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A VSCode extension to display relationships between files in a codebase, overlayed on a circle packing diagram of the file structure.

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CBRV - The CodeBase Relationship Visualizer

Understanding relationships between files and their directory structure is a fundamental part of the software development process. However, it can be hard to grasp these relationships without a convenient way to visualize them and how they fit into the directory structure of the codebase. CodeBase Relationship Visualizer (CBRV), is a Visual Studio Code extension that interactively visualizes the relationships between files.

CBRV displays the relationships between files as arrows superimposed over a circle packing diagram of the codebase's directory structure. The visualization is inspired by Repo Visualizer but interactive and zoomable.

CBRV comes bundled with visualizations of the stack trace path, a dependency graph for Python codebases, and a hyperlink graph for HTML and Markdown. CBRV also exposes an API that can be used by other extensions to create visualizations for different relationships.

A screenshot showing CBRV visualizing a hyperlink graph of the VSCode docs

Usage

Stack Trace Visualization

A screenshot of the CBRV Stack Trace Visualization A screenshot of the CBRV Stack Trace Visualization with recursion

The command "Visualize the stack trace during a debugger session" brings up the Stack Trace Visualization.

This visualization displays the stack trace as a line over the directory structure diagram. Arrows jump between the files in the current stack trace, displaying a line following the current path of execution though the code base. The visualization is linked with the debugger in real time, as you step though the debugger the visualization will update to match the current stack trace.

In the case of multithreading, multiple stack trace lines are rendered, each color-coded by thread. The extension is only be able to show stack traces for threads that are currently stopped on a breakpoint in the debugger.

The visualization uses the DAP to allow it to interface with most VSCode debuggers.

Dependency Visualization

A screenshot of the dependency visualization (on ShellAdventure)

The command "Visualize the dependencies between Python files" brings up the Dependency Visualization. This visualization displays dependencies between files in Python codebases. It displays a directed arrow for any imports in python files. It only show connections to/from a file on hover over that file by default. The visualization uses the handy pydeps package to extract the dependencies from the source files.

Hyperlink Visualization

A screenshot of the hyperlink visualization

The command "Visualize a hyperlink graph" brings up the Hyperlink Visualization. This visualization uses the CBRV API to display references between HTML and Markdown files. It displays a directed arrow for any href in an HTML document or links in a Markdown document that reference another file in the workspace. The visualization only shows connection to/from a file on hover over that file by default to prevent the visualization getting overly crowded.

Extending CBRV

CBRV exposes an API that can be used to create your own VSCode extensions with visualizations of different relationships between files. You can access the API in your extension by adding jesse-r-s-hines.codebase-relationship-visualizer to your package.json extensionDependencies and then import the api like so:

let cbrvAPI = vscode.extensions.getExtension('jesse-r-s-hines.codebase-relationship-visualizer').exports;
let visualization = await cbrvAPI.create({
  // ...
})

See https://code.visualstudio.com/api/references/vscode-api#extensions for more info on importing extensions.

API docs are available at https://jesse-r-s-hines.github.io/CodeBaseRelationshipVisualizer. You can see examples of using the API in the src/visualizations folder.

Development

To run the project from source run

npm ci

then open it up in VSCode and press F5 to run and debug it.

To run the Python Dependency Graph visualization you'll need to have Python3 installed.

On Windows, you'll want to enable git symlinks before you clone the repo, first enable "Developer Mode" in Windows settings and then run

git config --global core.symlinks true

To build and run the tests run

npm run test

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A VSCode extension to display relationships between files in a codebase, overlayed on a circle packing diagram of the file structure.

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