todogroup / repolinter

Repolinter, The Open Source Repository Linter
https://todogroup.github.io/repolinter/
Apache License 2.0
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github javascript linter

Repo Linter Build Status

Lint open source repositories for common issues.

Installation

Repolinter requires Node.JS >= v12 to function properly. Once Node.JS is installed, you can install Repolinter using npm:

npm install -g repolinter

Linting a Local Repository

Once installed, run the following to lint a directory:

repolinter lint <directory>

The above command will lint <directory> with the local repolinter.json ruleset or the default ruleset if none is found:

repolinter % repolinter lint .
Target directory: <directory>
Lint:
✔ license-file-exists: Found file (LICENSE)
✔ readme-file-exists: Found file (README.md)
✔ contributing-file-exists: Found file (CONTRIBUTING)
✔ code-of-conduct-file-exists: Found file (CODE-OF-CONDUCT)
✔ changelog-file-exists: Found file (CHANGELOG)
...
repolinter % echo $?
0

Linting a Remote Repository

Repolinter also supports linting a git repository using the --git flag. With this flag enabled, the directory input will be interpreted as a git URL which Repolinter will automatically clone into a temporary directory.

repolinter lint -g https://github.com/todogroup/repolinter.git

Formatting the Output

The Repolinter CLI currently supports three output formatting modes:

You can switch formatters using the --format flag. An example of using the JSON formatter:

repolinter % repolinter lint --format json .
{"params":{"targetDir":"/Users/nkoontz/Documents/code/repolinter","filterPaths":[],...

An example of using the Markdown formatter:

repolinter % repolinter lint --format markdown .
# Repolinter Report

This Repolinter run generated the following results:
| ❗  Error | ❌  Fail | ⚠️  Warn | ✅  Pass | Ignored | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 15 | 10 | 25 |
...

Limiting Paths

Repolinter supports an allowed list of paths through the --allowPaths option to prevent the accidental linting of build artifacts. These paths must still be contained in the target directory/repository.

repolinter lint --allowPaths ./a/path --allowPaths /another/path

Disabling Modifications

By default Repolinter will automatically execute fixes as specified by the ruleset. If this is not desired functionality, you can disable this with the --dryRun flag.

Ruleset Configuration

Similar to how eslint uses an eslintrc file to determine what validation processes will occur, Repolinter uses a JSON or YAML configuration file (referred to as a ruleset) to determine what checks should be run against a repository. Inside a ruleset, there are two main behaviors that can be configured:

These combined capabilities give you fine-grained control over the checks Repolinter runs.

Providing a Ruleset

Repolinter will pull its configuration from the following sources in order of priority:

  1. A ruleset specified with --rulesetFile or --rulesetUrl
  2. A repolint.json, repolinter.json, repolint.yaml, or repolinter.yaml file at the root of the project being linted
  3. The default ruleset

Creating a Ruleset

Any ruleset starts with the following base, shown in both JSON and YAML format:

{
  "$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/todogroup/repolinter/master/rulesets/schema.json",
  "version": 2,
  "axioms": {},
  "rules": {}
}
version: 2
axioms: {}
rules:

Where:

Rules

Rules are objects of the following format:

"<rule-name>": {
  "level": "error" | "warning" | "off",
  "rule": {
    "type": "<rule-type>",
    "options": {
      // <rule-options>
    }
  },
  "where": ["condition=*"],
  "fix": {
    "type": "<fix-type>",
    "options": {
      // <fix-options>
    }
  },
  "policyInfo": "...",
  "policyUrl": "..."
}
<rule-name>:
  level: error | warning | off
  rule:
    type: <rule-type>
    options:
      <rule-options>
  where: [condition=*]
  fix:
    type: <fix-type>
    options:
      <fix-options>
  policyInfo: >-
    ...
  policyUrl: >-
    ...

A minimal example of a rule that checks for the existence of a README:

"readme-file-exists" : {
  "level": "error",
  "rule": {
    "type": "file-existence",
    "options": {
      "globsAny": ["README*"]
    }
  }
}
readme-file-exists:
  level: error
  rule:
    type: file-existence
    options:
      globsAny:
      - README*

Checking that the README matches a certain hash, and replacing it if not:

"readme-file-up-to-date" : {
  "level": "error",
  "rule": {
    "type": "file-hash",
    "options": {
      "globsAny": ["README*"],
      "algorithm": "sha256",
      "hash": "..."
    }
  },
  "fix": {
    "type": "file-create",
    "options": {
      "file": "README.md",
      "replace": true,
      "text": { "url": "www.example.com/mytext.txt" }
    }
  },
  "policyInfo": "Gotta keep that readme up to date",
  "policyUrl": "www.example.com/mycompany"
}
readme-file-up-to-date:
  level: error
  rule:
    type: file-hash
    options:
      globsAny:
      - README*
      algorithm: sha256
      hash: "..."
  fix:
    type: file-create
    options:
      file: README.md
      replace: true
      text:
        url: www.example.com/mytext.txt
  policyInfo: Gotta keep that readme up to date
  policyUrl: www.example.com/mycompany

Axioms

"axioms": {
  "<axiom-id>": "<axiom-target>"
}
axioms:
  <axiom-id>: axiom-target

Each axiom is configured as a key value pair in the axioms object, where <axiom-id> specifies the program to run and <axiom-target> specifies the target to be used in the where conditional. The available axiom IDs can be found in the axiom documentation. It should be noted that some axioms require external packages to run.

An example configuration using an axiom to detect the packaging system for a project:

{
  "$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/todogroup/repolinter/master/rulesets/schema.json",
  "version": 2,
  "axioms": {
    "packagers": "package-type"
  },
  "rules": {
    "this-only-runs-if-npm": {
      "level": "error",
      "where": ["package-type=npm"],
      "rule": { /* ... */ }
    }
  }
}
version: 2
axioms:
  packagers: package-type
rules:
  this-only-runs-if-npm:
    level: error
    where: [package-type=npm]
    rule:
      ...

Some axioms (ex. contributor-count) output numerical values instead of strings. For these axioms, numerical comparisons (<, >, <=, >=) can be also be specified in the where conditional. Note that if a numerical comparison is used for a non-numerical axiom, the comparison will always fail.

{
  "axioms": {
    "contributor-count": "contributors"
  },
  "rules": {
    "my-rule": {
      "where": ["contributors>6", "contributors<200"],
      // ...
    }
  }
}
axioms:
  contributor-count: contributors
rules:
  my-rule:
    where:
    - contributors>6
    - contributors<200
    rule:
      ...

Extending Rulesets

A ruleset can extend another ruleset, in which case the two files will be recursively merged. Extended rulesets can themselves extend additional rulesets up to 20 rulesets deep.

Extend a ruleset by including an "extends" top-level key which identifies a URL or file path:

{
  "extends": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/todogroup/repolinter/master/rulesets/default.json"
  "rules": {
    # disable CI check
    "integrates-with-ci": {
      "level": "off"
    }
  }
}
extends: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/todogroup/repolinter/master/rulesets/default.json
rules:
  # disable CI check
  integrates-with-ci
    level: off
    ...

Relative paths are resolved relative to the location used to access the extending file. For example, if repolinter is invoked as:

repolinter -u http://example.com/custom-rules.yaml

And that ruleset includes extends: "./default.yaml", the path will be resolved relative to the original URL as http://example.com/default.yaml. If instead repolinter is invoked as:

repolinter -r /etc/repolinter/custom-rules.yaml

And that ruleset includes extends: "./default.yaml", the path will be resolved relative to the original file path as /etc/repolinter/default.yaml.

YAML and JSON rulesets can be extended from either format.

API

Repolinter also includes an extensible JavaScript API:

const repolinter = require('repolinter')
const result = await repolinter.lint('.')

This API allows the developer to have complete control over the configuration and formatting Repolinter should use. Documentation for this library can be found under API Documentation.

Going Further

License

This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.