Automatically fix all software bugs.
Automatically fix bugs in the current directory:
autofix
Preview all the commands this would run, but don't actually do anything:
autofix --dry
Autofix bugs, commit fixes into separate branches, push branches to a GitHub remote:
autofix --branches --push=myremote
Autofix bugs in a GitHub repository:
autofix https://github.com/nodejs/node
Autofix bugs in a GitHub repository, commit fixes, and automatically send pull requests (requires hub):
autofix https://github.com/nodejs/node --pull-request
If you have npm, you can run autofix
via npx
:
npx autofix
autofix (DIRECTORY|REPOSITORY) [OPTIONS]
-
DIRECTORY
: Run autofix in a particular directory (defaults to.
). -
REPOSITORY
: Clone a Git repository, then run autofix in it.
OPTIONS:
-
--dry
: Simulate without actually running any fix commands -
--branches
: Commit fixes of different types into different branches (e.g.autofix-codespell
) -
--tiers=0,1,2
: Choose which types of bugs should be autofixed (see details about tiers below) -
--verbose
: Log additional information to the console (e.g. for troubleshootingautofix
bugs) -
--push=REMOTE
: Push fixes to a given GitHub remote (e.g. your GitHub username) -
--pull-request
: Automatically open pull requests with pushed commits (requires hub, implies--push=origin
if unspecified) -
--pull-request-description=FILENAME
: Customize pull request descriptions by providing a markdown file (use with--pull-request
) -
--branch-suffix=SUFFIX
: Add a common suffix to generated branch names (i.e.autofix-codespell-SUFFIX
) -
--signoff
: Use Git's--signoff
(or-s
) feature when creating commits
Tier 0 (default - no rework needed):
- Remove trailing whitespace (uses
git
,xargs
andsed
) - Update pinned pyenv tool versions in Dockerfiles (requires
pyenv
andpyenv update
) - Update pinned nvm tool versions in Dockerfiles (requires
nvm
) - Update pinned sdkman tool versions in Dockerfiles (requires sdkman)
- Update pinned rr versions in Dockerfiles
- Update some pinned Go module versions in Dockerfiles
- Update Git submodules
Tier 1 (some rework might be needed):
- Fix typos & spelling mistakes (requires codespell)
Tier 2 (experimental, use with caution):
- Fix C++ bugs with
clang-tidy
(requires clang-tidy) - Fix Rust bugs with
clippy
(requires rust-clippy)
Tier 3 (you probably don't want to run these):
- TODO
You can also implement your own fixers (similar to the ones found in the ./fixers/ directory) and commit them to your repository under a .autofix/fixers/
directory. Autofix will automatically pick them up; run them on your codebase; and commit new fixes when relevant.