Tsort (Discworld)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The tsort program is a command line utility on Unix and Unix-like platforms, that performs a
topological sort In computer science, a topological sort or topological ordering of a directed graph is a linear ordering of its vertices such that for every directed edge ''uv'' from vertex ''u'' to vertex ''v'', ''u'' comes before ''v'' in the ordering. For ins ...
on its input. , it is part of the POSIX.1 standard.


History

According to its info page, this command was initially written for providing an ordering of object files that allowed the linker to process them sequentially (each one exactly once, and in order). The FreeBSD manual page dates its appearance to Version 7 Unix. Note that the following description is describing the behaviour of the
FreeBSD FreeBSD is a free and open-source Unix-like operating system descended from the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), which was based on Research Unix. The first version of FreeBSD was released in 1993. In 2005, FreeBSD was the most popular ...
implementation of tsort and mentions GNU features where they may exist. Other implementations or versions may differ.


Syntax

tsort dlq
ILE Ile may refer to: * iLe, a Puerto Rican singer * Ile District (disambiguation), multiple places * Ilé-Ifẹ̀, an ancient Yoruba city in south-western Nigeria * Interlingue (ISO 639:ile), a planned language * Isoleucine, an amino acid * Another ...
'' FreeBSD options can be: -d turn on debugging -l search for and display the longest cycle. -q Do not display informational messages about cycles. GNU provides the following options only: --help display help message and exit --version display version information and exit There are no options prescribed by POSIX.


Behavior

tsort reads its input (from the given FILE, or standard input if no input file is given or for a FILE of '-') as pairs of strings, separated by blanks, indicating a partial ordering. The output is a total ordering that corresponds to the given partial ordering. In other words: for a directed acyclic graph (used as a dependency graph), tsort produces a listing of the vertices so that for all edges 'a->b', 'a' comes before 'b' in the listing.


Examples

tsort lists the vertices of a directed acyclic graph in such an order that all ordering/direction relations are respected:


Call graph

tsort can help rearranging functions in a source file so that as many as possible are defined before they are used (Interpret the following as: calls , and ; calls , and so on. The result is that should be defined first, second, etc.):


Library

The traditional ld (Unix linker) requires that its library inputs be sorted in topological order, since it processes files in a single pass. This applies both to static libraries () and dynamic libraries (), and in the case of static libraries preferably for the individual object files contained within. BSD UNIX uses tsort as a common part of the typical ar & ranlib command invocations (from /usr/share/mk/bsd.lib.mk): lib$.a: $ $ @$ building static $ library @$ cq $ `lorder $ $ , tsort -q` $ $ $ Here ("library order") is used to generate the inter-file dependency list by inspecting the symbol table.


Usage notes

Notice the interchangeability of white space separators so the following inputs are equivalent: Pairs of identical items indicate presence of a vertex, but not ordering (so the following represents one vertex without edges): a a Strictly speaking there is no topological ordering of a graph that contains one or more cycles. However tsort prints a warning and GNU tsort prints the detected cycles to standard error (lines beginning with 'tsort:'): $ tsort < a b > b c > c a > EOF UX: tsort: INFORM: cycle in data tsort: a tsort: b tsort: c a b c


See also

* Sort (Unix) * Make (software) * Topological sorting * List of Unix commands * Call graph


References


Further reading

* *


External links

manual page of tsort on
FreeBSD

OpenBSD

NetBSD





HP-UX

dep-trace
Orders basic dependencies and unfolds nested ones. (basic: without 2D graphical presumption) {{Core Utilities commands Unix SUS2008 utilities Inferno (operating system) commands