Code2UML: Agentic LLMs with context engineering for scalable software visualization
It addresses the scalability bottleneck of LLM-based code analysis for real-world codebases by ensuring intermediate representations fit within context limits, enabling automated software documentation for developers.
The paper introduces an agentic LLM architecture with context engineering for automated UML diagram generation from source code, achieving 91.5% syntactic validity and 0.858 relationship precision across 12 repositories in 4 languages, with stable quality regardless of codebase size.
Large Language Model (LLM)-based code analysis tools are adopted to automate software documentation tasks. However, the scalability of these approaches to real codebases, where Intermediate Representations (IR) exceed LLM context limits, remains underexplored. This paper introduces an agentic architecture with context engineering for automated UML diagram generation from source code repositories. It employs a hierarchy of five specialized agents: PlannerAgent, AnalyzerAgent, DiagramAgent, CorrectorAgent and DependencyAnalyzerAgent, built on the Claude Agent SDK, each addressing a distinct cognitive subtask. A deterministic, importance-weighted IR compaction layer transforms full project IRs into diagram-specific views guaranteed to fit within token constraints, requiring no LLM calls and completing in milliseconds. Thus, we evaluate the system across 12 open-source repositories in 4 programming languages (Java, JavaScript, PHP, Python) and 7 UML diagram types, producing 84 observations assessed on 5 automated metrics. Results demonstrate high syntactic validity (mean: 91.5%, with component and deployment diagrams reaching 100%), strong relationship precision (mean: 0.858) and consistent structural quality (mean: 81.7/100, with cross-language variance of 3.1 points). Entity recall averaged 0.313, reflecting deliberate architectural prioritization over exhaustive coverage. A sensitivity analysis (31 to 4,578 IR entities) confirms that quality scores remain stable regardless of scale.