18

Hello,

I try to use doxygen to generate code documentation from a set of folders. My folder structure is like this:

+root
+-include/
+-include/subdir/file.h
+-src
+-src/subdir/file.cpp
+-Documentation/doxygen.config

Then in the configuration file I have the following settings in the "default" configuration file (Which is stated in the documentation and other questions here):

INPUT                  = "../include" "../src"
RECURSIVE              = YES

The problem is that when running this configuration, the HTML output does not contain any documentation whatsoever. When I add all individual files like

INPUT  = "../include/subdir/file.h"

to the input, it does generate documentation for those files. Is there an additional setting in the default configuration that I need to include in order for doxygen to find the files and create documentation?

I'm using doxygen 1.8.4 on Linux Ubuntu (12.04 LTS).

Thanks in advance for any hints or tips.

4
  • I tend not to use RECURSIVE myself as it tends to bring in too much. However, what happens if you (a) specify the folder path i.e. ../include/subdir, with recursive off, and/or (b) try ../include and ../src without the quotes? Shouldn't make any difference but comparing your and my doxyfiles that's all the comes to mind. Aug 20, 2013 at 14:15
  • 1
    Today I faced similar issue as you describe and the problem was in FILE_PATTERNS setting. After I cleared it, doxygen would operate as expected.
    – jcxz
    Sep 15, 2013 at 10:24
  • @jcxz well I tried your FILE_PATTERNS trick and it did not work for me... I still have to list all the directories... Dec 13, 2013 at 11:46
  • 1
    Your INPUT paths are specified relative to the directory containing the Doxygen configuration file. Is this also the directory in which you are invoking Doxygen? Doxygen may be resolving the relative paths from the PWD rather than the directory containing the configuration file. Also, remember that header files need the '@file' directive to be included in the documentation - this may be bypassed if the file is explicitly listed in the INPUT option (?). Aug 29, 2014 at 13:57

2 Answers 2

11

You can just simply do ../root instead of declaring both ../include and ../src

Also make sure you don't put quotes around the full absolute path, for it works just fine without those.

Make sure recursive is set to YES as you did.

Putting in the directory to the INPUT tag worked for me.

2

I am not sure if you still need this, but I have been struggling with this for some time and found the solution (at least for me)!

Leave the INPUT empty and set the RECURSIVE tag to YES. I am not an expert maybe someone else that knows these tags better can give a better answer, I just stumbled on the solution

At the very top of your source files, place:

/// \file

This tells Doxygen to include it in the HTML and it will show up in the files tab.

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