1GraphViz2(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation GraphViz2(3)
2
3
4
6 GraphViz2 - A wrapper for AT&T's Graphviz
7
9 Sample output
10 See <https://graphviz-perl.github.io/>.
11
12 Perl code
13 Typical Usage
14
15 use strict;
16 use warnings;
17 use File::Spec;
18 use GraphViz2;
19
20 use Log::Handler;
21 my $logger = Log::Handler->new;
22 $logger->add(screen => {
23 maxlevel => 'debug', message_layout => '%m', minlevel => 'error'
24 });
25
26 my $graph = GraphViz2->new(
27 edge => {color => 'grey'},
28 global => {directed => 1},
29 graph => {label => 'Adult', rankdir => 'TB'},
30 logger => $logger,
31 node => {shape => 'oval'},
32 );
33
34 $graph->add_node(name => 'Carnegie', shape => 'circle');
35 $graph->add_node(name => 'Murrumbeena', shape => 'box', color => 'green');
36 $graph->add_node(name => 'Oakleigh', color => 'blue');
37 $graph->add_edge(from => 'Murrumbeena', to => 'Carnegie', arrowsize => 2);
38 $graph->add_edge(from => 'Murrumbeena', to => 'Oakleigh', color => 'brown');
39
40 $graph->push_subgraph(
41 name => 'cluster_1',
42 graph => {label => 'Child'},
43 node => {color => 'magenta', shape => 'diamond'},
44 );
45 $graph->add_node(name => 'Chadstone', shape => 'hexagon');
46 $graph->add_node(name => 'Waverley', color => 'orange');
47 $graph->add_edge(from => 'Chadstone', to => 'Waverley');
48 $graph->pop_subgraph;
49
50 $graph->default_node(color => 'cyan');
51
52 $graph->add_node(name => 'Malvern');
53 $graph->add_node(name => 'Prahran', shape => 'trapezium');
54 $graph->add_edge(from => 'Malvern', to => 'Prahran');
55 $graph->add_edge(from => 'Malvern', to => 'Murrumbeena');
56
57 my $format = shift || 'svg';
58 my $output_file = shift || File::Spec->catfile('html', "sub.graph.$format");
59 $graph->run(format => $format, output_file => $output_file);
60
62 Overview
63 This module provides a Perl interface to the amazing Graphviz
64 <http://www.graphviz.org/>, an open source graph visualization tool
65 from AT&T.
66
67 It is called GraphViz2 so that pre-existing code using (the Perl
68 module) GraphViz continues to work.
69
70 To avoid confusion, when I use GraphViz2 (note the capital V), I'm
71 referring to this Perl module, and when I use Graphviz
72 <http://www.graphviz.org/> (lower-case v) I'm referring to the
73 underlying tool (which is in fact a set of programs).
74
75 Version 1.00 of GraphViz2 is a complete re-write, by Ron Savage, of
76 GraphViz V 2, which was written by Leon Brocard. The point of the re-
77 write is to provide access to all the latest options available to users
78 of Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.
79
80 GraphViz2 V 1 is not backwards compatible with GraphViz V 2, despite
81 the considerable similarity. It was not possible to maintain
82 compatibility while extending support to all the latest features of
83 Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.
84
85 To ensure GraphViz2 is a light-weight module, Moo has been used to
86 provide getters and setters, rather than Moose.
87
88 As of V 2.43, "GraphViz2" supports image maps, both client and server
89 side.
90
91 See "Image Maps" below.
92
93 What is a Graph?
94 An undirected graph is a collection of nodes optionally linked together
95 with edges.
96
97 A directed graph is the same, except that the edges have a direction,
98 normally indicated by an arrow head.
99
100 A quick inspection of Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>'s gallery
101 <http://www.graphviz.org/gallery/> will show better than words just how
102 good Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> is, and will reinforce the
103 point that humans are very visual creatures.
104
106 Of course you need to install AT&T's Graphviz before using this module.
107 See <http://www.graphviz.org/download/>.
108
110 Calling new()
111 "new()" is called as "my($obj) = GraphViz2 -> new(k1 => v1, k2 => v2,
112 ...)".
113
114 It returns a new object of type "GraphViz2".
115
116 Key-value pairs accepted in the parameter list:
117
118 edge => $hashref
119
120 The edge key points to a hashref which is used to set default
121 attributes for edges.
122
123 Hence, allowable keys and values within that hashref are anything
124 supported by Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.
125
126 The default is {}.
127
128 This key is optional.
129
130 global => $hashref
131
132 The global key points to a hashref which is used to set attributes for
133 the output stream.
134
135 This key is optional.
136
137 Valid keys within this hashref are:
138
139 combine_node_and_port
140
141 New in 2.58. It defaults to true, but in due course (currently planned
142 May 2021) it will default to false. When true, "add_node" and
143 "add_edge" will escape only some characters in the label and names, and
144 in particular the "from" and "to" parameters on edges will combine the
145 node name and port in one string, with a ":" in the middle (except for
146 special treatment of double-colons).
147
148 When the option is false, any name may be given to nodes, and edges can
149 be created between them. To specify ports, give the additional
150 parameter of "tailport" or "headport". To specify a compass point in
151 addition, give array-refs with two values for these parameters. Also,
152 "add_node"'s treatment of labels is more DWIM, with "{" etc being
153 transparently quoted.
154
155 directed => $Boolean
156
157 This option affects the content of the output stream.
158
159 directed => 1 outputs 'digraph name {...}', while directed => 0 outputs
160 'graph name {...}'.
161
162 At the Perl level, directed graphs have edges with arrow heads, such as
163 '->', while undirected graphs have unadorned edges, such as '--'.
164
165 The default is 0.
166
167 This key is optional.
168
169 driver => $program_name
170
171 This option specifies which external program to run to process the
172 output stream.
173
174 The default is to use File::Which's which() method to find the 'dot'
175 program.
176
177 This key is optional.
178
179 format => $string
180
181 This option specifies what type of output file to create.
182
183 The default is 'svg'.
184
185 Output formats of the form 'png:gd' etc are also supported, but only
186 the component before the first ':' is validated by GraphViz2.
187
188 This key is optional.
189
190 label => $string
191
192 This option specifies what an edge looks like: '->' for directed graphs
193 and '--' for undirected graphs.
194
195 You wouldn't normally need to use this option.
196
197 The default is '->' if directed is 1, and '--' if directed is 0.
198
199 This key is optional.
200
201 name => $string
202
203 This option affects the content of the output stream.
204
205 name => 'G666' outputs 'digraph G666 {...}'.
206
207 The default is 'Perl' :-).
208
209 This key is optional.
210
211 record_shape => /^(?:M?record)$/
212
213 This option affects the shape of records. The value must be 'Mrecord'
214 or 'record'.
215
216 Mrecords have nice, rounded corners, whereas plain old records have
217 square corners.
218
219 The default is 'Mrecord'.
220
221 See Record shapes <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/shapes.html#record>
222 for details.
223
224 strict => $Boolean
225
226 This option affects the content of the output stream.
227
228 strict => 1 outputs 'strict digraph name {...}', while strict => 0
229 outputs 'digraph name {...}'.
230
231 The default is 0.
232
233 This key is optional.
234
235 timeout => $integer
236
237 This option specifies how long to wait for the external program before
238 exiting with an error.
239
240 The default is 10 (seconds).
241
242 This key is optional.
243
244 graph => $hashref
245
246 The graph key points to a hashref which is used to set default
247 attributes for graphs.
248
249 Hence, allowable keys and values within that hashref are anything
250 supported by Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.
251
252 The default is {}.
253
254 This key is optional.
255
256 logger => $logger_object
257
258 Provides a logger object so $logger_object -> $level($message) can be
259 called at certain times. Any object with "debug" and "error" methods
260 will do, since these are the only levels emitted by this module. One
261 option is a Log::Handler object.
262
263 Retrieve and update the value with the logger() method.
264
265 By default (i.e. without a logger object), GraphViz2 prints warning and
266 debug messages to STDOUT, and dies upon errors.
267
268 However, by supplying a log object, you can capture these events.
269
270 Not only that, you can change the behaviour of your log object at any
271 time, by calling "logger($logger_object)".
272
273 See also the verbose option, which can interact with the logger option.
274
275 This key is optional.
276
277 node => $hashref
278
279 The node key points to a hashref which is used to set default
280 attributes for nodes.
281
282 Hence, allowable keys and values within that hashref are anything
283 supported by Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.
284
285 The default is {}.
286
287 This key is optional.
288
289 subgraph => $hashref
290
291 The subgraph key points to a hashref which is used to set attributes
292 for all subgraphs, unless overridden for specific subgraphs in a call
293 of the form push_subgraph(subgraph => {$attribute => $string}).
294
295 Valid keys within this hashref are:
296
297 • rank => $string
298
299 This option affects the content of all subgraphs, unless overridden
300 later.
301
302 A typical usage would be new(subgraph => {rank => 'same'}) so that
303 all nodes mentioned within each subgraph are constrained to be
304 horizontally aligned.
305
306 See scripts/rank.sub.graph.1.pl for sample code.
307
308 Possible values for $string are: max, min, same, sink and source.
309
310 See the Graphviz 'rank' docs
311 <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html#d:rank> for details.
312
313 The default is {}.
314
315 This key is optional.
316
317 verbose => $Boolean
318
319 Provides a way to control the amount of output when a logger is not
320 specified.
321
322 Setting verbose to 0 means print nothing.
323
324 Setting verbose to 1 means print the log level and the message to
325 STDOUT, when a logger is not specified.
326
327 Retrieve and update the value with the verbose() method.
328
329 The default is 0.
330
331 See also the logger option, which can interact with the verbose option.
332
333 This key is optional.
334
335 Validating Parameters
336 The secondary keys (under the primary keys 'edge|graph|node') are
337 checked against lists of valid attributes (stored at the end of this
338 module, after the __DATA__ token, and made available using
339 Data::Section::Simple).
340
341 This mechanism has the effect of hard-coding Graphviz
342 <http://www.graphviz.org/> options in the source code of GraphViz2.
343
344 Nevertheless, the implementation of these lists is handled differently
345 from the way it was done in V 2.
346
347 V 2 ships with a set of scripts, scripts/extract.*.pl, which retrieve
348 pages from the Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> web site and extract
349 the current lists of valid attributes.
350
351 These are then copied manually into the source code of GraphViz2,
352 meaning any time those lists change on the Graphviz
353 <http://www.graphviz.org/> web site, it's a trivial matter to update
354 the lists stored within this module.
355
356 See "Scripts Shipped with this Module" in GraphViz2.
357
358 Alternate constructor and object method
359 from_graph
360
361 my $gv = GraphViz2->from_graph($g);
362
363 # alternatively
364 my $gv = GraphViz2->new;
365 $gv->from_graph($g);
366
367 # for handy debugging of arbitrary graphs:
368 GraphViz2->from_graph($g)->run(format => 'svg', output_file => 'output.svg');
369
370 Takes a Graph object. This module will figure out various defaults from
371 it, including whether it is directed or not.
372
373 Will also use any node-, edge-, and graph-level attributes named
374 "graphviz" as a hash-ref for setting attributes on the corresponding
375 entities in the constructed GraphViz2 object. These will override the
376 figured-out defaults referred to above.
377
378 For a "multivertexed" graph, will only create one node per vertex, but
379 will search all the multi-IDs for a "graphviz" attribute, taking the
380 first one it finds (sorted alphabetically).
381
382 For a "multiedged" graph, will create one edge per multi-edge.
383
384 Will only set the "global" attribute if called as a constructor. This
385 will be dropped from any passed-in graph-level "graphviz" attribute
386 when called as an object method.
387
388 A special graph-level attribute (under "graphviz") called "groups" will
389 be given further special meaning: it is an array-ref of hash-refs.
390 Those will have keys, used to create subgraphs:
391
392 • attributes
393
394 Hash-ref of arguments to supply to "push_subgraph" for this
395 subgraph.
396
397 • nodes
398
399 Array-ref of node names to put in this subgraph.
400
401 Example:
402
403 $g->set_graph_attribute(graphviz => {
404 groups => [
405 {nodes => [1, 2], attributes => {subgraph=>{rank => 'same'}}},
406 ],
407 # other graph-level attributes...
408 });
409
411 Graph Scope
412 The graphical elements graph, node and edge, have attributes.
413 Attributes can be set when calling new().
414
415 Within new(), the defaults are graph => {}, node => {}, and edge => {}.
416
417 You override these with code such as new(edge => {color => 'red'}).
418
419 These attributes are pushed onto a scope stack during new()'s
420 processing of its parameters, and they apply thereafter until changed.
421 They are the 'current' attributes. They live at scope level 0 (zero).
422
423 You change the 'current' attributes by calling any of the methods
424 default_edge(%hash), default_graph(%hash) and default_node(%hash).
425
426 See scripts/trivial.pl ("Scripts Shipped with this Module" in
427 GraphViz2) for an example.
428
429 Subgraph Scope
430 When you wish to create a subgraph, you call push_subgraph(%hash). The
431 word push emphasises that you are moving into a new scope, and that the
432 default attributes for the new scope are pushed onto the scope stack.
433
434 This module, as with Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>, defaults to
435 using inheritance of attributes.
436
437 That means the parent's 'current' attributes are combined with the
438 parameters to push_subgraph(%hash) to generate a new set of 'current'
439 attributes for each of the graphical elements, graph, node and edge.
440
441 After a single call to push_subgraph(%hash), these 'current' attributes
442 will live a level 1 in the scope stack.
443
444 See scripts/sub.graph.pl ("Scripts Shipped with this Module" in
445 GraphViz2) for an example.
446
447 Another call to push_subgraph(%hash), without an intervening call to
448 pop_subgraph(), will repeat the process, leaving you with a set of
449 attributes at level 2 in the scope stack.
450
451 Both GraphViz2 and Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> handle this
452 situation properly.
453
454 See scripts/sub.sub.graph.pl ("Scripts Shipped with this Module" in
455 GraphViz2) for an example.
456
457 At the moment, due to design defects (IMHO) in the underlying Graphviz
458 <http://www.graphviz.org/> logic, there are some tiny problems with
459 this:
460
461 • A global frame
462
463 I can't see how to make the graph as a whole (at level 0 in the
464 scope stack) have a frame.
465
466 • Frame color
467
468 When you specify graph => {color => 'red'} at the parent level, the
469 subgraph has a red frame.
470
471 I think a subgraph should control its own frame.
472
473 • Parent and child frames
474
475 When you specify graph => {color => 'red'} at the subgraph level,
476 both that subgraph and it children have red frames.
477
478 This contradicts what happens at the global level, in that
479 specifying color there does not given the whole graph a frame.
480
481 • Frame visibility
482
483 A subgraph whose name starts with 'cluster' is currently forced to
484 have a frame, unless you rig it by specifying a color the same as
485 the background.
486
487 For sample code, see scripts/sub.graph.frames.pl.
488
489 Also, check the pencolor docs
490 <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html#d:pencolor> for how the
491 color of the frame is chosen by cascading thru a set of options.
492
493 I've posted an email to the Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> mailing
494 list suggesting a new option, framecolor, so deal with this issue,
495 including a special color of 'invisible'.
496
498 As of V 2.43, "GraphViz2" supports image maps, both client and server
499 side. For web use, note that these options also take effect when
500 generating SVGs, for a much lighter-weight solution to hyperlinking
501 graph nodes and edges.
502
503 The Default URL
504 See the Graphviz docs for 'cmapx'
505 <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/output.html#d:cmapx>.
506
507 Their sample code has a dot file - x.gv - containing this line:
508
509 URL="http://www.research.att.com/base.html";
510
511 The way you set such a url in "GraphViz2" is via a new parameter to
512 "new()". This parameter is called "im_meta" and it takes a hashref as a
513 value. Currently the only key used within that hashref is the case-
514 sensitive "URL".
515
516 Thus you must do this to set a URL:
517
518 my($graph) = GraphViz2 -> new
519 (
520 ...
521 im_meta =>
522 {
523 URL => 'http://savage.net.au/maps/demo.3.1.html', # Note: URL must be in caps.
524 },
525 );
526
527 See maps/demo.3.pl and maps/demo.4.pl for sample code.
528
529 Typical Code
530 Normally you would call "run()" as:
531
532 $graph -> run
533 (
534 format => $format,
535 output_file => $output_file
536 );
537
538 That line was copied from scripts/cluster.pl.
539
540 To trigger image map processing, you must include 2 new parameters:
541
542 $graph -> run
543 (
544 format => $format,
545 output_file => $output_file,
546 im_format => $im_format,
547 im_output_file => $im_output_file
548 );
549
550 That line was copied from maps/demo.3.pl, and there is an identical
551 line in maps/demo.4.pl.
552
553 The New Parameters to run()
554 • im_format => $str
555
556 Expected values: 'imap' (server-side) and 'cmapx' (client-side).
557
558 Default value: 'cmapx'.
559
560 • im_output_file => $file_name
561
562 The name of the output map file.
563
564 Default: ''.
565
566 If you do not set it to anything, the new image maps code is
567 ignored.
568
569 Sample Code
570 Various demos are shipped in the new maps/ directory:
571
572 Each demo, when FTPed to your web server displays some text with an
573 image in the middle. In each case you can click on the upper oval to
574 jump to one page, or click on the lower oval to jump to a different
575 page, or click anywhere else in the image to jump to a third page.
576
577 • demo.1.*
578
579 This set demonstrates a server-side image map but does not use
580 "GraphViz2".
581
582 You have to run demo.1.sh which generates demo.1.map, and then you
583 FTP the whole dir maps/ to your web server.
584
585 URL: your.domain.name/maps/demo.1.html.
586
587 • demo.2.*
588
589 This set demonstrates a client-side image map but does not use
590 "GraphViz2".
591
592 You have to run demo.2.sh which generates demo.2.map, and then you
593 manually copy demo.2.map into demo.2.html, replacing any version of
594 the map already present. After that you FTP the whole dir maps/ to
595 your web server.
596
597 URL: your.domain.name/maps/demo.2.html.
598
599 • demo.3.*
600
601 This set demonstrates a server-side image map using "GraphViz2" via
602 demo.3.pl.
603
604 Note line 54 of demo.3.pl which sets the default "im_format" to
605 'imap'.
606
607 URL: your.domain.name/maps/demo.3.html.
608
609 • demo.4.*
610
611 This set demonstrates a client-side image map using "GraphViz2" via
612 demo.4.pl.
613
614 As with demo.2.* there is some manually editing to be done.
615
616 Note line 54 of demo.4.pl which sets the default "im_format" to
617 'cmapx'. This is the only important difference between this demo
618 and the previous one.
619
620 There are other minor differences, in that one uses 'svg' and the
621 other 'png'. And of course the urls of the web pages embedded in
622 the code and in those web pages differs, just to demonstate that
623 the maps do indeed lead to different pages.
624
625 URL: your.domain.name/maps/demo.4.html.
626
628 add_edge(from => $from_node_name, to => $to_node_name, [label => $label,
629 %hash])
630 Adds an edge to the graph.
631
632 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
633
634 Here, [] indicate optional parameters.
635
636 Add a edge from 1 node to another.
637
638 $from_node_name and $to_node_name default to ''.
639
640 %hash is any edge attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
641 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
642 exactly the same way as the edge parameters in the calls to
643 default_edge(%hash), new(edge => {}) and push_subgraph(edge => {}).
644
645 To make the edge start or finish on a port, see
646 "combine_node_and_port".
647
648 add_node(name => $node_name, [%hash])
649 my $graph = GraphViz2->new(global => {combine_node_and_port => 0});
650 $graph->add_node(name => 'struct3', shape => 'record', label => [
651 { text => "hello\\nworld" },
652 [
653 { text => 'b' },
654 [
655 { text => 'c{}' }, # reproduced literally
656 { text => 'd', port => 'here' },
657 { text => 'e' },
658 ]
659 { text => 'f' },
660 ],
661 { text => 'g' },
662 { text => 'h' },
663 ]);
664
665 Adds a node to the graph.
666
667 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
668
669 If you want to embed newlines or double-quotes in node names or labels,
670 see scripts/quote.pl in "Scripts Shipped with this Module" in
671 GraphViz2.
672
673 If you want anonymous nodes, see scripts/anonymous.pl in "Scripts
674 Shipped with this Module" in GraphViz2.
675
676 Here, [] indicates an optional parameter.
677
678 %hash is any node attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
679 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
680 exactly the same way as the node parameters in the calls to
681 default_node(%hash), new(node => {}) and push_subgraph(node => {}).
682
683 The attribute name 'label' may point to a string or an arrayref.
684
685 If it is a string...
686
687 The string is the label. If the "shape" is a record, you can give any
688 text and it will be passed for interpretation by Graphviz. This means
689 you will need to quote < and > (port specifiers), "|" (cell separator)
690 and "{" "}" (structure depth) with "\" to make them appear literally.
691
692 For records, the cells start horizontal. Each additional layer of
693 structure will switch the orientation between horizontal and vertical.
694
695 If it is an arrayref of strings...
696
697 • The node is forced to be a record
698
699 The actual shape, 'record' or 'Mrecord', is set globally, with:
700
701 my($graph) = GraphViz2 -> new
702 (
703 global => {record_shape => 'record'}, # Override default 'Mrecord'.
704 ...
705 );
706
707 Or set locally with:
708
709 $graph -> add_node(name => 'Three', label => ['Good', 'Bad'], shape => 'record');
710
711 • Each element in the array defines a field in the record
712
713 These fields are combined into a single node
714
715 • Each element is treated as a label
716
717 • Each label is given a port name (1 .. N) of the form
718 "port$port_count"
719
720 • Judicious use of '{' and '}' in the label can make this record
721 appear horizontally or vertically, and even nested
722
723 If it is an arrayref of hashrefs...
724
725 • The node is forced to be a record
726
727 The actual shape, 'record' or 'Mrecord', can be set globally or
728 locally, as explained just above.
729
730 • Each element in the array defines a field in the record
731
732 • Each element is treated as a hashref with keys 'text' and 'port'
733
734 The 'port' key is optional.
735
736 • The value of the 'text' key is the label
737
738 • The value of the 'port' key is the port
739
740 • Judicious use of '{' and '}' in the label can make this record
741 appear horizontally or vertically, and even nested
742
743 See scripts/html.labels.*.pl and scripts/record.*.pl for sample code.
744
745 See also "How labels interact with ports".
746
747 For more details on this complex topic, see Records
748 <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/shapes.html#record> and Ports
749 <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html#k:portPos>.
750
751 default_edge(%hash)
752 Sets defaults attributes for edges added subsequently.
753
754 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
755
756 %hash is any edge attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
757 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
758 exactly the same way as the edge parameters in the calls to new(edge =>
759 {}) and push_subgraph(edge => {}).
760
761 default_graph(%hash)
762 Sets defaults attributes for the graph.
763
764 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
765
766 %hash is any graph attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
767 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
768 exactly the same way as the graph parameter in the calls to new(graph
769 => {}) and push_subgraph(graph => {}).
770
771 default_node(%hash)
772 Sets defaults attributes for nodes added subsequently.
773
774 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
775
776 %hash is any node attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
777 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
778 exactly the same way as the node parameters in the calls to new(node =>
779 {}) and push_subgraph(node => {}).
780
781 default_subgraph(%hash)
782 Sets defaults attributes for clusters and subgraphs.
783
784 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
785
786 %hash is any cluster or subgraph attribute accepted as Graphviz
787 attributes <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are
788 validated in exactly the same way as the subgraph parameter in the
789 calls to new(subgraph => {}) and push_subgraph(subgraph => {}).
790
791 dot_input()
792 Returns the output stream, formatted nicely, to be passed to the
793 external program (e.g. dot).
794
795 dot_output()
796 Returns the output from calling the external program (e.g. dot).
797
798 You must call run() before calling dot_output(), since it is only
799 during the call to run() that the output of the external program is
800 stored in the buffer controlled by dot_output().
801
802 This output is available even if run() does not write the output to a
803 file.
804
805 edge_hash()
806 Returns, at the end of the run, a hashref keyed by node name,
807 specifically the node at the arrowtail end of the hash, i.e. where the
808 edge starts from.
809
810 Use this to get a list of all nodes and the edges which leave those
811 nodes, the corresponding destination nodes, and the attributes of each
812 edge.
813
814 my($node_hash) = $graph -> node_hash;
815 my($edge_hash) = $graph -> edge_hash;
816
817 for my $from (sort keys %$node_hash)
818 {
819 my($attr) = $$node_hash{$from}{attributes};
820 my($s) = join(', ', map{"$_ => $$attr{$_}"} sort keys %$attr);
821
822 print "Node: $from\n";
823 print "\tAttributes: $s\n";
824
825 for my $to (sort keys %{$$edge_hash{$from} })
826 {
827 for my $edge (@{$$edge_hash{$from}{$to} })
828 {
829 $attr = $$edge{attributes};
830 $s = join(', ', map{"$_ => $$attr{$_}"} sort keys %$attr);
831
832 print "\tEdge: $from$$edge{from_port} -> $to$$edge{to_port}\n";
833 print "\t\tAttributes: $s\n";
834 }
835 }
836 }
837
838 If the caller adds the same edge two (or more) times, the attributes
839 from each call are not coalesced (unlike "node_hash()"), but rather the
840 attributes from each call are stored separately in an arrayref.
841
842 A bit more formally then, $$edge_hash{$from_node}{$to_node} is an
843 arrayref where each element describes one edge, and which defaults to:
844
845 {
846 attributes => {},
847 from_port => $from_port,
848 to_port => $to_port,
849 }
850
851 If from_port is not provided by the caller, it defaults to '' (the
852 empty string). If it is provided, it contains a leading ':'. Likewise
853 for to_port.
854
855 See scripts/report.nodes.and.edges.pl (a version of
856 scripts/html.labels.1.pl) for a complete example.
857
858 log([$level, $message])
859 Logs the message at the given log level.
860
861 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
862
863 Here, [] indicate optional parameters.
864
865 $level defaults to 'debug', and $message defaults to ''.
866
867 If called with $level eq 'error', it dies with $message.
868
869 logger($logger_object)
870 Gets or sets the log object.
871
872 Here, [] indicates an optional parameter.
873
874 node_hash()
875 Returns, at the end of the run, a hashref keyed by node name. Use this
876 to get a list of all nodes and their attributes.
877
878 my($node_hash) = $graph -> node_hash;
879
880 for my $name (sort keys %$node_hash)
881 {
882 my($attr) = $$node_hash{$name}{attributes};
883 my($s) = join(', ', map{"$_ => $$attr{$_}"} sort keys %$attr);
884
885 print "Node: $name\n";
886 print "\tAttributes: $s\n";
887 }
888
889 If the caller adds the same node two (or more) times, the attributes
890 from each call are coalesced (unlike "edge_hash()"), meaning all
891 attributes from all calls are combined under the attributes sub-key.
892
893 A bit more formally then, $$node_hash{$node_name} is a hashref where
894 each element describes one node, and which defaults to:
895
896 {
897 attributes => {},
898 }
899
900 See scripts/report.nodes.and.edges.pl (a version of
901 scripts/html.labels.1.pl) for a complete example, including usage of
902 the corresponding "edge_hash()" method.
903
904 pop_subgraph()
905 Pop off and discard the top element of the scope stack.
906
907 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
908
909 push_subgraph([name => $name, edge => {...}, graph => {...}, node => {...},
910 subgraph => {...}])
911 Sets up a new subgraph environment.
912
913 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
914
915 Here, [] indicate optional parameters.
916
917 name => $name is the name to assign to the subgraph. Name defaults to
918 ''.
919
920 So, without $name, 'subgraph {' is written to the output stream.
921
922 With $name, 'subgraph "$name" {' is written to the output stream.
923
924 Note that subgraph names beginning with 'cluster' are special to
925 Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html#d:clusterrank>.
926
927 See scripts/rank.sub.graph.[1234].pl for the effect of various values
928 for $name.
929
930 edge => {...} is any edge attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
931 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
932 exactly the same way as the edge parameters in the calls to
933 default_edge(%hash), new(edge => {}) and push_subgraph(edge => {}).
934
935 graph => {...} is any graph attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
936 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
937 exactly the same way as the graph parameters in the calls to
938 default_graph(%hash), new(graph => {}) and push_subgraph(graph => {}).
939
940 node => {...} is any node attributes accepted as Graphviz attributes
941 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html>. These are validated in
942 exactly the same way as the node parameters in the calls to
943 default_node(%hash), new(node => {}) and push_subgraph(node => {}).
944
945 subgraph => {..} is for setting attributes applicable to clusters and
946 subgraphs.
947
948 Currently the only subgraph attribute is "rank", but clusters have many
949 attributes available.
950
951 See the second column of the Graphviz attribute docs
952 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html> for details.
953
954 A typical usage would be push_subgraph(subgraph => {rank => 'same'}) so
955 that all nodes mentioned within the subgraph are constrained to be
956 horizontally aligned.
957
958 See scripts/rank.sub.graph.[12].pl and scripts/sub.graph.frames.pl for
959 sample code.
960
961 valid_attributes()
962 Returns a hashref of all attributes known to this module, keyed by type
963 to hashrefs to true values.
964
965 Stored in this module, using Data::Section::Simple.
966
967 These attributes are used to validate attributes in many situations.
968
969 You wouldn't normally need to use this method.
970
971 See scripts/report.valid.attributes.pl. See "Scripts Shipped with this
972 Module" in GraphViz2.
973
974 run([driver => $exe, format => $string, timeout => $integer, output_file =>
975 $output_file])
976 Runs the given program to process the output stream.
977
978 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
979
980 Here, [] indicate optional parameters.
981
982 $driver is the name of the external program to run.
983
984 It defaults to the value supplied in the call to new(global => {driver
985 => '...'}), which in turn defaults to File::Which's which('dot') return
986 value.
987
988 $format is the type of output file to write.
989
990 It defaults to the value supplied in the call to new(global => {format
991 => '...'}), which in turn defaults to 'svg'.
992
993 $timeout is the time in seconds to wait while the external program
994 runs, before dieing with an error.
995
996 It defaults to the value supplied in the call to new(global => {timeout
997 => '...'}), which in turn defaults to 10.
998
999 $output_file is the name of the file into which the output from the
1000 external program is written.
1001
1002 There is no default value for $output_file. If a value is not supplied
1003 for $output_file, the only way to recover the output of the external
1004 program is to call dot_output().
1005
1006 This method performs a series of tasks:
1007
1008 • Run the chosen external program on the "dot_input"
1009
1010 • Capture STDOUT and STDERR from that program
1011
1012 • Die if STDERR contains anything
1013
1014 • Copies STDOUT to the buffer controlled by the dot_output() method
1015
1016 • Write the captured contents of STDOUT to $output_file, if
1017 $output_file has a value
1018
1019 stringify_attributes($context, $option)
1020 Returns a string suitable to writing to the output stream.
1021
1022 $context is one of 'edge', 'graph', 'node', or a special string. See
1023 the code for details.
1024
1025 You wouldn't normally need to use this method.
1026
1027 validate_params($context, \%attributes)
1028 Validate the given attributes within the given context.
1029
1030 Also, if $context is 'subgraph', attributes are allowed to be in the
1031 'cluster' context.
1032
1033 Returns $self to allow method chaining.
1034
1035 $context is one of 'edge', 'global', 'graph', or 'node'.
1036
1037 You wouldn't normally need to use this method.
1038
1039 verbose([$integer])
1040 Gets or sets the verbosity level, for when a logging object is not
1041 used.
1042
1043 Here, [] indicates an optional parameter.
1044
1046 Graphviz version supported
1047 GraphViz2 targets V 2.34.0 of Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.
1048
1049 This affects the list of available attributes per graph item (node,
1050 edge, cluster, etc) available.
1051
1052 See the second column of the Graphviz attribute docs
1053 <https://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/attrs.html> for details.
1054
1055 Supported file formats
1056 Parses the output of "dot -T?", so depends on local installation.
1057
1058 Special characters in node names and labels
1059 GraphViz2 escapes these 2 characters in those contexts: [].
1060
1061 Escaping the 2 chars [] started with V 2.10. Previously, all of []{}
1062 were escaped, but {} are used in records to control the orientation of
1063 fields, so they should not have been escaped in the first place.
1064
1065 It would be nice to also escape | and <, but these characters are used
1066 in specifying fields and ports in records.
1067
1068 See the next couple of points for details.
1069
1070 Ports
1071 Ports are what Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> calls those places
1072 on the outline of a node where edges leave and terminate.
1073
1074 The Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> syntax for ports is a bit
1075 unusual:
1076
1077 • This works: "node_name":port5
1078
1079 • This doesn't: "node_name:port5"
1080
1081 Let me repeat - that is Graphviz syntax, not GraphViz2 syntax. In Perl,
1082 you must do this:
1083
1084 $graph -> add_edge(from => 'struct1:f1', to => 'struct2:f0', color => 'blue');
1085
1086 You don't have to quote all node names in Graphviz
1087 <http://www.graphviz.org/>, but some, such as digits, must be quoted,
1088 so I've decided to quote them all.
1089
1090 How labels interact with ports
1091 You can specify labels with ports in these ways:
1092
1093 • As a string
1094
1095 $graph -> add_node(name => 'struct3', label => "hello\nworld |{ b |{c|<here> d|e}| f}| g | h");
1096
1097 Here, the string contains a port (<here>), field markers (|), and
1098 orientation markers ({}).
1099
1100 Clearly, you must specify the field separator character '|'
1101 explicitly. In the next 2 cases, it is implicit.
1102
1103 Then you use $graph -> add_edge(...) to refer to those ports, if
1104 desired:
1105
1106 $graph -> add_edge(from => 'struct1:f2', to => 'struct3:here', color => 'red');
1107
1108 The same label is specified in the next case.
1109
1110 • As an arrayref of hashrefs
1111
1112 From scripts/record.2.pl:
1113
1114 $graph -> add_node(name => 'struct3', label =>
1115 [
1116 {
1117 text => "hello\nworld",
1118 },
1119 {
1120 text => '{b',
1121 },
1122 {
1123 text => '{c',
1124 },
1125 {
1126 port => '<here>',
1127 text => 'd',
1128 },
1129 {
1130 text => 'e}',
1131 },
1132 {
1133 text => 'f}',
1134 },
1135 {
1136 text => 'g',
1137 },
1138 {
1139 text => 'h',
1140 },
1141 ]);
1142
1143 Each hashref is a field, and hence you do not specify the field
1144 separator character '|'.
1145
1146 Then you use $graph -> add_edge(...) to refer to those ports, if
1147 desired. Again, from scripts/record.2.pl:
1148
1149 $graph -> add_edge(from => 'struct1:f2', to => 'struct3:here', color => 'red');
1150
1151 The same label is specified in the previous case.
1152
1153 • As an arrayref of strings
1154
1155 From scripts/html.labels.1.pl:
1156
1157 $graph -> add_node(name => 'Oakleigh', shape => 'record', color => 'blue',
1158 label => ['West Oakleigh', 'East Oakleigh']);
1159
1160 Here, again, you do not specify the field separator character '|'.
1161
1162 What happens is that each string is taken to be the label of a
1163 field, and each field is given an auto-generated port name of the
1164 form "<port$n>", where $n starts from 1.
1165
1166 Here's how you refer to those ports, again from
1167 scripts/html.labels.1.pl:
1168
1169 $graph -> add_edge(from => 'Murrumbeena', to => 'Oakleigh:port2',
1170 color => 'green', label => '<Drive<br/>Run<br/>Sprint>');
1171
1172 See also the docs for the "add_node(name => $node_name, [%hash])"
1173 method.
1174
1175 Attributes for clusters
1176 Just use subgraph => {...}, because the code (as of V 2.22) accepts
1177 attributes belonging to either clusters or subgraphs.
1178
1179 An example attribute is "pencolor", which is used for clusters but not
1180 for subgraphs:
1181
1182 $graph->push_subgraph(
1183 graph => {label => 'Child the Second'},
1184 name => 'cluster Second subgraph',
1185 node => {color => 'magenta', shape => 'diamond'},
1186 subgraph => {pencolor => 'white'}, # White hides the cluster's frame.
1187 );
1188 # other nodes or edges can be added within it...
1189 $graph->pop_subgraph;
1190
1192 • Handle edges such as 1 -> 2 -> {A B}, as seen in Graphviz
1193 <http://www.graphviz.org/>'s graphs/directed/switch.gv
1194
1195 But how?
1196
1197 • Validate parameters more carefully, e.g. to reject non-hashref
1198 arguments where appropriate
1199
1200 Some method parameter lists take keys whose value must be a
1201 hashref.
1202
1204 Axis Maps <http://www.axismaps.com/>.
1205
1206 Polygon Map Generation <http://www-cs-
1207 students.stanford.edu/~amitp/game-programming/polygon-map-generation/>.
1208 Read more on that here
1209 <http://blogs.perl.org/users/max_maischein/2011/06/display-your-
1210 data---randompoissondisc.html>.
1211
1212 Voronoi Applications
1213 <http://www.voronoi.com/wiki/index.php?title=Voronoi_Applications>.
1214
1216 Many thanks are due to the people who chose to make Graphviz
1217 <http://www.graphviz.org/> Open Source.
1218
1219 And thanks to Leon Brocard <http://search.cpan.org/~lbrocard/>, who
1220 wrote GraphViz, and kindly gave me co-maint of the module.
1221
1223 Version numbers < 1.00 represent development versions. From 1.00 up,
1224 they are production versions.
1225
1227 <https://github.com/ronsavage/GraphViz2.git>
1228
1230 GraphViz2 was written by Ron Savage <ron@savage.net.au> in 2011.
1231
1232 Home page: <http://savage.net.au/index.html>.
1233
1235 Australian copyright (c) 2011, Ron Savage.
1236
1237 All Programs of mine are 'OSI Certified Open Source Software';
1238 you can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of
1239 The Perl License, a copy of which is available at:
1240 http://dev.perl.org/licenses/
1241
1242
1243
1244perl v5.34.0 2022-01-21 GraphViz2(3)