraph.
wolffd@0 212 .SH "EDGES"
wolffd@0 213 .PP
wolffd@0 214 An abstract edge has two endpoint nodes called tail and head
wolffd@0 215 where the all outedges of the same node have it as the tail
wolffd@0 216 value and similarly all inedges have it as the head.
wolffd@0 217 In an undirected graph, head and tail are interchangable.
wolffd@0 218 If a graph has multi-edges between the same pair of nodes,
wolffd@0 219 the edge's string name behaves as a secondary key.
wolffd@0 220 .Pp
wolffd@0 221 \fBagedge\fP searches in a graph of subgraph for an
wolffd@0 222 edge between the given endpoints (with an optional
wolffd@0 223 multi-edge selector name) and returns it if found.
wolffd@0 224 Otherwise, if \fBcreateflag\fP is boolean true,
wolffd@0 225 a new edge is created and returned: otherwise
wolffd@0 226 a nil pointer is returned. If the \fBname\fP
wolffd@0 227 is NULL, then an anonymous internal
wolffd@0 228 value is generated. \fBagidedge\fP allows a programmer
wolffd@0 229 to create an edge by giving its unique 32-bit ID.
wolffd@0 230 \fBagfstin\fP, \fBagnxtint\fP, \fBagfstout\fP, and
wolffd@0 231 \fBagnxtout\fP visit directed in- and out- edge lists,
wolffd@0 232 and ordinarily apply only in directed graphs.
wolffd@0 233 \fBagfstedge\fP and \fBagnxtedge\fP visit all edges
wolffd@0 234 incident to a node. \fBagtail\fP and \fBaghead\fP
wolffd@0 235 get the endpoint of an edge.
wolffd@0 236 .SH "INTERNAL ATTRIBUTES"
wolffd@0 237 Programmer-defined values may be dynamically
wolffd@0 238 attached to graphs, subgraphs, nodes, and edges.
wolffd@0 239 Such values are either uninterpreted binary records
wolffd@0 240 (for implementing efficient algorithms)
wolffd@0 241 or character string data (for I/O).
wolffd@0 242 .SH "STRING ATTRIBUTES"
wolffd@0 243 String attributes are handled automatically in reading
wolffd@0 244 and writing graph files.
wolffd@0 245 A string attribute is identified by name and by
wolffd@0 246 an internal symbol table entry (\fBAgsym_t\fP) created by Libcgraph.
wolffd@0 247 Attributes of nodes, edges, and graphs (with their subgraphs)
wolffd@0 248 have separate namespaces. The contents of an \fBAgsym_t\fP
wolffd@0 249 is listed below, followed by primitives to operate on string
wolffd@0 250 attributes.
wolffd@0 251 .P0
wolffd@0 252 typedef struct Agsym_s { /* symbol in one of the above dictionaries */
wolffd@0 253 Dtlink_t link;
wolffd@0 254 char *name; /* attribute's name */
wolffd@0 255 char *defval; /* its default value for initialization */
wolffd@0 256 int id; /* its index in attr[] */
wolffd@0 257 unsigned char kind; /* referent object type */
wolffd@0 258 unsigned char fixed; /* immutable value */
wolffd@0 259 } Agsym_t;
wolffd@0 260 .P1
wolffd@0 261 .PP
wolffd@0 262 \fBagattr\fP creates or looks up attributes.
wolffd@0 263 \fBkind\fP may be \fBAGRAPH\fP, \fBAGNODE\fP, or \fBAGEDGE\fP.
wolffd@0 264 If \fBvalue\fP is \fB(char*)0)\fP, the request is to search
wolffd@0 265 for an existing attribute of the given kind and name.
wolffd@0 266 Otherwise, if the attribute already exists, its default
wolffd@0 267 for creating new objects is set to the given value;
wolffd@0 268 if it does not exist, a new attribute is created with the
wolffd@0 269 given default, and the default is applied to all pre-existing
wolffd@0 270 objects of the given kind. If \fBg\fP is NIL, the default is
wolffd@0 271 set for all graphs created subsequently.
wolffd@0 272 \fBagattrsym\fP is a helper function
wolffd@0 273 that looks up an attribute for a graph object given as an argument.
wolffd@0 274 \fBagnxtattr\fP permits traversing the list of attributes of
wolffd@0 275 a given type. If \fBNIL\fP is passed as an argument it gets
wolffd@0 276 the first attribute, otherwise it returns the next one in
wolffd@0 277 succession or returns \fBNIL\fP at the end of the list.
wolffd@0 278 \fBagget\fP and \fPagset\fP allow fetching and updating a
wolffd@0 279 string attribute for an object taking the attribute name as
wolffd@0 280 an argument. \fBagxget\fP and \fBagxset\fP do this but with
wolffd@0 281 an attribute symbol table entry as an argument (to avoid
wolffd@0 282 the cost of the string lookup). \fBagsafeset\fP is a
wolffd@0 283 convenience function that ensures the given attribute is
wolffd@0 284 declared before setting it locally on an object.
wolffd@0 285
wolffd@0 286 .SH "STRINGS"
wolffd@0 287 Libcgraph performs its own storage management of strings as
wolffd@0 288 reference-counted strings.
wolffd@0 289 The caller does not need to dynamically allocate storage.
wolffd@0 290 .PP
wolffd@0 291 \fBagstrdup\fP returns a pointer to a reference-counted copy of
wolffd@0 292 the argument string, creating one if necessary. \fBagstrbind\fP
wolffd@0 293 returns a pointer to a reference-counted string if it exists, or NULL if not.
wolffd@0 294 All uses of cgraph strings need to be freed using \fBagstrfree\fP
wolffd@0 295 in order to correctly maintain the reference count.
wolffd@0 296 .PP
wolffd@0 297 \fBagcanonStr\fP returns a pointer to a version of the input string
wolffd@0 298 canonicalized for output for later re-parsing. This includes quoting
wolffd@0 299 special characters and keywords. It uses its own internal buffer, so
wolffd@0 300 the value will be lost on the next call to \fBagcanonStr\fP.
wolffd@0 301 \fBagstrcanon\fP is an unsafe version of \fBagcanonStr\fP, in which
wolffd@0 302 the application passes in a buffer as the second argument. Note that
wolffd@0 303 the buffer may not be used; if the input string is in canonical form,
wolffd@0 304 the function will just return a pointer to it.
wolffd@0 305 .PP
wolffd@0 306 The cgraph parser handles HTML-like strings. These should be
wolffd@0 307 indistinguishable from other strings for most purposes. To create
wolffd@0 308 an HTML-like string, use \fBagstrdup_html\fP. The \fBaghtmlstr\fP
wolffd@0 309 function can be used to query if a string is an ordinary string or
wolffd@0 310 an HTML-like string.
wolffd@0 311 .SH "RECORDS"
wolffd@0 312 Uninterpreted records may be attached to graphs, subgraphs, nodes,
wolffd@0 313 and edges for efficient operations on values such as marks, weights,
wolffd@0 314 counts, and pointers needed by algorithms. Application programmers
wolffd@0 315 define the fields of these records, but they must be declared with
wolffd@0 316 a common header as shown below.
wolffd@0 317 .P0
wolffd@0 318 typedef struct Agrec_s {
wolffd@0 319 Agrec_t header;
wolffd@0 320 /* programmer-defined fields follow */
wolffd@0 321 } Agrec_t;
wolffd@0 322 .P1
wolffd@0 323 Records are created and managed by Libcgraph. A programmer must
wolffd@0 324 explicitly attach them to the objects in a graph, either to
wolffd@0 325 individual objects one at a time via \fBagbindrec\fP, or to
wolffd@0 326 all the objects of the same class in a graph via \fBaginit\fP.
wolffd@0 327 The \fBname\fP argument a record distinguishes various types of records,
wolffd@0 328 and is programmer defined (Libcgraph reserves the prefix \fB_ag\fR).
wolffd@0 329 If size is 0, the call to \fBagbindrec\fP is simply a lookup.
wolffd@0 330 \fBagdelrec\fP is the deletes records one at a time.
wolffd@0 331 \fBagclean\fP does the same for all objects of the same
wolffd@0 332 class in an entire graph.
wolffd@0 333
wolffd@0 334 Internally, records are maintained in circular linked lists
wolffd@0 335 attached to graph objects.
wolffd@0 336 To allow referencing application-dependent data without function
wolffd@0 337 calls or search, Libcgraph allows setting and locking the list
wolffd@0 338 pointer of a graph, node, or edge on a particular record.
wolffd@0 339 This pointer can be obtained with the macro \fBAGDATA(obj)\fP.
wolffd@0 340 A cast, generally within a macro or inline function,
wolffd@0 341 is usually applied to convert the list pointer to
wolffd@0 342 an appropriate programmer-defined type.
wolffd@0 343
wolffd@0 344 To control the setting of this pointer,
wolffd@0 345 the \fBmove_to_front\fP flag may be \fBAG_MTF_FALSE\fP,
wolffd@0 346 \fBAG_MTF_SOFT\fP, or \fBAG_MTF_HARD\fP accordingly.
wolffd@0 347 The \fBAG_MTF_SOFT\fP field is only a hint that decreases
wolffd@0 348 overhead in subsequent calls of \fBaggetrec\fP;
wolffd@0 349 \fBAG_MTF_HARD\fP guarantees that a lock was obtained.
wolffd@0 350 To release locks, use \fBAG_MTF_SOFT\fP or \fBAG_MTF_FALSE\fP.
wolffd@0 351 Use of this feature implies cooperation or at least isolation
wolffd@0 352 from other functions also using the move-to-front convention.
wolffd@0 353
wolffd@0 354 .SH "DISCIPLINES"
wolffd@0 355 (The following is not intended for casual users.)
wolffd@0 356 Programmer-defined disciplines customize certain resources-
wolffd@0 357 ID namespace, memory, and I/O - needed by Libcgraph.
wolffd@0 358 A discipline struct (or NIL) is passed at graph creation time.
wolffd@0 359 .P0
wolffd@0 360 struct Agdisc_s { /* user's discipline */
wolffd@0 361 Agmemdisc_t *mem;
wolffd@0 362 Agiddisc_t *id;
wolffd@0 363 Agiodisc_t *io;
wolffd@0 364 } ;
wolffd@0 365 .P1
wolffd@0 366 A default discipline is supplied when NIL is given for
wolffd@0 367 any of these fields.
wolffd@0 368
wolffd@0 369 An ID allocator discipline allows a client to control assignment
wolffd@0 370 of IDs (uninterpreted 32-bit values) to objects, and possibly how
wolffd@0 371 they are mapped to and from strings.
wolffd@0 372
wolffd@0 373 .P0
wolffd@0 374 struct Agiddisc_s { /* object ID allocator */
wolffd@0 375 void *(*open)(Agraph_t *g); /* associated with a graph */
wolffd@0 376 int (*map)(void *state, int objtype, char *str, ulong *id, int createflag);
wolffd@0 377 int (*alloc)(void *state, int objtype, ulong id);
wolffd@0 378 void (*free)(void *state, int objtype, ulong id);
wolffd@0 379 char *(*print)(void *state, int objtype, ulong id);
wolffd@0 380 void (*close)(void *state);
wolffd@0 381 } ;
wolffd@0 382 .P1
wolffd@0 383
wolffd@0 384 \f5open\fP permits the ID discipline to initialize any data
wolffd@0 385 structures that maintains per individual graph.
wolffd@0 386 Its return value is then passed as the first argument to
wolffd@0 387 all subsequent ID manager calls.
wolffd@0 388
wolffd@0 389 \f5alloc\fP informs the ID manager that Libcgraph is attempting
wolffd@0 390 to create an object with a specific ID that was given by a client.
wolffd@0 391 The ID manager should return TRUE (nonzero) if the ID can be
wolffd@0 392 allocated, or FALSE (which aborts the operation).
wolffd@0 393
wolffd@0 394 \f5free\fP is called to inform the ID manager that the
wolffd@0 395 object labeled with the given ID is about to go out of existence.
wolffd@0 396
wolffd@0 397 \f5map\fP is called to create or look-up IDs by string name
wolffd@0 398 (if supported by the ID manager). Returning TRUE (nonzero)
wolffd@0 399 in all cases means that the request succeeded (with a valid
wolffd@0 400 ID stored through \f5result\fP. There are four cases:
wolffd@0 401 .PP
wolffd@0 402 \f5name != NULL\fP and \f5createflag == 1\fP:
wolffd@0 403 This requests mapping a string (e.g. a name in a graph file) into a new ID.
wolffd@0 404 If the ID manager can comply, then it stores the result and returns TRUE.
wolffd@0 405 It is then also responsible for being able to \f5print\fP the ID again
wolffd@0 406 as a string. Otherwise the ID manager may return FALSE but it must
wolffd@0 407 implement the following (at least for graph file reading and writing to work):
wolffd@0 408 .PP
wolffd@0 409 \f5name == NULL\fP and \f5createflag == 1\fP:
wolffd@0 410 The ID manager creates a unique new ID of its own choosing.
wolffd@0 411 Although it may return FALSE if it does not support anonymous objects,
wolffd@0 412 but this is strongly discouraged (to support "local names" in graph files.)
wolffd@0 413 .PP
wolffd@0 414 \f5name != NULL\fP and \f5createflag == 0\fP:
wolffd@0 415 This is a namespace probe. If the name was previously mapped into
wolffd@0 416 an allocated ID by the ID manager, then the manager must return this ID.
wolffd@0 417 Otherwise, the ID manager may either return FALSE, or may store
wolffd@0 418 any unallocated ID into result. (This is convenient, for example,
wolffd@0 419 if names are known to be digit strings that are directly converted into 32 bit values.)
wolffd@0 420 .PP
wolffd@0 421 \f5name == NULL\fP and \f5createflag == 0\fP: forbidden.
wolffd@0 422 .PP
wolffd@0 423 \f5print\fP is allowed to return a pointer to a static buffer;
wolffd@0 424 a caller must copy its value if needed past subsequent calls.
wolffd@0 425 \f5NULL\fP should be returned by ID managers that do not map names.
wolffd@0 426 .PP
wolffd@0 427 The \f5map\fP and \f5alloc\fP calls do not pass a pointer to the
wolffd@0 428 newly allocated object. If a client needs to install object
wolffd@0 429 pointers in a handle table, it can obtain them via
wolffd@0 430 new object callbacks.
wolffd@0 431 .P0
wolffd@0 432 struct Agiodisc_s {
wolffd@0 433 int (*fread)(void *chan, char *buf, int bufsize);
wolffd@0 434 int (*putstr)(void *chan, char *str);
wolffd@0 435 int (*flush)(void *chan); /* sync */
wolffd@0 436 /* error messages? */
wolffd@0 437 } ;
wolffd@0 438
wolffd@0 439 struct Agmemdisc_s { /* memory allocator */
wolffd@0 440 void *(*open)(void); /* independent of other resources */
wolffd@0 441 void *(*alloc)(void *state, size_t req);
wolffd@0 442 void *(*resize)(void *state, void *ptr, size_t old, size_t req);
wolffd@0 443 void (*free)(void *state, void *ptr);
wolffd@0 444 void (*close)(void *state);
wolffd@0 445 } ;
wolffd@0 446 .P1
wolffd@0 447
wolffd@0 448 .SH "EXAMPLE PROGRAM"
wolffd@0 449 .P0
wolffd@0 450 #include <graphviz/cgraph.h>
wolffd@0 451 typedef struct mydata_s {Agrec_t hdr; int x,y,z;} mydata;
wolffd@0 452
wolffd@0 453 main(int argc, char **argv)
wolffd@0 454 {
wolffd@0 455 Agraph_t *g;
wolffd@0 456 Agnode_t *v;
wolffd@0 457 Agedge_t *e;
wolffd@0 458 Agsym_t *attr;
wolffd@0 459 Dict_t *d
wolffd@0 460 int cnt;
wolffd@0 461 mydata *p;
wolffd@0 462
wolffd@0 463 if (g = agread(stdin,NIL(Agdisc_t*))) {
wolffd@0 464 cnt = 0; attr = 0;
wolffd@0 465 while (attr = agnxtattr(g, AGNODE, attr)) cnt++;
wolffd@0 466 printf("The graph %s has %d attributes\n",agnameof(g),cnt);
wolffd@0 467
wolffd@0 468 /* make the graph have a node color attribute, default is blue */
wolffd@0 469 attr = agattr(g,AGNODE,"color","blue");
wolffd@0 470
wolffd@0 471 /* create a new graph of the same kind as g */
wolffd@0 472 h = agopen("tmp",g->desc);
wolffd@0 473
wolffd@0 474 /* this is a way of counting all the edges of the graph */
wolffd@0 475 cnt = 0;
wolffd@0 476 for (v = agfstnode(g); v; v = agnxtnode(g,v))
wolffd@0 477 for (e = agfstout(g,v); e; e = agnxtout(g,e))
wolffd@0 478 cnt++;
wolffd@0 479
wolffd@0 480 /* attach records to edges */
wolffd@0 481 for (v = agfstnode(g); v; v = agnxtnode(g,v))
wolffd@0 482 for (e = agfstout(g,v); e; e; = agnxtout(g,e)) {
wolffd@0 483 p = (mydata*) agbindrec(g,e,"mydata",sizeof(mydata),TRUE);
wolffd@0 484 p->x = 27; /* meaningless data access example */
wolffd@0 485 ((mydata*)(AGDATA(e)))->y = 999; /* another example */
wolffd@0 486 }
wolffd@0 487 }
wolffd@0 488 }
wolffd@0 489 .P1
wolffd@0 490 .SH "EXAMPLE GRAPH FILES"
wolffd@0 491 .P0
wolffd@0 492 digraph G {
wolffd@0 493 a -> b;
wolffd@0 494 c [shape=box];
wolffd@0 495 a -> c [weight=29,label="some text];
wolffd@0 496 subgraph anything {
wolffd@0 497 /* the following affects only x,y,z */
wolffd@0 498 node [shape=circle];
wolffd@0 499 a; x; y -> z; y -> z; /* multiple edges */
wolffd@0 500 }
wolffd@0 501 }
wolffd@0 502
wolffd@0 503 strict graph H {
wolffd@0 504 n0 -- n1 -- n2 -- n0; /* a cycle */
wolffd@0 505 n0 -- {a b c d}; /* a star */
wolffd@0 506 n0 -- n3;
wolffd@0 507 n0 -- n3 [weight=1]; /* same edge because graph is strict */
wolffd@0 508 }
wolffd@0 509 .P1
wolffd@0 510 .SH "SEE ALSO"
wolffd@0 511 Libcdt(3)
wolffd@0 512
wolffd@0 513 .SH "BUGS"
wolffd@0 514 It is difficult to change endpoints of edges, delete string attributes or
wolffd@0 515 modify edge keys. The work-around is to create a new object and copy the
wolffd@0 516 contents of an old one (but new object obviously has a different ID,
wolffd@0 517 internal address, and object creation timestamp).
wolffd@0 518
wolffd@0 519 The API lacks convenient functions to substitute programmer-defined ordering of
wolffd@0 520 nodes and edges but in principle this can be supported.
wolffd@0 521 .SH "AUTHOR"
wolffd@0 522 Stephen North, north@research.att.com, AT&T Research.