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boot-check

Boot tasks to check, analyze and inspect Clojure/Script code.

It relies on universe tested kibit, eastwood, yagni, bikeshed and other titans.

Clojars Project

Why

To be able to reach out to multiple code analyzers as well as compose them as Boot tasks:

(require '[tolitius.boot-check :as check])
(deftask check-sources []
  (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})
  (comp
    (check/with-yagni)
    (check/with-eastwood)
    (check/with-kibit)
    (check/with-bikeshed)))

You can choose the tools (tasks) that apply, i.e. use one or several, and boot-check will do the rest: integration with analyzers, dependencies, reports, etc..

All these tasks will run inside Boot pods.

Kibit

kibit is a static code analyzer for Clojure, ClojureScript, cljx and other Clojure variants.

From Command Line

To check your code directly from shell:

$ boot check/with-kibit
latest report from kibit.... [You Rock!]

In case there are problems:

(defn when-vs-if []
  (if 42 42 nil))

(defn vec-vs-into []
  (into [] 42))

kibit will show suggestions:

$ boot check/with-kibit
At ../.boot/cache/tmp/../fun/boot-check/yeg/-grrwi1/test/with_kibit.clj:4:
Consider using:
  (when 42 42)
instead of:
  (if 42 42 nil)

At ../.boot/cache/tmp/../fun/boot-check/yeg/-grrwi1/test/with_kibit.clj:7:
Consider using:
  (vec 42)
instead of:
  (into [] 42)

WARN: kibit found some problems:

{:problems #{{:expr (if 42 42 nil), :line 4, :column 3, :alt (when 42 42)}
             {:expr (into [] 42), :line 7, :column 3, :alt (vec 42)}}}

From within "build.boot"

To use boot-check tasks within build.boot is easy:

(require '[tolitius.boot-check :as check])

(deftask check-sources []
  (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})
  (comp
    (check/with-kibit)))

Help

$ boot check/with-kibit -h
Static code analyzer for Clojure, ClojureScript, cljx and other Clojure variants.

This task will run all the kibit checks within a pod.

At the moment it takes no arguments, but behold..! it will. (files, rules, reporters, etc..)

Options:
  -h, --help  Print this help info.
  -t, --throw-on-errors  throw an exception if the check does not pass

Yagni

yagni is a static code analyzer that helps you find unused code in your applications and libraries.

From Command Line

To check your code directly from shell:

$ boot check/with-yagni
latest report from yagni.... [You Rock!]

if Yagni finds unused code it will gladly report the news:

WARN: could not find any references to the following:

tolitius.yagni/check
test.with-yagni/func-the-second
test.with-yagni/other-func
tolitius.yagni/report
test.with-kibit/vec-vs-into
test.with-yagni/-main

WARN: the following have references to them, but their parents do not:

tolitius.yagni/yagni-deps
tolitius.yagni/pp
test.with-kibit/when-vs-if
test.with-yagni/func
test.with-yagni/notafunc

From within "build.boot"

To use boot-check tasks within build.boot is easy:

(require '[tolitius.boot-check :as check])

(deftask check-sources []
  (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})
  (comp
    (check/with-yagni)))

Help

$ boot check/with-yagni -h
Static code analyzer for Clojure that helps you find unused code in your applications and libraries.

This task will run all the yagni checks within a pod.

Options:
  -h, --help             Print this help info.
  -o, --options OPTIONS  OPTIONS sets yagni options EDN map.
  -t, --throw-on-errors  throw an exception if the check does not pass

Yagni entry points

Yagni works by searching your codebase from an initial set of entrypoints. As libraries, multi-main programs, and certain other types of projects either tend to have no :main or many entrypoint methods, you can instead, optionally, enumerate a list of entrypoints for your project in options:

(check/with-yagni :options {:entry-points ["test.with-yagni/-main"
                                           "test.with-yagni/func-the-second"
                                           42]})))

check out the example in the boot.build of this project.

Eastwood

eastwood is a Clojure lint tool that uses the tools.analyzer and tools.analyzer.jvm libraries to inspect namespaces and report possible problems.

From Command Line

To check your code directly from shell:

$ boot check/with-eastwood
latest report from eastwood.... [You Rock!]

if eastwood finds problems it will gladly report the news:

== Linting test.with-kibit ==
... /test/with_kibit.clj:4:3: constant-test: Test expression is always logical true or always logical false: 42 in form (if 42 42 nil)

== Linting test.with-eastwood ==
... /test/with_eastwood.clj:5:8: def-in-def: There is a def of a nested inside def nested-def

== Warnings: 2 (not including reflection warnings)  Exceptions thrown: 0

WARN: eastwood found some problems ^^^

From within "build.boot"

To use boot-check tasks within build.boot is easy:

(require '[tolitius.boot-check :as check])

(deftask check-sources []
  (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})
  (comp
    (check/with-eastwood)))

Help

$ boot check/with-eastwood -h
Clojure lint tool that uses the tools.analyzer and tools.analyzer.jvm libraries to inspect namespaces and report possible problems

This task will run all the eastwood checks within a pod.

At the moment it takes no arguments, but behold..! it will. (linters, namespaces, etc.)

Options:
  -h, --help  Print this help info.
  -t, --throw-on-errors  throw an exception if the check does not pass

Bikeshed

bikeshed is a Clojure "checkstyle/pmd" tool that designed to tell you your code is bad, and that you should feel bad.

From Command Line

To check your code directly from shell:

$ boot check/with-bikeshed
latest report from bikeshed.... [You Rock!]

if bikeshed finds problems it will gladly report the news:

Checking for lines longer than 80 characters.
Badly formatted files:
../tolitius/boot_check.clj:8:            [boot.core :as core :refer [deftask user-files tmp-file set-env! get-env]]
../tolitius/boot_check.clj:25:  "Static code analyzer for Clojure, ClojureScript, cljx and other Clojure variants.
../tolitius/boot_check.clj:29:  At the moment it takes no arguments, but behold..! it will. (files, rules, reporters, etc..)"
../tolitius/boot_check.clj:30:  ;; [f files FILE #{sym} "the set of files to check."]      ;; TODO: convert these to "tmp-dir/file"

Checking for lines with trailing whitespace.
Badly formatted files:
../tolitius/boot/helper.clj:6:  (mapv #(.getAbsolutePath %)
../tolitius/checker/bikeshed.clj:7:  '[[lein-bikeshed "0.2.0" :exclusions [org.clojure/tools.cli
../tolitius/checker/yagni.clj:33:      (let [graph# (binding [*ns* (the-ns *ns*)]
../tolitius/boot/helper.clj:6:  (mapv #(.getAbsolutePath %)
../tolitius/checker/bikeshed.clj:7:  '[[lein-bikeshed "0.2.0" :exclusions [org.clojure/tools.cli
../tolitius/checker/yagni.clj:33:      (let [graph# (binding [*ns* (the-ns *ns*)]

Checking for files ending in blank lines.
No files found.

Checking for redefined var roots in source directories.
No with-redefs found.

Checking whether you keep up with your docstrings.
9/50 [18.00%] functions have docstrings.
Use -v to list functions without docstrings

WARN: bikeshed found some problems ^^^

From within "build.boot"

To use boot-check tasks within build.boot is easy:

(require '[tolitius.boot-check :as check])

(deftask check-sources []
  (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})
  (comp
    (check/with-bikeshed)))

Help

$ boot check/with-bikeshed -h

This task is backed by 'lein-bikeshed' which is designed to tell you your code is bad, and that you should feel bad

This task will run bikeshed checks within a pod.

Options:
  -h, --help             Print this help info.
  -o, --options OPTIONS  OPTIONS sets bikeshed options EDN map.
  -t, --throw-on-errors  throw an exception if the check does not pass

Bikeshed Options

Bikeshed takes some options:

(check/with-bikeshed :options {:check? #{:long-lines}
                               :verbose true
                               :max-line-length 42})

or

$ boot check/with-bikeshed -o '{:check? #{:long-lines :trailing-whitespace :var-redefs :bad-methods :name-collisions}}'

check out the example in the boot.build of this project.

Handling Errors

All tasks (i.e. for kibit, yagni, eastwood, bikeshed, etc.) accept an optional flag:

-t, --throw-on-errors  throw an exception if the check does not pass

that if set will report all the problems found with the task, and then throw an exception.

Here are some examples:

boot.user=> (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})

Kibit Exceptions

boot.user=> (boot (check/with-kibit "-t"))
 ... reporting problems here then throws:

clojure.lang.ExceptionInfo: kibit checks fail

boot.user=> *e
#error {}
 :cause "kibit checks fail"
 :data {:causes ({:expr (if 42 42 nil), :line 4, :column 3, :alt (when 42 42)} {:expr (into [] 42), :line 7, :column 3, :alt (vec 42)})}
 ...

Yagni Exceptions

boot.user=> (boot (check/with-yagni "-t"))
 ... reporting problems here then throws:

clojure.lang.ExceptionInfo: yagni checks fail

boot.user=> *e
#error {}
 :cause "yagni checks fail"
 :data {:causes {:no-refs #{tolitius.boot-check/with-eastwood test.with-yagni/other-func tolitius.boot-check/with-yagni tolitius.boot-check/with-bikeshed tolitius.boot-check/with-kibit test.with-eastwood/nested-def test.with-kibit/vec-vs-into test.with-eastwood/always-true}, :no-parent-refs #{tolitius.boot.helper/make-pod-pool tolitius.boot.helper/fileset->paths tolitius.checker.yagni/yagni-deps tolitius.checker.yagni/entry-points-file tolitius.checker.bikeshed/bikeshed-deps tolitius.checker.yagni/create-entry-points test.with-kibit/when-vs-if tolitius.checker.yagni/check tolitius.checker.yagni/pp tolitius.boot.helper/tmp-dir-paths test.with-eastwood/a tolitius.checker.yagni/report tolitius.checker.yagni/check-graph tolitius.checker.kibit/kibit-deps tolitius.checker.eastwood/check tolitius.checker.kibit/check tolitius.boot-check/pod-deps tolitius.boot-check/with-throw test.with-yagni/func tolitius.checker.bikeshed/check tolitius.checker.eastwood/eastwood-deps tolitius.boot-check/bootstrap}}}
 ...

Eastwood Exceptions

boot.user=> (boot (check/with-eastwood "-t"))
 ... reporting problems here then throws:

clojure.lang.ExceptionInfo: eastwood checks fail

boot.user=> *e
#error {}
 :cause "eastwood checks fail"
 :data {:causes {:err nil, :warning-count 12, :exception-count 0}}
 ...

In case of Eastwood warnings are not returned, just their number of them. They are however reported (printed) as found.

Bikeshed Exceptions

boot.user=> (boot (check/with-bikeshed "-t"))
 ... reporting problems here then throws:

boot.user=> *e
#error {}
 :cause "bikeshed checks fail"
 :data {:causes true}
 ...

In case of Bikeshed, no errors / warnings are retured, since its own internal checks just return true/false values. But the exception is raised nevertheless to indicate that some checks have failed.

Aggregating Errors

There are a couple of ways boot-check deals with exceptions:

  • report problems, but throw no exceptions

this is a default behavior, here is an example from build.boot:

(deftask check-all []
  (comp
    (test-kibit)
    (test-yagni)
    (test-eastwood)
    (test-bikeshed))
  • force to throw exceptions when errors are found

This is done by the throw-on-error boot task. Here are a couple of examples.

This example would run eastwood checker and would throw an exception right after it in case eastwood finds problems:

(deftask test-eastwood-and-throw []
  (set-env! :source-paths #{"src" "test"})
  (comp
    (check/with-eastwood :options {:gen-report true :exclude-linters [:unused-ret-vals]})
    (check/throw-on-errors)))

this example would run all the checkers and if any of these checkers report errors it will aggregate all of these errors and throw an exception including all of them:

(deftask check-all-and-throw []
  (comp
    (test-kibit)
    (test-yagni)
    (test-eastwood)
    (test-bikeshed)
    (check/throw-on-errors)))

if errors are found their aggregate is thrown:

clojure.lang.ExceptionInfo: Some of code checkers have failed.
    causes: ({:category nil,
              :linter-tool :kibit,
              :key "kibit",
              :coords
              {:file nil, :line 5, :column 28, :line-end nil, :column-end nil},
              :snippet nil,
              :issue-form nil,
              :id "5616d90d-d957-4b15-bf53-082a0f82892a",
              :severity :normal,
              :hint-form nil,
              :message
              "Consider changing [ (fn [options] (:reporter options)) ] with [ :reporter ]"}
             {:category nil,
              :linter-tool :yagni,
              :key :no-parent-refs,
              :coords
              {:file "tolitius/boot/helper.clj",
               :line 0,
               :column 0,
               :line-end nil,
               :column-end nil},
              :snippet nil,
              :issue-form nil,
              :id "90249104-8b32-4125-9286-05f9fe3f13bf",
              :severity :normal,
              :hint-form nil,
              :message
              "Var tolitius.boot.helper/make-pod-pool is referenced by unused code"}
              ... ...

Reporting

Besides reporting errors to standard output (stdout) which could be diffficult to inspect boot-check can generate other reports in different formats (default and built in is HTML) with a help of a :gen-report option which forces a particular checker task to report its warnings.

All checkers with this option set to true will write found issues into a shared interim warnings file. Later this file will be used to generate the final report. boot-check allows plugging in new reporters. This can be done by implementing the following multimethod:

(defmethod tolitius.core.reporting/report :your-own-generator [issues options])

After providing source code with a custom report generator a namespace containing that generator must be evaluated.

There is an already implemented, built in HTML report generator that can be set as a default by including this namespace in build.boot:

(require '[tolitius.reporter.html])

which will load an HTML multimethod implementation.

Here is an example of how to include a checker task into reporting:

(check/with-kibit :options {:gen-report :true})

and how to override default html report generator:

(set-env! :boot-check-reporter :your-own-generator)
(comp
  (check/with-kibit :options {:gen-report :true}))

A typical pipeline with reporting enabled (and additional throw-on-errors task) may look like this:

(deftask check-with-report []
  (set-env! :boot-check-reporter :your-own-generator) ;;setup report generator
  (comp
    (test-kibit)                                      ;; do not include in report - only stdout
    (test-eastwood :options {:gen-report true})       ;; include in report and print stdout
    (test-yagni)                                      ;; do not include in report - only stdout
    (test-bikeshed :options {:gen-report true})       ;; include in report and print stdout
    (check/throw-on-errors)))                         ;;throw errors after all.

Other Reporting Options

Currently boot-check supports following reporting options:

  • boot-check-reporter: a hook to a custom report generator implementation (described above)
  • report-file-name: a file name pattern to be used when generating report files
  • report-path: a file path where this report should be written to
  • report-skip-time?: whether a timestamp should be included in the file name. By default a timestamp is included but you may want to disable it for example to enable fast refreshing when report is already opened in the browser

Report samples

A "grid" view:

sample boot check report

"Issue details" view (currently only code snippet is showing in here):

issue details view

Report limitations

Due to implementation details of some of checkers (bikeshed, kibit) some limitations exist regarding amount of information visible on report.

  • kibit currently does not return filenames, which makes it impossible to include it in the report (only stdout directly from kibit reports filenames)
  • bikeshed does not return issue details at all - it only returns some summary containing list of tests which has not passed. Because of that - reports only contain that summary returned from bikeshed.

Demo

Here is a boot check demo project which can be cloned and played with.

License

Copyright © 2018 toliitus

Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at) your option any later version.