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Link to original content: https://github.com/SoftwareUnderstanding/inspect4py
GitHub - SoftwareUnderstanding/inspect4py: Static code analysis package for Python repositories
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inspect4py

PyPI DOI Project Status: Active – The project has reached a stable, usable state and is being actively developed.

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Library to allow users inspect a software project folder (i.e., a directory and its subdirectories) and extract all the most relevant information, such as class, method and parameter documentation, classes (and their methods), functions, etc.

Features:

Given a folder with code, inspect4py will:

  • Extract all imported modules and how each module is imported as (i.e., whether they are internal or external).
  • Extract all functions in the code, including their documentation, parameters, accepted values, and call list.
  • Extract all classes in the code, with all their methods and respective documentation
  • Extract the control flow of each file.
  • Extract the hierarchy of directories and files.
  • Extract the requirements used in the software project.
  • Classify which files are tests
  • Classify the main type of software project (script, package, library or service). Only one type is returned as main type (e.g., if a library has the option to be deployed as a service, inspect4py will return Library as its main type)
  • Return a ranking of the different ways in which a a software component can be run, ordered by relevance.

All metadata is extracted as a JSON file.

Inspect4py currently works only for Python 3 projects.

Background:

inspect4py added the functionality of capture Data Flow Graphs for each function inspired by GraphCodeBERT: Github & Paper. The illustration is given:

Source Code List Output Networkx Image
def max(a, b):
x = 0
if a > b:
x = a
else:
x = b
return x
('a', 3, 'comesFrom', [], [])
('b', 5, 'comesFrom', [], [])
('x', 8, 'computedFrom', ['0'], [10])
('0', 10, 'comesFrom', [], [])
('a', 12, 'comesFrom', ['a'], [3])
('b', 14, 'comesFrom', ['b'], [5])
('x', 16, 'computedFrom', ['a'], [18])
('a', 18, 'comesFrom', ['a'], [3])
('x', 21, 'computedFrom', ['b'], [23])
('b', 23, 'comesFrom', ['b'], [5])
('x', 25, 'comesFrom', ['x'], [16, 21])
image

inspect4py uses ASTs, more specifically the ast module in Python, generating a tree of objects (per file) whose classes all inherit from ast.AST.

inspect4py parses each of the input file(s) as an AST tree, extracting the relevant information and storing it as a JSON file. Furthermore, it also captures the control flow of each input file(s), by using another two libraries:

  • staticfg: StatiCFG is a package that can be used to produce control flow graphs (CFGs) for Python 3 programs. The CFGs it generates can be easily visualised with graphviz and used for static analysis. We have a flag in the code (FLAG_PNG) to indicate if we want to generate this type of control flow graphs or not. Note: The original code of this package can be found here, which has been fixed it in our repository

We also use docstring_parser, which has support for ReST, Google, and Numpydoc-style docstrings. Some (basic) tests done using this library can be found at here.

Finally, we reuse Pigar for generating automatically the requirements of a given repository. This is an optional funcionality. In order to activate the argument (-r) has to be indicated when running inspect4py.

Cite inspect4py

Please cite our MSR 2022 demo paper:

@inproceedings{FilgueiraG22,
  author    = {Rosa Filgueira and
               Daniel Garijo},
  title     = {Inspect4py: {A} Knowledge Extraction Framework for Python Code Repositories},
  booktitle = {{IEEE/ACM} 19th International Conference on Mining Software Repositories,
               {MSR} 2022, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, May 23-24, 2022},
  pages     = {232--236},
  publisher = {{IEEE}},
  year      = {2022},
  url       = {https://dgarijo.com/papers/inspect4py_MSR2022.pdf},
  doi       = {10.1145/3524842.3528497}
}

Install

Preliminaries

Make sure you have tree-sitter installed, C complier is needed, more info:

pip install tree-sitter

Note that if the ".so" file is not working properly, it is recommended that run the following commeds to generate a so file for your OS:

git clone https://github.com/tree-sitter/tree-sitter-python

python inspect4py/build.py

Make sure you have graphviz installed:

sudo apt-get install graphviz

Python version

We have tested inspect4py in Python 3.7+. Our recommended version is Python 3.9.

Operative System

We have tested inspect4py in Unix, MacOS and Windows 11(22621.1265).

Installation from pypi

inspect4py is available in pypi! Just install it like a regular package:

pip install inspect4py

You are done!

Then try to update the python-dev utilities: sudo apt-get install python3.X-dev (where X is your python version)

Installation from code

Prepare a virtual Python3 enviroment, cd into the inspect4py folder and install the package as follows:

git clone https://github.com/SoftwareUnderstanding/inspect4py
cd inspect4py
pip install -e .

You are done!

Package dependencies:

docstring_parser==0.7
astor
graphviz
click
pigar
setuptools==54.2.0
json2html
configparser
bigcode_astgen
GitPython
tree-sitter

If you want to run the evaluations, do not forget to add pandas to the previous set.

Installation through Docker

You need to have Docker installed.

Next, clone the inspect4py repository:

git clone https://github.com/SoftwareUnderstanding/inspect4py/

Generate a Docker image for inspect4py:

docker build --tag inspect4py:1.0 .

Run the inspect4py image:

docker run -it --rm inspect4py:1.0 /bin/bash

Now you can run inspect4py:

root@e04792563e6a:/# inspect4py --help

For more information about inspect4py execution options, please see the section below (Execution).

Note that when running inspect4py with Docker, you will need to need to provide a path to the target repository to analyze. You can do this by:

  1. Cloning the target repository. For example:
docker run -it --rm inspect4py:1.0 /bin/bash
# Docker image starts
root@e04792563e6a:/# git clone https://github.com/repo/id
root@e04792563e6a:/# inspect4py -i id
  1. Creating a volume. For example, for mounting the $PWD folder:
docker run -it -v -v $PWD:/out --rm inspect4py:1.0 /bin/bash
# Docker image starts
root@e04792563e6a:/# inspect4py -i /out/path/to/repo

Other useful commands when using Docker:

docker cp [OPTIONS] CONTAINER:SRC_PATH DEST_PATH|-
docker image rm -f inspect4py:1.0

Execution

The tool can be executed to inspect a file, or all the files of a given directory (and its subdirectories). For example, it can be used to inspect all the python files of a given GitHub repository (that has been previously cloned locally).

The tool by default stores the results in the OutputDir directory, but users can specify their own directory name by using -o or --output flags.

inspect4py --input_path <FILE.py | DIRECTORY> [--output_dir "OutputDir", --ignore_dir_pattern "__", ignore_file_pattern "__" --requirements --html_output]

For clarity, we have added a help command to explain each input parameter:

inspect4py --help


Usage: inspect4py [OPTIONS]

Options:
  --version                       Show the version and exit.
  -i, --input_path TEXT           input path of the file or directory to
                                  inspect.  [required]
  -o, --output_dir TEXT           output directory path to store results. If
                                  the directory does not exist, the tool will
                                  create it.
  -ignore_dir, --ignore_dir_pattern TEXT
                                  ignore directories starting with a certain
                                  pattern. This parameter can be provided
                                  multiple times to ignore multiple directory
                                  patterns.
  -ignore_file, --ignore_file_pattern TEXT
                                  ignore files starting with a certain
                                  pattern. This parameter can be provided
                                  multiple times to ignore multiple file
                                  patterns.
  -r, --requirements              find the requirements of the repository.
  -html, --html_output            generates an html file of the DirJson in the
                                  output directory.
  -cl, --call_list                generates the call list in a separate html
                                  file.
  -cf, --control_flow             generates the call graph for each file in a
                                  different directory.
  -dt, --directory_tree           captures the file directory tree from the
                                  root path of the target repository.
  -si, --software_invocation      generates which are the software
                                  invocation commands to run and test the
                                  target repository.
  -ast, -—abstract_syntax_tree    generates abstract syntax tree in json format.
  -sc, --source_code              generates source code of each ast node.
  -ld, --license_detection        detects the license of the target repository.
  -rm, --readme                   extract all readme files in the target repository.
  -md, --metadata                 extract metadata of the target repository using
                                  Github API.
  -df, --data_flow                extract data flow graph for every function, BOOL
  -st, --symbol_table             symbol table file location. STR
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

Documentation

For additional documentation and examples, please have a look at our online documentation

Contribution guidelines

Contributions to address any of the current issues are welcome. In order to push your contribution, just push your pull request to the development branch (dev). The master branch has only the code associated to the latest release.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Laura Camacho, designer of the logo