1.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1990, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" Copyright (c) 1976 Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. 4.\" All rights reserved. 5.\" 6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8.\" are met: 9.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 11.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 12.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 13.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 14.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 15.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 16.\" without specific prior written permission. 17.\" 18.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 19.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 20.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 21.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 22.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 23.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 24.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 25.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 26.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 27.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 28.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 29.\" 30.\" @(#)indent.1 8.1 (Berkeley) 7/1/93 31.\" $FreeBSD$ 32.\" 33.Dd August 7, 2017 34.Dt INDENT 1 35.Os 36.Sh NAME 37.Nm indent 38.Nd indent and format C program source 39.Sh SYNOPSIS 40.Nm 41.Op Ar input-file Op Ar output-file 42.Op Fl bacc | Fl nbacc 43.Op Fl bad | Fl nbad 44.Op Fl badp | Fl nbadp 45.Op Fl bap | Fl nbap 46.Bk -words 47.Op Fl ei | Fl ei 48.Op Fl eei | Fl eei 49.Op Fl bbb | Fl nbbb 50.Ek 51.Op Fl \&bc | Fl nbc 52.Op Fl \&bl 53.Op Fl \&br 54.Op Fl bs | Fl nbs 55.Op Fl c Ns Ar n 56.Op Fl \&cd Ns Ar n 57.Bk -words 58.Op Fl cdb | Fl ncdb 59.Ek 60.Op Fl \&ce | Fl nce 61.Op Fl \&ci Ns Ar n 62.Op Fl cli Ns Ar n 63.Op Fl d Ns Ar n 64.Op Fl \&di Ns Ar n 65.Bk -words 66.Op Fl fbs | Fl nfbs 67.Op Fl fc1 | Fl nfc1 68.Op Fl fcb | Fl nfcb 69.Ek 70.Op Fl i Ns Ar n 71.Op Fl \&ip | Fl nip 72.Op Fl l Ns Ar n 73.Op Fl \&lc Ns Ar n 74.Op Fl \&ldi Ns Ar n 75.Op Fl \&lp | Fl nlp 76.Op Fl npro 77.Op Fl P Ns Ar file 78.Op Fl pcs | Fl npcs 79.Op Fl psl | Fl npsl 80.Op Fl sac | Fl nsac 81.Op Fl \&sc | Fl nsc 82.Bk -words 83.Op Fl sob | Fl nsob 84.Ek 85.Op Fl \&st 86.Op Fl \&ta 87.Op Fl troff 88.Op Fl ts Ns Ar n 89.Op Fl U Ns Ar file 90.Op Fl ut | Fl nut 91.Op Fl v | Fl \&nv 92.Sh DESCRIPTION 93The 94.Nm 95utility is a 96.Em C 97program formatter. 98It reformats the 99.Em C 100program in the 101.Ar input-file 102according to the switches. 103The switches which can be 104specified are described below. 105They may appear before or after the file 106names. 107.Pp 108.Sy NOTE : 109If you only specify an 110.Ar input-file , 111the formatting is 112done `in-place', that is, the formatted file is written back into 113.Ar input-file 114and a backup copy of 115.Ar input-file 116is written in the current directory. 117If 118.Ar input-file 119is named 120.Sq Pa /blah/blah/file , 121the backup file is named 122.Sq Pa file.BAK 123by default. The extension used for the backup file may be overridden using the 124.Ev SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX 125environment variable. 126.Pp 127If 128.Ar output-file 129is specified, 130.Nm 131checks to make sure that it is different from 132.Ar input-file . 133.Pp 134The options listed below control the formatting style imposed by 135.Nm . 136.Bl -tag -width Op 137.It Fl bacc , nbacc 138If 139.Fl bacc 140is specified, a blank line is forced around every conditional 141compilation block. 142For example, in front of every #ifdef and after every #endif. 143Other blank lines surrounding such blocks will be swallowed. 144Default: 145.Fl nbacc . 146.It Fl bad , nbad 147If 148.Fl bad 149is specified, a blank line is forced after every block of 150declarations. 151Default: 152.Fl nbad . 153.It Fl badp , nbadp 154This is vaguely similar to 155.Fl bad 156except that it only applies to the first set of declarations 157in a procedure (just after the first `{') and it causes a blank 158line to be generated even if there are no declarations. 159The default is 160.Fl nbadp. 161.It Fl bap , nbap 162If 163.Fl bap 164is specified, a blank line is forced after every procedure body. 165Default: 166.Fl nbap . 167.It Fl bbb , nbbb 168If 169.Fl bbb 170is specified, a blank line is forced before every block comment. 171Default: 172.Fl nbbb . 173.It Fl \&bc , nbc 174If 175.Fl \&bc 176is specified, then a newline is forced after each comma in a declaration. 177.Fl nbc 178turns off this option. 179Default: 180.Fl \&nbc . 181.It Fl \&br , \&bl 182Specifying 183.Fl \&bl 184lines-up compound statements like this: 185.Bd -literal -offset indent 186if (...) 187{ 188 code 189} 190.Ed 191.Pp 192Specifying 193.Fl \&br 194(the default) makes them look like this: 195.Bd -literal -offset indent 196if (...) { 197 code 198} 199.Ed 200.It Fl bs , nbs 201Whether a blank should always be inserted after sizeof. 202The default is 203.Fl nbs. 204.It Fl c Ns Ar n 205The column in which comments on code start. 206The default is 33. 207.It Fl cd Ns Ar n 208The column in which comments on declarations start. 209The default 210is for these comments to start in the same column as those on code. 211.It Fl cdb , ncdb 212Enables (disables) the placement of comment delimiters on blank lines. 213With 214this option enabled, comments look like this: 215.Bd -literal -offset indent 216 /* 217 * this is a comment 218 */ 219.Ed 220.Pp 221Rather than like this: 222.Bd -literal -offset indent 223 /* this is a comment */ 224.Ed 225.Pp 226This only affects block comments, not comments to the right of 227code. 228The default is 229.Fl cdb . 230.It Fl ce , nce 231Enables (disables) forcing of `else's to cuddle up to the immediately preceding 232`}'. 233The default is 234.Fl \&ce . 235.It Fl \&ci Ns Ar n 236Sets the continuation indent to be 237.Ar n . 238Continuation 239lines will be indented that far from the beginning of the first line of the 240statement. 241Parenthesized expressions have extra indentation added to 242indicate the nesting, unless 243.Fl \&lp 244is in effect 245or the continuation indent is exactly half of the main indent. 246.Fl \&ci 247defaults to the same value as 248.Fl i . 249.It Fl cli Ns Ar n 250Causes case labels to be indented 251.Ar n 252tab stops to the right of the containing 253.Ic switch 254statement. 255.Fl cli0.5 256causes case labels to be indented half a tab stop. 257The 258default is 259.Fl cli0 . 260.It Fl d Ns Ar n 261Controls the placement of comments which are not to the 262right of code. 263For example, 264.Fl \&d\&1 265means that such comments are placed one indentation level to the 266left of code. 267Specifying the default 268.Fl \&d\&0 269lines-up these comments with the code. 270See the section on comment 271indentation below. 272.It Fl \&di Ns Ar n 273Specifies the indentation, in character positions, 274of global variable names and all struct/union member names 275relative to the beginning of their type declaration. 276The default is 277.Fl di16 . 278.It Fl dj , ndj 279.Fl \&dj 280left justifies declarations. 281.Fl ndj 282indents declarations the same as code. 283The default is 284.Fl ndj . 285.It Fl \&ei , nei 286Enables (disables) special 287.Ic else-if 288processing. 289If it is enabled, an 290.Ic if 291following an 292.Ic else 293will have the same indentation as the preceding 294.Ic \&if 295statement. 296The default is 297.Fl ei . 298.It Fl eei , neei 299Enables (disables) extra indentation on continuation lines of 300the expression part of 301.Ic if 302and 303.Ic while 304statements. 305These continuation lines will be indented one extra level. 306The default is 307.Fl neei . 308.It Fl fbs , nfbs 309Enables (disables) splitting the function declaration and opening brace 310across two lines. 311The default is 312.Fl fbs . 313.It Fl fc1 , nfc1 314Enables (disables) the formatting of comments that start in column 1. 315Often, comments whose leading `/' is in column 1 have been carefully 316hand formatted by the programmer. 317In such cases, 318.Fl nfc1 319should be 320used. 321The default is 322.Fl fc1 . 323.It Fl fcb , nfcb 324Enables (disables) the formatting of block comments (ones that begin 325with `/*\\n'). 326Often, block comments have been not so carefully hand formatted by the 327programmer, but reformatting that would just change the line breaks is not 328wanted. 329In such cases, 330.Fl nfcb 331should be used. 332Block comments are then handled like box comments. 333The default is 334.Fl fcb . 335.It Fl i Ns Ar n 336The number of spaces for one indentation level. 337The default is 8. 338.It Fl \&ip , nip 339Enables (disables) the indentation of parameter declarations from the left 340margin. 341The default is 342.Fl \&ip . 343.It Fl l Ns Ar n 344Maximum length of an output line. 345The default is 78. 346.It Fl lc Ns Ar n 347Maximum length of an output line in a block comment. 348The default is 0, which means to limit block comment lines in accordance with 349.Fl l. 350.It Fl \&ldi Ns Ar n 351Specifies the indentation, in character positions, 352of local variable names 353relative to the beginning of their type declaration. 354The default is for local variable names to be indented 355by the same amount as global ones. 356.It Fl \&lp , nlp 357Lines-up code surrounded by parenthesis in continuation lines. 358If a line 359has a left paren which is not closed on that line, then continuation lines 360will be lined up to start at the character position just after the left 361paren. 362For example, here is how a piece of continued code looks with 363.Fl nlp 364in effect: 365.Bd -literal -offset indent 366p1 = first_procedure(second_procedure(p2, p3), 367\ \ third_procedure(p4, p5)); 368.Ed 369.Pp 370With 371.Fl lp 372in effect (the default) the code looks somewhat clearer: 373.Bd -literal -offset indent 374p1\ =\ first_procedure(second_procedure(p2,\ p3), 375\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ third_procedure(p4,\ p5)); 376.Ed 377.Pp 378Inserting two more newlines we get: 379.Bd -literal -offset indent 380p1\ =\ first_procedure(second_procedure(p2, 381\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ p3), 382\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ third_procedure(p4, 383\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ p5)); 384.Ed 385.It Fl npro 386Causes the profile files, 387.Sq Pa ./.indent.pro 388and 389.Sq Pa ~/.indent.pro , 390to be ignored. 391.It Fl P Ns Ar file 392Read profile from 393.Ar file . 394.It Fl pcs , npcs 395If true 396.Pq Fl pcs 397all procedure calls will have a space inserted between 398the name and the `('. 399The default is 400.Fl npcs . 401.It Fl psl , npsl 402If true 403.Pq Fl psl 404the names of procedures being defined are placed in 405column 1 \- their types, if any, will be left on the previous lines. 406The 407default is 408.Fl psl . 409.It Fl sac , nsac 410Control whether parenthesized type names in casts are followed by a space or 411not. 412The default is 413.Fl nsac . 414.It Fl \&sc , nsc 415Enables (disables) the placement of asterisks (`*'s) at the left edge of all 416comments. 417The default is 418.Fl sc . 419.It Fl sob , nsob 420If 421.Fl sob 422is specified, indent will swallow optional blank lines. 423You can use this to 424get rid of blank lines after declarations. 425Default: 426.Fl nsob . 427.It Fl \&st 428Causes 429.Nm 430to take its input from stdin and put its output to stdout. 431.It Fl ta 432Automatically add all identifiers ending in "_t" to the list 433of type keywords. 434.It Fl T Ns Ar typename 435Adds 436.Ar typename 437to the list of type keywords. 438Names accumulate: 439.Fl T 440can be specified more than once. 441You need to specify all the typenames that 442appear in your program that are defined by 443.Ic typedef 444\- nothing will be 445harmed if you miss a few, but the program will not be formatted as nicely as 446it should. 447This sounds like a painful thing to have to do, but it is really 448a symptom of a problem in C: 449.Ic typedef 450causes a syntactic change in the 451language and 452.Nm 453cannot find all 454instances of 455.Ic typedef . 456.It Fl troff 457Causes 458.Nm 459to format the program for processing by 460.Xr troff 1 . 461It will produce a fancy 462listing in much the same spirit as 463.Xr vgrind 1 . 464If the output file is not specified, the default is standard output, 465rather than formatting in place. 466.It Fl ts Ns Ar n 467Assumed distance between tab stops. 468The default is 8. 469.It Fl U Ns Ar file 470Adds type names from 471.Ar file 472to the list of type keywords. 473.It Fl ut , nut 474Enables (disables) the use of tab characters in the output. 475The default is 476.Fl ut . 477.It Fl v , \&nv 478.Fl v 479turns on `verbose' mode; 480.Fl \&nv 481turns it off. 482When in verbose mode, 483.Nm 484reports when it splits one line of input into two or more lines of output, 485and gives some size statistics at completion. 486The default is 487.Fl \&nv . 488.El 489.Pp 490You may set up your own `profile' of defaults to 491.Nm 492by creating a file called 493.Pa .indent.pro 494in your login directory and/or the current directory and including 495whatever switches you like. 496A `.indent.pro' in the current directory takes 497precedence over the one in your login directory. 498If 499.Nm 500is run and a profile file exists, then it is read to set up the program's 501defaults. 502Switches on the command line, though, always override profile 503switches. 504The switches should be separated by spaces, tabs or newlines. 505.Pp 506.Ss Comments 507.Sq Em Box 508.Em comments . 509The 510.Nm 511utility 512assumes that any comment with a dash or star immediately after the start of 513comment (that is, `/*\-' or `/**') is a comment surrounded by a box of stars. 514Each line of such a comment is left unchanged, except that its indentation 515may be adjusted to account for the change in indentation of the first line 516of the comment. 517.Pp 518.Em Straight text . 519All other comments are treated as straight text. 520The 521.Nm 522utility fits as many words (separated by blanks, tabs, or newlines) on a 523line as possible. 524Blank lines break paragraphs. 525.Ss Comment indentation 526If a comment is on a line with code it is started in the `comment column', 527which is set by the 528.Fl c Ns Ns Ar n 529command line parameter. 530Otherwise, the comment is started at 531.Ar n 532indentation levels less than where code is currently being placed, where 533.Ar n 534is specified by the 535.Fl d Ns Ns Ar n 536command line parameter. 537If the code on a line extends past the comment 538column, the comment starts further to the right, and the right margin may be 539automatically extended in extreme cases. 540.Ss Preprocessor lines 541In general, 542.Nm 543leaves preprocessor lines alone. 544The only 545reformatting that it will do is to straighten up trailing comments. 546It 547leaves embedded comments alone. 548Conditional compilation 549.Pq Ic #ifdef...#endif 550is recognized and 551.Nm 552attempts to correctly 553compensate for the syntactic peculiarities introduced. 554.Ss C syntax 555The 556.Nm 557utility understands a substantial amount about the syntax of C, but it 558has a `forgiving' parser. 559It attempts to cope with the usual sorts of 560incomplete and malformed syntax. 561In particular, the use of macros like: 562.Pp 563.Dl #define forever for(;;) 564.Pp 565is handled properly. 566.Sh ENVIRONMENT 567The 568.Nm 569utility uses the 570.Ev HOME 571environment variable. 572.Sh FILES 573.Bl -tag -width "./.indent.pro" -compact 574.It Pa ./.indent.pro 575profile file 576.It Pa ~/.indent.pro 577profile file 578.El 579.Sh HISTORY 580The 581.Nm 582command appeared in 583.Bx 4.2 . 584.Sh BUGS 585The 586.Nm 587utility has even more switches than 588.Xr ls 1 . 589.Pp 590A common mistake is to try to indent all the 591.Em C 592programs in a directory by typing: 593.Pp 594.Dl indent *.c 595.Pp 596This is probably a bug, not a feature. 597