Crates.io | precious-testhelper |
lib.rs | precious-testhelper |
version | 0.7.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2022-09-19 02:07:32.02827 |
updated_at | 2024-06-17 02:04:11.507975 |
description | A helper library for precious tests - not for external use |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/houseabsolute/precious |
max_upload_size | |
id | 668882 |
size | 48,638 |
Who doesn't love linters and tidiers (aka pretty printers)? I sure love them. I love them so much that in many of my projects I might have five or ten!
Wouldn't it be great if you could run all of them with just one command? Wouldn't it be great if that command just had one config file to define what tools to run on each part of your project? Wouldn't it be great if Sauron were our ruler?
Now with Precious you can say "yes" to all of those questions.
Precious is a code quality tool that lets you run all of your linters and tidiers with a single command. It's features include:
precious.toml
, defines all of your linter and tidier commands, as well as what files
they operate on.There are several ways to install this tool.
Install my universal binary installer (ubi) tool and you can
use it to download precious
and many other tools.
$> ubi --project houseabsolute/precious --in ~/bin
You can grab a binary release from the releases page. Untar the tarball and put the executable it contains somewhere in your path and you're good to go.
You can also install this via cargo
by running cargo install precious
. See
the cargo documentation to understand
where the binary will be installed.
The precious
binary has a config init
subcommand that will generate a config file for you. This
subcommand takes the following flags:
Flag | Description |
---|---|
-a , --auto |
Automatically determines what components to create |
-c , ‑‑component <COMPONENT> |
The component(s) to generate config for (see below) |
-p , ‑‑path <PATH> |
The path to which the config file should be written. Defaults to ./precious.toml |
You must pass either --auto
or at least one --component
. In --auto
mode, precious
will look
at all the files in your project and generate config based on the types of files it finds.
Here's an example for a Rust project:
$> precious config init --component rust --component gitignore --component yaml
The following components are supported:
go
- Generates config for a Go project which uses golangci-lint
for linting and tidying.perl
- Generates config for a Perl project which uses a variety of tools, including
perlcritic
and
perltidy
.rust
- Generates config for a Rust project which uses
rustfmt
for tidying and
clippy
for linting.shell
- Generated config which uses shfmt
for tidying and
shellcheck
for linting.gitignore
- Generates config to lint and tidy (by sorting) .gitignore
files using
omegasort
.markdown
- Generates config to lint and tidy Markdown files using
prettier
.toml
- Generates config to lint and tidy TOML files using taplo
.yaml
- Generates config to lint and tidy YAML files using prettier
.This repo's examples directory has precious.toml
config files for several languages.
Contributions for other languages are welcome!
The config in the examples matches what precious config init
generates, and there are comments in
the files with more details about how you might change this configuration.
Also check out the example install-dev-tools.sh
script for a
tool to install all of your project's linting and tidying dependencies. You can customize this as
needed to install only the tools you need for your project.
Precious is configured via a single precious.toml
or .precious.toml
file that lives in your
project root. The file is in TOML format.
There is just one key that can be set in the top level table of the config file:
Key | Type | Required? | Description |
---|---|---|---|
exclude |
array of strings | no | Each array member is a pattern that will be matched against potential files when precious is run. These patterns are matched in the same way as patterns in a gitignore file. You can use lines starting with a ! to negate the meaning of previous rules in the list, so that anything that matches is not excluded even if it matches previous rules. |
All other configuration is on a per-command basis. A command is something that either tidies (aka pretty prints or beautifies), lints, or does both. These commands are external programs which precious will execute as needed.
Each command is defined in a block named something like [commands.command-name]
. Each name after
the commands.
prefix must be unique. You can have run the same executable differently with
different commands as long as each command has a unique name.
Commands are run in the same order as they appear in the config file.
There are three configuration keys for command invocation. All of them are optional. If none are
specified, precious
defaults to this:
invoke = "per-file"
working-dir = "root"
path-args = "file"
This runs the command once per file with the working directory for the command as the project root. The command will be passed a relative path to the file from the root as a single argument to the command.
invoke
The invoke
key tells precious
how the command should be invoked.
Value | Description |
---|---|
"per-file" |
Run this command once for each matching file. This is the default. |
"per-dir" |
Run this command once for each matching directory. |
"once" |
Run this command once. |
There are some experimental options for the invoke
key as well. The exact names or the details
of how they operate may change in a future release.
Value | Description |
---|---|
.per‑file‑or‑dir = n |
If the number of matching files is less than n , run this command once for each matching file. Otherwise run it once for each matching directory. |
.per‑file‑or‑once = n |
If the number of matching files is less than n , run this command once for each matching file. Otherwise run it once. |
.per‑dir‑or‑dir = n |
If the number of matching directories is less than n , run this command once for each matching directory. Otherwise run it once. |
These are written like this:
[commands.some-command]
invoke.per-file-or-dir = 42
These experimental options are useful for optimizing the speed of running a command. In some cases, a command can be run in multiple ways, and how quickly it completes depends on how many files or directories need to be linted or tidied.
The golangci-lint
tool is a good example. Invoking it multiple times for a few directories can be
much faster than running it against the entire repo. However, once there are enough directories to
check, invoking it once for the entire repo will be faster.
Note that the path-args
setting needs to work with both possible cases for these options. For
golangci-lint
, that means setting it to dir
when using per-dir-or-once
.
working-dir
The working-dir
key tells precious what the working directory should be when the command is run.
Value | Description |
---|---|
"root" |
The working directory is the project root. This is the default. |
"dir" |
The working directory is the directory containing the matching files. This means precious will chdir into each matching directory in turn as it executes the command. |
.chdir‑to = "path" |
The working directory will be the given path when executing the command. This path must be relative to the project root. |
working-dir.chdir-to = "path"
The final option for working-dir
is to set an explicit path as the working directory.
With this option, the working directory will be set to the given subdirectory when the command is executed. Relative paths passed to the command will be relative to this subdirectory rather than the project root.
path-args
The path-args
key tells precious how paths should be passed when the command is run.
Value | Description |
---|---|
"file" |
Passes the path to the matching file relative to the root. This is the default. With working-directory.chdir-to the path is relative to the given working directory. |
"dir" |
Passes the path to the directory containing the matching files relative to the root. With working-directory.chdir-to the path is relative to the given working directory. |
"none" |
No paths are passed to the command at all. |
"dot" |
Always pass . as the path. This is useful when working-dir = "dir" and the command still requires a path to be passed. |
"absolute‑file" |
Passes the path to the matching file as an absolute path from the filesystem's root directory. |
"absolute‑dir" |
Passes the path to the directory containing the matching files as an absolute path from the filesystem's root directory. |
Most combinations of these configuration keys are allowed, but there are some nonsensical
combinations that will cause precious
to exit with an error.
invoke = "per-file"
path-args = "dir", "none", "dot", or "absolute-dir"
You cannot invoke a command once per file without passing the filename.
invoke = "per-dir"
path-args = "none" or "dot"
working-dir = "root"
# ... or ...
working-dir.chdir-to = "whatever"
You cannot invoke a command once per directory from a root without passing the directory name or a
list of file names. If you want to run a command once per directory with no path arguments or using
.
as the path then you must set working-dir = "dir"
.
invoke = "once"
working-dir = "dir"
You cannot invoke a command once if the working directory is set to each matching directory in turn.
See the Invocation Examples documentation for comprehensive examples of every possible set of options.
The other keys allowed for each command are as follows:
Key | Type | Required? | Applies To | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
type |
string | yes | all | This must be either lint , tidy , or both . This defines what type of command this is. A command which is both must define lint-flags or tidy-flags as well. |
|
include |
string or array of strings | yes | all | Each array member is a gitignore pattern that tells precious what files this command applies to. You can use lines starting with a ! to negate the meaning of previous rules in the list, so that anything that matches is not included even if it matches previous rules. |
|
exclude |
string or array of strings | no | all | Each array member is a gitignore pattern that tells precious what files this command should not be applied to. You can use lines starting with a ! to negate the meaning of previous rules in the list, so that anything that matches is not excluded even if it matches previous rules. |
|
cmd |
string or array of strings | yes | all | This is the executable to be run followed by any arguments that should always be passed. | |
env |
table - values are strings | no | all | This key allows you to set one or more environment variables that will be set when the command is run. The values in this table must be strings. | |
path-flag |
string | no | all | By default, precious will pass the path being operated on to the command it executes as the final, positional, argument(s). If the command takes paths via a flag you need to specify that flag with this key. |
|
lint-flags |
string or array of strings | no | combined linter & tidier | If a command is both a linter and tidier then it may take extra flags to operate in linting mode. This is how you set that flag. | |
tidy-flags |
string or array of strings | no | combined linter & tidier | If a command is both a linter and tidier then it may take extra flags to operate in tidying mode. This is how you set that flag. | |
ok-exit-codes |
integer or array of integers | yes | all | Any exit code that does not indicate an abnormal exit should be here. For most commands this is just 0 but some commands may use other exit codes even for a normal exit. |
|
lint-failure-exit-codes |
integer or array of integers | no | linters | If the command is a linter then these are the status codes that indicate a lint failure. These need to be specified so precious can distinguish an exit because of a lint failure versus an exit because of some unexpected issue. |
|
ignore-stderr |
string or array of strings | all | all | By default, precious assumes that when a command sends output to stderr that indicates a failure to lint or tidy. This parameter can specify one or more regexes. These regexes will be matched against the command's stderr output. If any of the regexes match, the stderr output is ignored. |
|
labels |
string or array of strings | all | all | One or more labels used to categorize commands. See below for more details. |
For commands that can be run from a subdirectory, you may need to specify config files in terms of
the project root. You can do this by using the string $PRECIOUS_ROOT
in any element of the cmd
configuration key. So for example you might write something like this:
cmd = ["some-tidier", "--config", "$PRECIOUS_ROOT/some-tidier.conf"]
The $PRECIOUS_ROOT
string will be replaced by the absolute path to the project root.
To get help run precious --help
.
The root command takes the following flags:
Flag | Description |
---|---|
-c , --config <config> |
Path to the precious config file |
-j , --jobs <jobs> |
Number of parallel jobs (threads) to run (defaults to one per core) |
-q , --quiet |
Suppresses most output |
-a , --ascii |
Replace super-fun Unicode symbols with terribly boring ASCII |
-v , --verbose |
Enable verbose output |
-V , --version |
Prints version information |
-d , --debug |
Enable debugging output |
-t , --trace |
Enable tracing output (maximum logging) |
-h , --help |
Prints help information |
Precious will always execute commands in parallel, with one process per CPU by default. The
execution is parallelized based on the command's invocation configuration. For example, on a 12 CPU
system, a command that has invoke = "per-file"
will be executed up to 12 times in parallel, with
each command execution receiving one file.
You can disable parallel execution by passing --jobs 1
.
The precious
command has three subcommands, lint
, tidy
, and config
. You must always specify
one of these. The lint
and tidy
commands take the same flags:
When you run precious
you must tell it what paths to operate on. There are several flags for this:
You can tidy or lint with just a single command by passing the --command
flag:
$> precious lint --command some-command --all
The name passed to --command
must match the name of the command in your config file. So in the
above example, this would look for a command defined as [commands.some-command]
in your config.
Each command can be assigned one or more labels. This lets you create arbitrary groups of commands.
Then when you tidy or lint you can pick a label by passing a --label
flag:
$> precious lint --label some-label --all
The way labels work is as follows:
labels
key in its config has one label, default
.tidy
or lint
without a --label
flag uses the default
label.labels
to a command and you want that command included in the default
label, you
must explicitly include it:
[command.some-command]
# ...
labels = [ "default", "some-label" ]
When selecting paths precious
always respects your ignore files. Right now it only knows how
this works for git, and it will respect all of the following ignore files:
.ignore
and .gitignore
files..git/info/exclude
file.$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ignore
.This is implemented using the rust ignore
crate, so adding
support for other VCS systems should be proposed there.
In addition, you can specify excludes for all commands by setting a global exclude
key.
Finally, you can specify per-command include
and exclude
keys.
When precious
runs it does the following to determine which commands apply to which paths.
--all
- All files under the project root (the directory containing the precious config file).--git
- All files in the git repo that have been modified, including staged files.--staged
- All files in the git repo that have been staged.--git-diff-from <REF>
- All files in the current HEAD
that differ from <REF>
.invoke
key, a list of files to be checked is generated and the command's
include/exclude rules are applied. To be included, a file must match at least one include rule
and not match any exclude rules to be accepted.
invoke
is per-file
, then the rules are applied one file at a time.invoke
is per-dir
, then if any file in the directory matches the rules, the command will
be run on that directory.invoke
is once
, then the rules are applied to all of the files at once. If any one of
those files matches the include rule, the command will be run.config
SubcommandIn addition to the init
subcommand, this command has a list
subcommand. This prints a Unicode
table describing the commands in your config file.
Found config file at: /home/autarch/projects/precious/precious.toml
┌─────────────────────┬──────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Name ┆ Type ┆ Runs │
╞═════════════════════╪══════╪════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╡
│ rustfmt ┆ both ┆ rustfmt --edition 2021 │
├╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌┼╌╌╌╌╌╌┼╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌┤
│ clippy ┆ lint ┆ cargo clippy --locked --all-targets --all-features │
│ ┆ ┆ --workspace -- -D clippy::all │
├╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌┼╌╌╌╌╌╌┼╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌┤
│ prettier ┆ both ┆ ./node_modules/.bin/prettier --no-config --print-width │
│ ┆ ┆ 100 --prose-wrap always │
├╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌┼╌╌╌╌╌╌┼╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌╌┤
│ omegasort-gitignore ┆ both ┆ omegasort --sort path --unique │
└─────────────────────┴──────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Here are some recommendations for how to get the best experience with precious.
invoke
the CommandSome commands might work equally well with invoke
set to either per-dir
or once
. The right run
mode to choose depends on how you are using precious.
In general, if you either have a very small set of directories, or you are running precious on
most or all of the directories at once, then once
will be faster.
However, if you have a larger set of directories and you usually only need to lint or tidy a small
subset of these at once, then per-dir
mode will be faster.
You can also use the experimental invoke.per-dir-or-once = n
option to invoke the command one of
two ways, depending on the number of directories that precious will operate on.
Many commands will accept a "quiet" flag of some sort. In general, you probably do not want to run commands in a quiet mode with precious.
In the case of a successful tidy or lint command execution, precious already hides all stdout from the command that it runs. If the command fails somehow, precious will print out the command's stdout and stderr output.
By default, precious treats any output to stderr as an error in the command (as opposed to a
linting failure). You can use the ignore-stderr
to specify one or more regexes for allowed stderr
output.
In addition, you can see all stdout and stderr output from a command by running precious in
--debug
mode.
All of which is to say that in general there's no value to running a command in quiet mode with precious. All that does is make it harder to debug issues with that command when lint checks fail or other issues occur.
When running in --tidy
mode, precious always exits with 0
if there are no errors when tidying,
whether or not any files are tidied.
When running in --lint
mode, precious will exit with 0
when all files pass linting. If any lint
commands fail it will exit with 1
.
In both modes, if any commands fail, either by returning exit codes that aren't listed as ok or by
printing to stderr unexpectedly, then the exit code will not be 0
or 1
.
There are some configuration scenarios that you may need to handle. Here are some examples:
Some commands, such as rust-clippy, expect to run just once across the entire source tree, rather than once per file or directory.
In order to make that happen you should use the following config:
include = "**/*.rs"
invoke = "once"
path-args = "dot" # or "none"
This will cause precious
to run the command exactly once in the project root.
If you want to run the command without passing the path being operated on to the command, set
invoke = "per-dir"
, working-dir = "dir"
, and path-args = "none"
:
include = "**/*.rs"
invoke = "per-dir"
working-dir = "dir"
path-args = "none"
Use an ignore pattern starting with !
in the exclude
list:
[commands.rustfmt]
type = "both"
include = "**/*.rs"
exclude = [
"path/to/dir",
"!path/to/dir/included.rs",
]
cmd = ["rustfmt"]
lint-flags = "--check"
ok-exit-codes = [0]
lint-failure-exit-codes = [1]
Simply run precious lint -s
in your hook. It will exit with a non-zero status if any of the lint
commands indicate a linting problem.
As of version 0.1.2, commands are run in the same order as they appear in the config file.