dependency-graph is a command-line tool that can visualize the dependencies of packages. The tool takes the path to an Xcode project or a Package.swift file as input and outputs a graph that shows the dependencies of the packages in the project or package.
The following graphs are examples of the graphs that dependency-graph can output. The first graph built by providing dependency-graph the path to a Package.swift file and the second graph was made by providing dependency-graph the path to an .xcodeproj file as input.
Swift Package | Xcode Project |
---|---|
Nodes shaped as ellipsis represent products, e.g. the libraries in a Swift package, and the square nodes represent targets.
Start off by installing the tool with Homebrew.
brew tap simonbs/dependency-graph https://github.com/simonbs/dependency-graph.git
brew install dependency-graph
Note If you get the following error when attempting to install dependency-graph:
Error: Cannot install under Rosetta 2 in ARM default prefix (/opt/homebrew)! To rerun under ARM use: arch -arm64 brew install ... To install under x86_64, install Homebrew into /usr/local.
You can use the the following to install dependency-graph:
arch -arm64 brew install dependency-graph
You may now run the following command to verify that the tool was installed correctly. The following command should print information on how the tool can be used.
dependency-graph --help
Run the dependency-graph
command with the path to a folder containing an .xcodeproj or Package.swift file.
dependency-graph ~/Developer/Example
You may also pass the full path to the .xcodeproj or Package.swift file as shown below.
dependency-graph ~/Developer/Example/Example.xcodeproj
The dependency-graph
command will output a textual representation of a graph. By default the tool will output a graph using the DOT syntax. For example, if the Xcode project or Package.swift file contains the following dependencies:
Library A in Package A depends on Target A
Library B in Package B depends on Target B
Library A in Package A depends on Library B in Package B
The output of the tool would be a graph that looks like this:
digraph g {
subgraph cluster_packageA {
label="Package A"
libraryA [label="LibraryB", shape=ellipse]
targetA [label="TargetA", shape=box]
}
subgraph cluster_packageB {
label="Package B"
libraryB [label="LibraryB", shape=ellipse]
targetB [label="TargetB", shape=box]
}
libraryA -> targetA
libraryB -> targetB
libraryA -> libraryB
}
The output can be rendered to an image by piping it to a renderer. See the following sections for details on the supported renderers.
By default dependency-graph will use the DOT syntax which can be rendered by the dot CLI, which is part of Graphviz.
Install Graphviz and run dependency-graph
and pass the output to the newly installed dot
CLI.
brew install graphviz
dependency-graph ~/Developer/Example | dot -Tsvg -o graph.svg
When rendering the graph to a PNG, you will likely want to specify the size of the output to ensure it is readable. To generate an image with dot that is exactly 6000 pixels wide or 8000 pixels tall but not necessarily both, do the following:
dependency-graph ~/Developer/Example | dot -Tpng -Gsize=60,80\! -Gdpi=100 -o graph.png
You may want to play around with the values for --node-spacing
and --rank-spacing
to increase the readability of the graph.
dependency-graph --node-spacing 50 --rank-spacing 150 ~/Developer/Example | dot -Tsvg -o graph.svg
For large projects the graph may become unreadable. Passing the output through Grahpviz' unflatten command may improve the results.
dependency-graph ~/Developer/Example | unflatten -l 100 -c 100 -f | dot -Tpng -o graph.png
Specify the --syntax mermaid
option to have dependency-graph output a graph using the Mermaid diagram syntax.
The output be rendered to an image using the the mermaid cli.
npm install -g @mermaid-js/mermaid-cli
dependency-graph --syntax mermaid ~/Developer/Example | mmdc -o graph.svg
To generate an image on a page that is 6000 pixels wide with mermaid, do the following:
dependency-graph --syntax mermaid ~/Developer/Example | mmdc -o graph.png -w 6000
You may also want to play around with the values for --node-spacing
and --rank-spacing
to increase the readability of the graph.
dependency-graph --syntax mermaid --node-spacing 50 --rank-spacing 150 ~/Developer/Example | mmdc -o graph.png
Specify the --syntax d2
option to have dependency-graph output a graph using the d2 scripting language.
The output be rendered to an image using the the d2 cli.
curl -fsSL https://d2lang.com/install.sh | sh -s --
dependency-graph --syntax d2 ~/Developer/Example | d2 - graph.png
Pass the --packages-only
flag to include only the Xcode project and Swift packages in the graph. This omits the libraries and targets within the Xcode project and Swift packages.
As I'm splitting my iOS and macOS applications into small Swift packages with several small targets, I started wishing for a way to visualise the relationship between the products and targets in my Swift packages. That's why I built this tool.
Several other tools can visualise a Swift package, however, I wanted a tool that can take both a Swift package and an Xcode project as input.
The example in the top of this README shows a visualization of a Swift package and the graph below shows a visualisation of an Xcode project. Notice that the left-most subgraph represents an Xcode project named ScriptUIEditor.xcodeproj and it has three targets: ScriptUIEditor, ScriptBrowserFeature, and ScriptBrowserFeatureUITests. Two of these depends on the Swift packages represented by the remaining subgraphs.
These graphs provide a good way to get an overview of a package or the relationship between several packages. Sometimes it can be helpful to generate multiple graphs to get a good overview, for example, a graph of the entire project and graphs of selected packages. Fortunately, the dependency-graph
CLI makes this easy as it can take either an Xcode project and a Package.swift file as input.
dependency-graph parses Xcode project using XcodeProj and interprets Package.swift files using the output from the swift package dump-package
command.
This means that dependency-graph does not perform any package resolution or build the project, making it very fast to run the dependency-graph
command but also produces a less detailed output that tools that rely on package resolution.
The tool has a focus on visualising local dependencies, that is, Swift packages stored locally in a project. dependency-graph will include remote dependencies in the visualisation but it will not clone those dependencies to deterine their dependency graph. It is technically possible to include this but it has not been necessary for my use cases.