FreeBSD manual
download PDF document: pack.3.pdf
LIBPACK(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual LIBPACK(3)
NAME
libpack - support for connected components
SYNOPSIS
#include <graphviz/pack.h>
typedef enum { l_clust, l_node, l_graph, l_array} pack_mode;
typedef struct {
float aspect; /* desired aspect ratio */
int sz; /* row/column size size */
unsigned int margin; /* margin left around objects, in points */
int doSplines; /* use splines in constructing graph shape */
pack_mode mode; /* granularity and method */
boolean *fixed; /* fixed[i] == true implies g[i] should not be moved */
packval_t* vals; /* for arrays, sort numbers */
int flags;
} pack_info;
point* putRects(int ng, boxf* bbs, pack_info* pinfo);
int packRects(int ng, boxf* bbs, pack_info* pinfo);
point* putGraphs (int, Agraph_t**, Agraph_t*, pack_info*);
int packGraphs (int, Agraph_t**, Agraph_t*, pack_info*);
int packSubgraphs (int, Agraph_t**, Agraph_t*, pack_info*);
pack_mode getPackMode (Agraph_t*, pack_mode dflt);
int getPack (Agraph_t*, int, int);
int isConnected (Agraph_t*);
Agraph_t** ccomps (Agraph_t*, int*, char*);
Agraph_t** pccomps (Agraph_t*, int*, char*, boolean*);
int nodeInduce (Agraph_t*);
DESCRIPTION
libpack supports the use of connected components in the context of
laying out graphs using other graphviz libraries. One set of functions
can be used to take a single graph and break it apart into connected
components. A complementary set of functions takes a collection of
graphs (not necessarily components of a single graph) which have been
laid out separately, and packs them together.
As this library is meant to be used with libcommon, it relies on the
Agraphinfo_t, Agnodeinfo_t and Agedgeinfo_t used in that library. The
specific dependencies are given below in the function descriptions.
Creating components
Agraph_t** ccomps (Agraph_t* g, int* cnt, char* pfx)
The function ccomps takes a graph g and returns an array of pointers to
subgraphs of g which are its connected components. cnt is set to the
number of components. If pfx is non-NULL, it is used as a prefix for
the names of the subgraphs; otherwise, the string ``_cc_'' is used.
Note that the subgraphs only contain the relevant nodes, not any
This is identical to ccomps except that is puts all pinned nodes in the
first component returned. In addition, if pinned is non-NULL, it is set
to true if pinned nodes are found and false otherwise.
int nodeInduce (Agraph_t* g)
This function takes a subgraph g and finds all edges in its root graph
both of whose endpoints are in g. It returns the number of such edges
and, if this edge is not already in the subgraph, it is added.
int isConnected (Agraph_t* g)
This function returns non-zero if the graph g is connected.
Packing components
point* putGraphs (int ng, Agraph_t** gs, Agraph_t* root, pack_info ip)
putGraphs packs together a collection of laid out graphs into a single
layout which avoids any overlap. It takes as input ng graphs gs. For
each graph, it is assumed that all the nodes have been positioned using
pos, and that the xsize and ysize fields have been set.
If root is non-NULL, it is taken as the root graph of the subgraphs gs
and is used to find the edges. Otherwise, putGraphs uses the edges
found in each graph gs[i].
For the modes l_node, l_clust, and l_graph, the packing is done using
the polyomino-based algorithm of Freivalds et al. This allows for a
fairly tight packing, in which a convex part of one graph might be
inserted into the concave part of another. The granularity of the
polyominoes used depends on the value of ip->mode. If this is l_node, a
polyomino is constructed to approximate the nodes and edges. If this is
l_clust, the polyomino treats top-level clusters as single rectangles,
unioned with the polyominoes for the remaining nodes and edges. If the
value is l_graph, the polyomino for a graph is a single rectangle
corresponding to the bounding box of the graph.
The mode l_node specifies that the graphs should be packed as an array.
If ip->doSplines is true, the function uses the spline information in
the spl field of an edge, if it exists. Otherwise, the algorithm
represents an edge as a straight line segment connecting node centers.
The parameter ip->margin specifies a boundary of margin points to be
allowed around each node. It must be non-negative.
The parameter ip->fixed, if non-null, should point to an array of ng
booleans. If ip->fixed[i] is true, graph gs[i] should be left at its
original position. The packing will first first place all of the fixed
graphs, then fill in the with the remaining graphs.
The function returns an array of points which can be used as the origin
of the bounding box of each graph. If the graphs are translated to
these positions, none of the graph components will overlap. The array
returned is obtained from malloc and must be freed by the caller. If
any problem occurs, putGraphs returns NULL. As a side-effect, at its
start, putGraphs sets the bb of each graph to reflect its initial
layout. Note that putGraphs does not do any translation or change the
input graphs in any other way than setting the bb.
This function uses the bb field in Agraphinfo_t, the pos, xsize and
int packSubgraphs (int ng, Agraph_t** gs, Agraph_t* root, pack_info* ip)
This function simply calls packGraphs with the given arguments, and
then recomputes the bounding box of the root graph.
int pack_graph(int ng, Agraph_t** gs, Agraph_t* root, boolean* fixed)
uses packSubgraphs to place the individual subgraphs into a single
layout with the parameters obtained from getPackInfo. If successful,
dotneato_postprocess is called on the root graph.
point* putRects (int ng, boxf* bbs, pack_info* ip)
putRects packs together a collection of rectangles into a single layout
which avoids any overlap. It takes as input ng rectangles bbs.
Its behavior and return value are analogous to those of putGraphs.
However, the modes l_node and l_clust are illegal. The fields fixed
and doSplines of ip are unused.
int packRects (int ng, boxf* bbs, pack_info* ip)
packRects is analogous to packGraphs: it calls putRects and, if this is
successful, it translates the rectangles in bbs appropriately.
Utility functions
The library provides several functions which can be used to tailor the
packing based on graph attributes.
pack_mode parsePackModeInfo(char* p, pack_mode dflt, pack_info* pinfo)
analyzes p as a string representation of pack mode, storing the
information in pinfo. If p is "cluster", it returns l_clust; for
"graph", it returns l_graph; for "node", it returns l_node; for
"array", it returns l_array; for "aspect", it returns l_aspect;
otherwise, it returns dflt. Related data is also stored in pinfo.
pack_mode getPackModeInfo(Agraph_t * g, pack_mode dflt, pack_info* pinfo)
This function processes the graph's "packmode" attribute, storing the
information in pinfo. It returns pinfo->mode. The attribute is
processed using parsePackModeInfo with dflt passed as the default
argument.
pack_mode getPackMode (Agraph_t* g, pack_mode dflt)
This function returns a pack_mode associated with g.
int getPack (Agraph_t* g, int not_def, int dflt)
This function queries the graph attribute "pack". If this is defined as
a non-negative integer, the integer is returned; if it is defined as
"true", the value dflt is returned; otherwise, the value not_def is
returned.
pack_mode getPackInfo(Agraph_t * g, pack_mode dflt, int dfltMargin,
pack_info* pinfo)
This function calls both getPackModeInfo and getPack, storing the
information in pinfo. dfltMargin is used for both integer arguments of
getPack, with the result saved as pinfo->margin. It returns
pinfo->mode.
SEE ALSO
dot(1), neato(1), twopi(1), libgraph(3)
K. Freivalds et al., "Disconnected Graph Layout and the Polyomino
Packing Approach", GD0'01, LNCS 2265, pp. 378-391.
04 APRIL 2009 LIBPACK(3)