sloccount counts the physical source lines of code (SLOC)
contained in descendants of the specified set of directories.
It automatically determines which files are source code files,
and it automatically determines the computer language used in each file.
By default it summarizes the SLOC results and presents various estimates
(such as effort and cost to develop),
but its output can be controlled by various options.
If you give sloccount a list of two or more directories, the counts
will be broken up according to that list.
There is one important limitation:
the basenames of the directories given as parameters must be different,
because those names are used to group summary information.
Thus, you can't run "sloccount /usr/src/hello /usr/local/src/hello".
This limitation only applies to parameters of sloccount - subdirectories
descended from the top directories can have the same basename.
If you give sloccount only a single directory, sloccount tries
to automatically find a reasonable breakdown for purposes of reporting
(so it'll produce a useful report).
In this case, if the directory has at least
two subdirectories, then those subdirectories will be used as the
breakdown.
If the single directory contains files as well as directories
(or if you give sloccount some files as parameters), those files will
be assigned to the directory "top_dir" so you can tell them apart
from other contents.
Finally, if there's a subdirectory named "src", then that subdirectory is
again broken down, with all the further subdirectories prefixed with "src_".
Thus, if directory "X" has a subdirectory "src", which contains subdirectory
"modules", sloccount will report a separate count for "src_modules".
sloccount normally considers all descendants of these directories,
though unless told otherwise it ignores symbolic links.
sloccount is the usual front-end of the package of tools named "SLOCCount".
Note that the name of the entire package has capital letters, while
the name of this front-end program does not.
sloccount will normally report estimates of schedule time, effort, and
cost, and for single projects it also estimates
the average number of active developers.
These are merely estimates, not etched in stone; you can modify the
parameters used to improve the estimates.
OPTIONS
--version
Report the version number of SLOCCount and immediately exit.
This option can't be usefully combined with any other option.
--cached
Do not recalculate; instead, use cached results from a previous execution.
Without the --cached or --append option,
sloccount automatically removes the data directory
and recreates it.
--append
Do not remove previous calculations from the data directory;
instead, add the analysis to the current contents of the data directory.
--datadir directory
Store or use cached data in the given data directory; default value
is "~/.slocdata".
--follow
Follow symbolic links.
--duplicates
Count all duplicates.
Normally, if files have equal content (as determined using
MD5 hash values), only one is counted.
--crossdups
Count duplicates if they occur in different portions of the breakdown.
Thus, if the top directory contains many different projects, and you
want the duplicates in different projects to count in each project,
choose this option.
--autogen
Count source code files that appear to be automatically generated.
Normally these are excluded.
--multiproject
The different directories represent different projects;
otherwise, it's assumed that all of the source code belongs
to a single project.
This doesn't change the total number of files or SLOC values, but
it does affect the effort and schedule estimates.
Given this option,
effort is computed separately for each project (and then summed),
and the schedule is the estimated schedule of the largest project.
--filecount
Display counts of files instead of SLOC.
--wide
Display in the "wide" (tab-separated) format.
--details
Display details, that is, results for every source code file.
--effort F E
Change the factor and exponent for the effort model.
Effort (in person-months) is computed as F*(SLOC/1000)^E.
--schedule F E
Change the factor and exponent for the schedule model.
Schedule (in months) is computed as F*(effort)^E.
--personcost cost
Change the average annual salary to
cost.
--overhead overhead
Change the overhead value to
overhead.
Estimated cost is computed as effort * personcost * overhead.
--addlang language
Add a language not considered by default to be a ``language'' to be
reported.
Currently the only legal values for language are "makefile", "sql",
and "html".
These files
are not normally included in the SLOC counts, although their SLOCs are
internally calculated and they are shown in the file counts.
If you want to include more than one such language, do it by
passing --addlang more than once, e.g., --addlang makefile --addlang sql.
--addlangall
Add all languages not normally included in final reports.
NOTES
As with many other programs using Unix-like options,
directories whose names begin with a
dash (``-'') can be misinterpreted as options.
If the directories to be analyzed might begin with a dash, use the
double-dash (``- -'') to indicate the end of the option list
before listing the directories.
BUGS
Filenames with embedded newlines (in the directories or their
descendants) won't be handled correctly; they will be interpreted
as separate filenames where the newlines are inserted.
An attacker could prevent sloccount from working by
creating filenames of the form /normal/directory ... NEWLINE/dev/zero.
Such filenames are exceedingly rare in source code because they're a pain
to work with using other tools, too.
Future versions of sloccount may internally use NUL-separated filenames
(like GNU find's -print0 command) to fix this.
There are many more languages not yet handled by SLOCCount.
SLOCCount only reports physical source lines of code.
It would be
very useful if it could also report logical lines of code, and perhaps
other common metrics such as McCabe's complexity measures
and complexity density (complexity/SLOC for each function or procedure).
SEE ALSO
See the SLOCCount website at http://www.dwheeler.com/sloccount.
Note that more detailed documentation is available both on the website
and with the SLOCCount package.