openlynt
is a lint tool for Go that works on individual ast nodes.
This tool is a work-in-progress - we'll add more as we encode our rules.
More documentation will follow as well once things are solidified.
Supported rules:
- required formatting of named import declarations
go get -u go.openly.dev/openlynt/cmd/openlynt
A sample openlynt.yml
file can be found at cmd/openlynt/testdata/openlynt.yml
.
You can provide a path to the openlynt.yml
file via -rules
or place it in
the current directory as .openlynt.yml
.
To provide a path to the source files to parse, you can either pass -path
OR
run the following: openlynt path/
For this example, we have package main
that must import several other
packages that fulfill an interface. For clarity and sanity, we require these
packages to be named imports - and to be named following a certain pattern.
In this case, we want them named pkg<PREFIX>v<version>
.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"xyz.org/pkg/prefix/v503" // unnamed
INCORRECTv99 "xyz.org/pkg/prefix2/v99" // wrong name
pkgOKv1 "xyz.org/pkg/ok/v1" // correct name
)
func main() {
fmt.Println("...")
}
Our ruleset (.openlynt.yml
) would be:
rules:
rule_pkgprefix:
type: import
name: Named Import Rule
if:
# any import path that contains "pkg/[a-z0-9]+/v\d+", ie "pkg/something/v1"
path: regexp: \/pkg\/(?P<prefix>[a-z0-9]+)\/v(?P<version>[0-9]+)
require:
# require the named import to match the following, eg "pkgSOMETHINGv1"
name: pkg{{ "${prefix}" | upper }}v${version}
Running openlynt
against this source file would result in:
$ ./openlynt -path testdata -rules testdata/openlynt.yml && echo "ok"
22:25:51 testdata/incorrect.go: expected import("xyz.org/pkg/prefix/v503") to be named(pkgPREFIXv503), but it was()
22:25:51 testdata/incorrect.go: expected import("xyz.org/pkg/prefix2/v99") to be named(pkgPREFIX2v99), but it was(INCORRECTv99)
After fixing:
$ ./openlynt -path testdata/correct.go -rules testdata/openlynt.yml && echo "ok"
ok
At the moment, the following rule types are supported.
rule_short_name:
type: import
name: Friendly Rule Name
if:
path: REGEXP
require:
name: "custom-import-name-template"
The import
rule supports text/template
replacements with your regexp, as
well as sprig functions - eg, piping
a named-regex-match into upper
, lower
, plural
, etc.
rule_short_name:
type: comment_group
name: Friendly Rule Name
if:
text: REGEXP
require:
# optional
text: REGEXP
# optional
len: int
The comment_group
rule supports regexp matches and requirements for the
entire comment group text. It will match both multiple lines of //
in
succession as well as /*
.
The len
parameter specifies an optional required minimum-line-count for a
matching comment. As an example, if you require a TODO
comment to contain a
link to an issue tracker and have at least 2 lines of information about the
problem:
rule_todo:
type: comment_group
name: TODO Requirement
if:
text: TODO
require:
text: "https?://github.com/your/project/issues/\\d+"
len: 2
A comment like this would fail to pass:
// TODO: I'm not saying anything useful or linking to the issue.