162

Is there a way to call something like clang-format --style=Webkit for an entire cpp project folder, rather than running it separately for each file?

I am using clang-format.py and vim to do this, but I assume there is a way to apply this once.

1

18 Answers 18

164

Unfortunately, there is no way to apply clang-format recursively. *.cpp will only match files in the current directory, not subdirectories. Even **/* doesn't work.

Luckily, there is a solution: grab all the file names with the find command and pipe them in. For example, if you want to format all .h and .cpp files in the directory foo/bar/ recursively, you can do

find foo/bar/ -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -i

See here for additional discussion.

7
  • 10
    Well, **/*.cpp seems to work in (reasonably modern) bash. You may need to shopt -s globstar before.
    – sbarzowski
    Mar 17, 2016 at 10:23
  • 1
    If you are using CMake, this post shows you how you can use CMake's GLOB_RECURSE to find all .cpp files and pass them to clang-format.
    – johnthagen
    Apr 30, 2017 at 17:58
  • 6
    The combination of find and xargs should use find ... -print0 and xargs -0 ... to ensure that all types of filenames are handled correctly.
    – Alexander
    Jan 26, 2018 at 10:57
  • 17
    This command fails if any .cpp or .h files exist in pwd. find foo/bar/ -iname '*.h' -o -iname '*.cpp' | xargs clang-format -i will fix the issue.
    – nyanpasu64
    May 11, 2018 at 6:43
  • @nyanpasu64 It will also fail in zsh. I actually don't understand why it doesn't fail in bash. :-) Those quotes should be really there so why does it even work without them in bash. Aug 12, 2022 at 13:24
90

What about:

clang-format -i -style=WebKit *.cpp *.h

in the project folder. The -i option makes it inplace (by default formatted output is written to stdout).

9
  • 7
    or if you are using a config file and want to format multiple file types: clang-format-3.6 -i -style=file *.cpp *.h *.hpp
    – mBardos
    Aug 6, 2015 at 12:46
  • 84
    Unfortunately, that won't recurse into subdirectories.
    – Antimony
    Mar 16, 2016 at 20:59
  • 5
    Yes, *.cpp will be expanded by the shell. clang just needs a list of files. More advanced options (like recursive globbing) depend on the features of your shell. See unix.stackexchange.com/questions/49913/recursive-glob on how to use ** construct.
    – sbarzowski
    Mar 17, 2016 at 10:14
  • What about with clang-tidy? Jul 1, 2020 at 4:09
  • @AaronFranke Using *.cpp to generate a list of files should work. The clang-tidy command allows passing multiple files. ` USAGE: clang-tidy [options] <source0> [... <sourceN>] ` In practice that may not be the best way, though. Clang-tidy performs a much deeper analysis, so it requires the compiler flags for each file etc. When I used clang-tidy, I usually had a "compilation database" – a JSON file with the commands for each file and some script which went over it. It was a couple years back, maybe there is a better way now.
    – sbarzowski
    Jul 1, 2020 at 18:12
53

First create a .clang-format file if it doesn't exist:

clang-format -style=WebKit -dump-config > .clang-format

Choose whichever predefined style you like, or edit the resulting .clang-format file.

clang-format configurator is helpful.

Then run:

find . -regex '.*\.\(cpp\|hpp\|cc\|cxx\)' -exec clang-format -style=file -i {} \;

Other file extensions than cpp, hpp, cc and cxx can be used in the regular expression, just make sure to separate them with \|.

5
  • For -style=file is there a way to specify a custom file path? I tried -style=~/.clang-format and it doesn't work. Jan 8, 2020 at 21:02
  • Not that I know of, apart from changing the current directory.
    – Alexander
    Jan 8, 2020 at 21:06
  • The ghetto solution I came up with is to make a function which first runs cp ~/.clang-format . then the find command in your answer. Jan 8, 2020 at 21:09
  • Interesting but it doesn't work for me on macOS. But this version (with -E flag and without escaping special symbols does): find -E . -regex '.*\.(cpp|hpp|cc|cxx)' -exec clang-format -style=file -i {} \; Mar 1, 2021 at 13:06
  • Thanks for the info, Anton Breusov. -E does not work here on Arch Linux, but -regextype egrep does. Does -regextype egrep work on macOS too?
    – Alexander
    Mar 3, 2021 at 9:33
15

I recently found a bash-script which does exactly what you need:

https://github.com/eklitzke/clang-format-all

This is a bash script that will run clang-format -i on your code.

Features:

  • Finds the right path to clang-format on Ubuntu/Debian, which encode the LLVM version in the clang-format filename
  • Fixes files recursively
  • Detects the most common file extensions used by C/C++ projects

On Windows, I used it successfully in Git Bash and WSL.

10

For the Windows users: If you have Powershell 3.0 support, you can do:

Get-ChildItem -Path . -Directory -Recurse |
    foreach {
        cd $_.FullName
        &clang-format -i -style=WebKit *.cpp
    }

Note1: Use pushd . and popd if you want to have the same current directory before and after the script

Note2: The script operates in the current working directory

Note3: This can probably be written in a single line if that was really important to you

9

When you use Windows (CMD) but don't want to use the PowerShell cannon to shoot this fly, try this:

for /r %t in (*.cpp *.h) do clang-format -i -style=WebKit "%t"

Don't forget to duplicate the two %s if in a cmd script.

7

The below script and process:

  1. works in Linux
  2. should work on MacOS
  3. works in Windows inside Git For Windows terminal with clang-format downloaded and installed.

Here's how I do it:

I create a run_clang_format.sh script and place it in the root of my project directory, then I run it from anywhere. Here's what it looks like:

run_clang_format.sh

#!/bin/bash

THIS_PATH="$(realpath "$0")"
THIS_DIR="$(dirname "$THIS_PATH")"

# Find all files in THIS_DIR which end in .ino, .cpp, etc., as specified
# in the regular expression just below
FILE_LIST="$(find "$THIS_DIR" | grep -E ".*(\.ino|\.cpp|\.c|\.h|\.hpp|\.hh)$")"

echo -e "Files found to format = \n\"\"\"\n$FILE_LIST\n\"\"\""

# Format each file.
# - NB: do NOT put quotes around `$FILE_LIST` below or else the `clang-format` command will 
#   mistakenly see the entire blob of newline-separated file names as a SINGLE file name instead 
#   of as a new-line separated list of *many* file names!
clang-format --verbose -i --style=file $FILE_LIST

Using --style=file means that I must also have a custom .clang-format clang-format specifier file at this same level, which I do.

Now, make your newly-created run_clang_format.sh file executable:

chmod +x run_clang_format.sh

...and run it:

./run_clang_format.sh

Here's a sample run and output for me:

~/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer$ ./run_clang-format.sh 
Files found to format = 
"""
/home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/examples/PPM_Writer_demo/PPM_Writer_demo.ino
/home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/examples/PPM_Writer_demo2/PPM_Writer_demo2.ino
/home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/src/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer.h
/home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/src/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer.cpp
/home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/src/timers/eRCaGuy_TimerCounterTimers.h
"""
Formatting /home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/examples/PPM_Writer_demo/PPM_Writer_demo.ino
Formatting /home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/examples/PPM_Writer_demo2/PPM_Writer_demo2.ino
Formatting /home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/src/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer.h
Formatting /home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/src/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer.cpp
Formatting /home/gabriel/GS/dev/eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer/src/timers/eRCaGuy_TimerCounterTimers.h

You can find my run_clang_format.sh file in my eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer repository, and in my eRCaGuy_CodeFormatter repository too. My .clang-format file is there too.

References:

  1. My repository:
    1. Update: see here instead: https://github.com/ElectricRCAircraftGuy/eRCaGuy_CodeFormatter
    2. eRCaGuy_PPM_Writer repo
    3. run_clang_format.sh file
  2. My notes on how to use clang-format in my "git & Linux cmds, help, tips & tricks - Gabriel.txt" doc in my eRCaGuy_dotfiles repo (search the document for "clang-format").
  3. Official clang-format documentation, setup, instructions, etc! https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ClangFormat.html
  4. Download the clang-format auto-formatter/linter executable for Windows, or other installers/executables here: https://llvm.org/builds/
  5. Clang-Format Style Options: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ClangFormatStyleOptions.html
  6. [my answer] How do I get the directory where a Bash script is located from within the script itself?

Related:

  1. [my answer] Indenting preprocessor directives with clang-format

See also:

  1. [my answer] https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67678531/fixing-a-simple-c-code-without-the-coments/67678570#67678570
3

In modern bash you can recursively crawl the file tree

for file_name in ./src/**/*.{cpp,h,hpp}; do
    if [ -f "$file_name" ]; then
        printf '%s\n' "$file_name"
        clang-format -i $file_name
    fi
done

Here the source is assumed to be located in ./src and the .clang-format contains the formatting information.

1
  • I don't think globstar is on by default in bash, so you'd need to set it. Nov 20, 2020 at 5:51
2

Here is a solution that searches recursively and pipes all files to clang-format as a file list in one command. It also excludes the "build" directory (I use CMake), but you can just omit the "grep" step to remove that.

shopt -s globstar extglob failglob && ls **/*.@(h|hpp|hxx|c|cpp|cxx) | grep -v build | tr '\n' ' ' | xargs clang-format -i
2

As @sbarzowski touches on in a comment above, in bash you can enable globstar which causes ** to expand recursively.

If you just want it for this one command you can do something like the following to format all .h, .cc and .cpp files.

(shopt -s globstar; clang-format -i **/*.{h,cc,cpp})

Or you can add shopt -s globstar to your .bashrc and have ** goodness all the time in bash.

As a side note, you may want to use --dry-run with clang-format the first time to be sure it's what you want.

2

You can use this inside a Make file. It uses git ls-files --exclude-standard to get the list of the files, so that means untracked files are automatically skipped. It assumes that you have a .clang-tidy file at your project root.

format:
ifeq ($(OS), Windows_NT)
    pwsh -c '$$files=(git ls-files --exclude-standard); foreach ($$file in $$files) { if ((get-item $$file).Extension -in ".cpp", ".hpp", ".c", ".cc", ".cxx", ".hxx", ".ixx") { clang-format -i -style=file $$file } }'
else
    git ls-files --exclude-standard | grep -E '\.(cpp|hpp|c|cc|cxx|hxx|ixx)$$' | xargs clang-format -i -style=file
endif

Run with make format

Notice that I escaped $ using $$ for make.

If you use go-task instead of make, you will need this:

  format:
    - |
      {{if eq OS "windows"}} 
        powershell -c '$files=(git ls-files --exclude-standard); foreach ($file in $files) { if ((get-item $file).Extension -in ".cpp", ".hpp", ".c", ".cc", ".cxx", ".hxx", ".ixx") { clang-format -i -style=file $file } }' 
      {{else}} 
        git ls-files --exclude-standard | grep -E '\.(cpp|hpp|c|cc|cxx|hxx|ixx)$' | xargs clang-format -i -style=file 
      {{end}}

Run with task format

If you want to run the individual scripts, then use these

# powershell
$files=(git ls-files --exclude-standard); foreach ($file in $files) { if ((get-item $file).Extension -in ".cpp", ".hpp", ".c", ".cc", ".cxx", ".hxx", ".ixx") { clang-format -i -style=file $file } }
# bash
git ls-files --exclude-standard | grep -E '\.(cpp|hpp|c|cc|cxx|hxx|ixx)$' | xargs clang-format -i -style=file
1

I'm using the following command to format all objective-C files under the current folder recursively:

$ find . -name "*.m" -o -name "*.h" | sed 's| |\\ |g' | xargs clang-format -i

I've defined the following alias in my .bash_profile to make things easier:

# Format objC files (*.h and *.m) under the current folder, recursively
alias clang-format-all="find . -name \"*.m\" -o -name \"*.h\" | sed 's| |\\ |g' | xargs clang-format -i"
1

Also consider git-clang-format. It might be closer to what you need on a day-to-day basis.

git-clang-format formats all your changed C/C++ files in the current Git repository. There are some good tutorials here and here but in summary, once clang's bin directory is in your PATH:

To see what changes will be made:

git clang-format --diff

And to actually make the changes:

git clang-format --force
0

A bit <O/T>, but when I googled "how to feed a list of files into clang-format" this was the top hit. In my case, I don't want to recurse over an entire directory for a specific file type. Instead, I want to apply clang-format to all the files I edited before I push my feature/bugfix branch. The first step in our pipeline is clang-format, and it almost always fails, so I wanted to run this "manually" on my changes just to take care of that step instead of nearly always dealing with a quickly failing pipeline. You can get a list of all the files you changed with

git diff <commitOrTagToCompareTo> --name-only 

And borrowing from Antimony's answer, you can pipe that into xargs and finally clang-format:

git diff <commitOrTagToCompareTo> --name-only | xargs clang-format -i

Running git status will now show which files changed (git diff(tool) will show you the changes), and you can commit and push this up, hopefully moving on to more important parts of the pipeline.

0

The first step is to find out header and source files, we use:

find . -path ./build -prune -o -iname "*.hpp" -o -iname "*.cpp" -o -iname "*.c" -o -iname "*.h"

The -o is for "or" and -iname is for ignoring case. And in your case specifically, you may add more extensions like -o -iname "*.cc". Here another trick is to escape ./build/ directory, -path ./build -prune suggests do not descend into the given directory "./build".
Type above command you will find it still prints out "./build", then we use sed command to replace "./build" with empty char, something like:

sed 's/.\/build//' <in stream>

At last, we call clang-format to do formatting:

clang-format -i <file>

Combine them, we have:

find . -path ./build -prune -o -iname "*.hpp" -o -iname "*.cpp" -o -iname "*.cc" -o -iname "*.cxx" -o -iname "*.c" -o -iname "*.h"|sed 's/.\/build//'|xargs clang-format -i
1
  • This can be unsafe, consider using print0 with xargs -0 Sep 18, 2022 at 11:25
0

I had similar issue where I needed to check for formatting errors, but I wanted to do it with a single clang-format invocation both on linux and windows.

Here are my one-liners:

Bash:

find $PWD/src -type f \( -name "*.h" -o -name "*.cpp" \) -exec clang-format -style=file --dry-run --Werror {} +

Powershell:

clang-format -style=file --dry-run --Werror $(Get-ChildItem -Path $PWD/src -Recurse | Where Name -Match '\.(?:h|cpp)$' | Select-Object -ExpandProperty FullName)

0

This command will help you to find *.h & *.cpp from all the subfolders and also to update the files with our customize clang format file, which is in Foo/Boo

find ../src/ -iname *.h -o -iname *.cpp | xargs clang-format -style=file:"Foo/Boo/.clang-format" -i

1
  • 1
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    – Community Bot
    Apr 16, 2023 at 5:27
0

I checked these answers , and they all failed for me. (Some of them were not for Windows). So my solution in PowerShell that worked for me is:

Get-ChildItem -Recurse *.cpp |
     foreach {
         & 'C:\Program Files\LLVM\bin\clang-format.exe' -i -style=file --fallback-style=Google $_.FullName
     }

Get-ChildItem -Recurse *.h |
     foreach {
         & 'C:\Program Files\LLVM\bin\clang-format.exe' -i -style=file --fallback-style=Google $_.FullName
     }

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