
C::Scan - scan C language files for easily recognized constructs.

$c = new C::Scan 'filename' => $filename, 'filename_filter' => $filter,
'add_cppflags' => $addflags;
$c->set('includeDirs' => [$Config::Config{shrpdir}]);
my $fdec = $c->get('parsed_fdecls');

This description is VERY incomplete.
This module uses Data::Flow interface, thus one uses it in the following fashion:
$c = new C::Scan(attr1 => $value1, attr2 => $value2);
$c->set( attr3 => $value3 );
$value4 = $c->get('attr4');
Attributes are depending on some other attributes. The only required attribute, i.e., the attribute which should be set, is filename, which denotes which file to parse.
All other attributes are either optional, or would be calculated basing on values of required and optional attributes.
includesValue: reference to a list of included files.
defines_argsValue: reference to hash of macros with arguments. The values are references to an array of length 2, the first element is a reference to the list of arguments, the second one being the expansion. Newlines are not unescaped, thus
#define C(x,y) E\
F
will finish with ("C" => [ ["x", "y"], "E\nF"]).
defines_no_argsValue: reference to hash of macros without arguments. Newlines are not escaped, thus
#define A B
will finish with ("A" => "B").
fdeclsValue: reference to list of declarations of functions.
inlinesValue: reference to list of definitions of functions.
parsed_fdeclsValue: reference to list of parsed declarations of functions.
A parsed declaration is a reference to a list of (rt, nm, args, ft, mod). Here rt is return type of a function, nm is the name, args is the list of arguments, ft is the full text of the declaration, and mod is the modifier (which is always undef).
Each entry in the list args is of the same form (ty, nm, args, ft, mod), here ty is the type of an argument, nm is the name (a generated one if missing in the declaration), args is undef, and mod is the string of array modifiers.
typedef_hashValue: a reference to a hash which contains known typedefs as keys. Values of the hash are array references of length 2, with what should be put before/after the type for a standalone typedef declaration (but without the typedef substring).
Parse uses naive heuristics.
typedef_textsValue: a reference to a list which contains known expansions of typedefs.
typedefs_maybeValue: a reference to a list of typedefed names. Heuristics are used.
vdeclsValue: a reference to a list of extern variable declarations.
typedef_structsValue: a reference to a hash of parsed struct declarations from typedefs. Keys are typedefed names, values are undefs if not a struct, and array references (with what?) for values.