Enter your SDK, go to this modules location, then run install.sh to create a virtualenv and install all requirements and this module itself. Then just activate your virtualenv.
cros_sdk --enter cd ~/trunk/chromite/contrib/depgraph_visualization ./install.sh source my_visualizations/bin/activate
This will put a script called visualize_depgraph
on your PATH. From there you can run visualize_depgraph --help
to see the available options.
To use visualize_depgraph
you only need to specify the -b
/--build-target
argument with the target build of your choosing. This will create an HTML with the whole dependency graph on it. Just click it to view it in your default browser.
visualize_depgraph -b=amd64-generic visualize_depgraph --build-target=amd64-generic
You can also create a dependency graph for one or more packages by passing them as arguments; just be sure that these packages have plenty of dependencies otherwise the resulting graph might not be so useful.
visualize_depgraph chromeos-base/crosvm -b=amd64-generic visualize_depgraph chromeos-base/crosvm chromeos-base/tast-build-deps -b=amd64-generic
The default name and location of the output file is “DepGraph” and “./” respectively. To change them you can use the options --output-name
and --output-path
.
visualize_depgraph net-fs/samba -b=amd64-generic --output-path=bar/foo --output-name=SambaGraph
If you were to use a package with no dependencies you would just see the package itself. Like in this example.
visualize_depgraph virtual/rust -b=amd64-generic
If one of the packages you list is part of the dependency tree of another one it won't be marked as a root node. Such is the case in this example.
visualize_depgraph chromeos-base/crosvm chromeos-base/libbrillo -b=amd64-generic