B::Graph, version 0.03

Copyright (C) 1997,1998 Stephen McCamant. All rights reserved. This
program is free software; you can redistribute and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.

Module list information:
B::Graph	adpr	Perl Compiler backend to diagram OP trees

This module is a layer between the perl-internals-examining parts of
Malcolm Beattie's perl compiler (the B::* classes) and your favorite
graph layout tool (currently Dot and VGC are supported, but adding
others would be easy). It examines the internal structures that perl
builds to represent your code (OPs and SVs), and generates
specifications for multicolored boxes and arrows to represent them.

New in this version:
  - Limited length of string values printed
  - Limited number of edges from one node for VCG
  - Made FILEGV links optional
  - Eliminated `pp_' prefix on OP nodes
  - Enhanced OP_NULL handling to show op_targ as old type
  - Shortened private [INP]OK abbreviations
  - Made special SVs SV-shaped
  - Cleaned up globals to make multiple calls possible (for mod_perl)


Other things you need:

perl 5.004	(some 5.003_?? versions might work, as would 5.003
                 with tweaking)

Compiler-a3	(on CPAN; other versions might work too. Note that
                 perl 5.004 added a new opcode, so you'll want to
		 apply the included patch. This problem should be
 		 fixed in 5.005, whenever it's released.)

The graph visualization package from from AT&T (contains Dot)
http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/graphviz/
     OR
Visualization of Compiler Graphs (`the VGC tool')
http://www.cs.uni-sb.de/RW/users/sander/html/gsvcg1.htm
(VCG has Windows and X11 interfaces, and is good for interactive
viewing; Dot is a batch program that generates good PostScript, so
you'll need either a printer or an previewer)

A basic understanding of how perl's internals work (see perlguts(1))
     OR
A willingness to stare at complicated-looking diagrams, most of which
you don't understand
(Seriously, this module can be a good tool for learning about how perl
works inside -- for instance, its output is a lot more intutive that
`perl -Dx''s, IMHO)

BUILDING

Just like any other module:
% perl Makefile.PL
% make
% make install

(`make test' currently doesn't do anything interesting) 

EXAMPLE

% perl -MO=Graph,-vcg -e '$a = $b + $c' >graph.vcg
% xvcg graph.vcg
    OR
% perl -MO=Graph,-dot -e '$a = $b + $x' | dot -Tps >graph.ps
% gv graph.ps (or your favorite PostScript previewer)

(depending on your shell, you might be able to do everyting in one
line -- in zsh, say 
% xvcg =(perl -MO=Graph,-vcg -e '...')
)

You may notice that this is the same example used in perlguts (the
section titled `code tree'). A comparison to the ASCII art there will
give you an idea of what `slightly more complicated' means.

For more detailed information, see the POD at the end of Graph.pm.


Send questions, bug reports, and feature requests to me, Stephen
McCamant <alias@mcs.com>.