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Tailor is a cross-platform static analysis and lint tool for source code written in Apple's Swift programming language. It analyzes your code to ensure consistent styling and help avoid bugs.
Tailor supports Swift 3.0.1 out of the box and helps enforce style guidelines outlined in the The Swift Programming Language, GitHub, Ray Wenderlich, and Coursera style guides. It supports cross-platform usage and can be run on Mac OS X via your shell or integrated with Xcode, as well as on Linux and Windows.
Tailor parses Swift source code using the primary Java target of ANTLR:
ANTLR is a powerful parser generator [ . . . ] widely used in academia and industry to build all sorts of languages, tools, and frameworks.
— About the ANTLR Parser Generator
Requires Java (JRE or JDK) Version 8 or above: Java SE Downloads
brew install tailor
curl -fsSL https://tailor.sh/install.sh | sh
iex (new-object net.webclient).downloadstring('https://tailor.sh/install.ps1')
You may also download Tailor via GitHub Releases, extract the archive, and symlink the tailor/bin/tailor
shell script to a location in your $PATH
.
If your continuous integration server supports Homebrew installation, you may use the following snippet:
before_install:
- brew update
- brew install tailor
In other cases, use this snippet:
Replace ${TAILOR_RELEASE_ARCHIVE}
with the URL of the release you would like to install, e.g. https://github.com/sleekbyte/tailor/releases/download/v0.1.0/tailor.tar
.
before_script:
- wget ${TAILOR_RELEASE_ARCHIVE} -O /tmp/tailor.tar
- tar -xvf /tmp/tailor.tar
- export PATH=$PATH:$PWD/tailor/bin/
Run Tailor with a list of files and directories to analyze, or via Xcode.
$ tailor [options] [--] [[file|directory] ...]
Help for Tailor is accessible via the [-h|--help]
option.
$ tailor -h
Usage: tailor [options] [--] [[file|directory] ...]
Perform static analysis on Swift source files.
Invoking Tailor with at least one file or directory will analyze all Swift files at those paths. If
no paths are provided, Tailor will analyze all Swift files found in '$SRCROOT' (if defined), which
is set by Xcode when run in a Build Phase. Tailor may be set up as an Xcode Build Phase
automatically with the --xcode option.
Options:
-c,--config=<path/to/.tailor.yml> specify configuration file
--debug print ANTLR error messages when parsing error occurs
--except=<rule1,rule2,...> run all rules except the specified ones
-f,--format=<xcode|json|cc|html> select an output format
-h,--help display help
--invert-color invert colorized console output
-l,--max-line-length=<0-999> maximum Line length (in characters)
--list-files display Swift source files to be analyzed
--max-class-length=<0-999> maximum Class length (in lines)
--max-closure-length=<0-999> maximum Closure length (in lines)
--max-file-length=<0-999> maximum File length (in lines)
--max-function-length=<0-999> maximum Function length (in lines)
--max-name-length=<0-999> maximum Identifier name length (in characters)
--max-severity=<error|warning (default)> maximum severity
--max-struct-length=<0-999> maximum Struct length (in lines)
--min-name-length=<1-999> minimum Identifier name length (in characters)
--no-color disable colorized console output
--only=<rule1,rule2,...> run only the specified rules
--purge=<1-999> reduce memory usage by clearing DFA cache after
specified number of files are parsed
--show-rules show description for each rule
-v,--version display version
--xcode=<path/to/project.xcodeproj> add Tailor Build Phase Run Script to Xcode Project
- Enabling and Disabling Rules
- Cross-Platform
- Automatic Xcode Integration
- Colorized Output
- Warnings, Errors, and Failing the Build
- Disable Violations within Source Code
- Configuration
- Formatters
Rule identifiers and "preferred/not preferred" code samples may be found on the Rules page.
Rules may be individually disabled (blacklist) or enabled (whitelist) via the --except
and --only
command-line flags.
tailor --except=brace-style,trailing-whitespace main.swift
tailor --only=redundant-parentheses,terminating-semicolon main.swift
Tailor may be used on Mac OS X via your shell or integrated with Xcode, as well as on Linux and Windows.
Tailor can be integrated with Xcode projects using the --xcode
option.
tailor --xcode /path/to/demo.xcodeproj/
This adds the following Build Phase Run Script to your project's default target.
Tailor's output will be displayed inline within the Xcode Editor Area and as a list in the Log Navigator.
- Add a new configuration, say
Analyze
, to the project
- Modify the active scheme's
Analyze
phase to use the new build configuration created above
- Tweak the build phase run script to run Tailor only when analyzing the project (⇧⌘B)
if [ "${CONFIGURATION}" = "Analyze" ]; then
if hash tailor 2>/dev/null; then
tailor
else
echo "warning: Please install Tailor from https://tailor.sh"
fi
fi
Tailor uses the following color schemes to format CLI output:
--max-severity
can be used to control the maximum severity of violation messages. It can be set to error
or warning
(by default, it is set to warning
). Setting it to error
allows you to distinguish between lower and higher priority messages. It also fails the build in Xcode, if any errors are reported (similar to how a compiler error fails the build in Xcode). With max-severity
set to warning
, all violation messages are warnings and the Xcode build will never fail.
This setting also affects Tailor's exit code on the command-line, a failing build will exit 1
whereas having warnings only will exit 0
, allowing Tailor to be easily integrated into pre-commit hooks.
Violations on a specific line may be disabled with a trailing single-line comment.
import Foundation; // tailor:disable
Additionally, violations in a given block of code can be disabled by enclosing the block within tailor:off
and tailor:on
comments.
// tailor:off
import Foundation;
import UIKit;
import CoreData;
// tailor:on
class Demo() {
// Define public members here
}
// tailor:off
and// tailor:on
comments must be paired
The behavior of Tailor can be customized via the .tailor.yml
configuration file. It enables you to
- include/exclude certain files and directories from analysis
- enable and disable specific analysis rules
- specify output format
- specify CLI output color scheme
You can tell Tailor which configuration file to use by specifying its file path via the --config
CLI option. By default, Tailor will look for the configuration file in the directory where you will run Tailor from.
The file follows the YAML 1.1 format.
Tailor checks all files found by a recursive search starting from the directories given as command line arguments. However, it only analyzes Swift files that end in .swift
. If you would like Tailor to analyze specific files and directories, you will have to add entries for them under include
. Files and directories can also be ignored through exclude
.
Here is an example that might be used for an iOS project:
include:
- Source # Inspect all Swift files under "Source/"
exclude:
- '**Tests.swift' # Ignore Swift files that end in "Tests"
- Source/Carthage # Ignore Swift files under "Source/Carthage/"
- Source/Pods # Ignore Swift files under "Source/Pods/"
- Files and directories are specified relative to where
tailor
is run from - Paths to directories or Swift files provided explicitly via CLI will cause the
include
/exclude
rules specified in.tailor.yml
to be ignored - Exclude is given higher precedence than Include
- Tailor recognizes the Java Glob syntax
Tailor allows you to individually disable (blacklist) or enable (whitelist) rules via the except
and only
labels.
Here is an example showcasing how to enable certain rules:
# Tailor will solely check for violations to the following rules
only:
- upper-camel-case
- trailing-closure
- forced-type-cast
- redundant-parentheses
Here is an example showcasing how to disable certain rules:
# Tailor will check for violations to all rules except for the following ones
except:
- parenthesis-whitespace
- lower-camel-case
- only is given precedence over except
- Rules that are explicitly included/excluded via CLI will cause the
only
/except
rules specified in.tailor.yml
to be ignored
Tailor allows you to specify the output format (xcode
/json
) via the format
label.
Here is an example showcasing how to specify the output format:
# The output format will now be in JSON
format: json
- The output format explicitly specified via CLI will cause the output format defined in
.tailor.yml
to be ignored
Tailor allows you to specify the CLI output color schemes via the color
label. To disable colored output, set color
to disable
. To invert the color scheme, set color
to invert
.
Here is an example showcasing how to specify the CLI output color scheme:
# The CLI output will not be colored
color: disable
- The CLI output color scheme explicitly specified via CLI will cause the output color scheme defined in
.tailor.yml
to be ignored
Tailor's output format may be customized via the -f
/--format
option. The Xcode formatter is selected by default.
The default xcode
formatter outputs violation messages according to the format expected by Xcode to be displayed inline within the Xcode Editor Area and as a list in the Log Navigator. This format is also as human-friendly as possible on the console.
$ tailor main.swift
********** /main.swift **********
/main.swift:1: warning: [multiple-imports] Imports should be on separate lines
/main.swift:1:18: warning: [terminating-semicolon] Statements should not terminate with a semicolon
/main.swift:3:05: warning: [constant-naming] Global Constant should be either lowerCamelCase or UpperCamelCase
/main.swift:5:07: warning: [redundant-parentheses] Conditional clause should not be enclosed within parentheses
/main.swift:7: warning: [terminating-newline] File should terminate with exactly one newline character ('\n')
Analyzed 1 file, skipped 0 files, and detected 5 violations (0 errors, 5 warnings).
JSON Formatter
The json
formatter outputs an array of violation messages for each file, and a summary
object indicating the parsing results and the violation counts.
$ tailor -f json main.swift
{
"files": [
{
"path": "/main.swift",
"violations": [
{
"severity": "warning",
"rule": "constant-naming",
"location": {
"line": 1,
"column": 5
},
"message": "Global Constant should be either lowerCamelCase or UpperCamelCase"
}
],
"parsed": true
}
],
"summary": {
"violations": 1,
"warnings": 1,
"analyzed": 1,
"errors": 0,
"skipped": 0
}
}
The html
formatter outputs a complete HTML document that should be written to a file.
tailor -f html main.swift > tailor.html
Please review the guidelines for contributing to this repository.
- Java Version 8
- Gradle (optional,
./gradlew
may be used instead) - Ruby 2.0.0+
- Bundler
Tailor is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE.md for details.