views:

188

answers:

5

I'm currently working on a very large project, and am under a lot of pressure to finish it soon, and I'm having a serious problem. The programmer who wrote this last defined variables in a very odd way - the config variables aren't all in the same file, they're spread out across the entire project of over 500 files and 100k+ lines of code, and I'm having a hell of a time figuring out where a certain variable is, so I can fix an issue.
Is there a way to track this variable down? I believe he's using SMARTY (Which I can not stand, due to issues like this), and the variable is a template variable. I'm fairly sure that the variable I'm looking for was initially defined as a PHP variable, then that variable is passed into SMARTY, so I'd like to track down the PHP one, however if that's impossible - how can I track down where he defined the variable for SMARTY?

P.S. I'm in Vista, and don't have ssh access to the server, so 'grep' is out of the question.

A: 

It's not a perfect solution, but I find agent ransack useful for searching large directories and files. Might help you narrow things down. The search results will allow you to read the exact line it finds a match on in the result pane.

Steerpike
+1  A: 

This sort of thing is the #1 reason I install Cygwin on all my windows machines.

grep myvariablename `find project_dir -name "*.php"

I can't imagine programming without a working grep.

Nathan
Try ack, it's better than grep. No, really: http://betterthangrep.com/
Charles
Holy smokes that looks awesome. Installing now from CPAN everywhere.
Nathan
Hey, I've been using ack for a couple weeks now and I love it. Thanks again, Charles!
Nathan
A: 

Just use one of the available PHP IDEs (or a simple text editor like Notepad++ if you're really desperate) and search for the name of the variable in all source files (most PHP IDEs also support finding where functions/vars were defined and allow you to jump to the relevant piece of code). Though it seems weird that you don't know what piece of code calls the template (whether it's Smarty or anything else doesn't really matter). You should be able to drill down in the code starting from the URI (using any IDE which supports debugging), because that way you're bound to see where said variable is defined.

wimvds
A: 

If you use the netbeans editor just "right click" -> "go to Definition"

Or ctrl + click on the variable.

If the editor can't figure it out, you could fallback to the "Find in files" option.

Bob Fanger
+2  A: 

Brute force way, because sometimes smarty variables are not directly assigned, but their names can be stored in variables, concatenated from many strings or be result of some functions, that makes it impossible to find in files by simply searching / greping.

Firstly, write your own function to print readable backtrace, ie:

function print_backtrace()
{
    $backtrace = debug_backtrace(FALSE);
    foreach($backtrace as $trace)
        echo "{$trace['file']} :: {$trace['line']}<br>";
}

Open main smarty file (Smarty.class.php by default) and around line 580 there is function called assign. Modify it to watch for desired variable name:

function assign($tpl_var, $value = null)
{
    if($tpl_var == 'FOOBAR') /* Searching for FOOBAR */
    {
        print_backtrace();
        exit;
    }

The same modification may be required for second function - assign_by_ref. Now after running script you should have output like that:

D:\www\test_proj\libs\smarty\Smarty.class.php :: 584
D:\www\test_proj\classes.php :: 11
D:\www\test_proj\classes.php :: 6
D:\www\test_proj\functions.php :: 7
D:\www\test_proj\index.php :: 100

Second line points to the place where variable was first assigned.

dev-null-dweller
Thanks, this is a great idea - I'm definitely saving this code for future debugging, however I ended up just using grep as suggested below.
Jon