Imhotep is a tool which will comment on commits coming into your repository and check for syntactic errors and general lint warnings.
NOTE: This repository has been archived, as it's been superceeded by GitHub's check annotations feature.
Currently, installation is done from source through Python packaging system. We first need to download it from GitHub. We then setup a virtualenv which will keep our python packages separate from other things on your system, lest we have version conflicts. Finally, we install the required packages.
virtualenv env
. env/bin/activate
pip install imhotep
If you want to hack on imhotep, that looks more like this:
git clone git://github.com/justinabrahms/imhotep.git
cd imhotep
virtualenv env
. env/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e .
You'll also need to install the plugins you'd like to run. Examples
include jshint,
flake8,
pep8,
pylint,
rubocop,
foodcritic,
PMD,
and jsl. You can
install those with pip. Example: pip install imhotep_jshint
.
Search on PyPI for a full list.
To use imhotep, we must tell it which repository to look at, who to authenticate as and what to comment on. Imhotep is able to comment in two ways: either on a single commit or on a pull request.
imhotep \
--repo_name="justinabrahms/imhotep" \
--github-username="your_username" \
--github-password="a_sha_generated_by_github" \
--pr-number=1
imhotep \
--repo_name="justinabrahms/imhotep" \
--github-username="your_username" \
--github-password="a_sha_generated_by_github" \
--commit="a123445714cfa89d1e843d9950ea8f249cd6e4df"
The SHA generated by github is done through your user's settings
page. Generate a personal
access token and use that for the --github-password
above.
usage: imhotep [-h] [--config-file CONFIG_FILE] --repo_name REPO_NAME [--commit COMMIT] [--origin-commit ORIGIN_COMMIT] [--filenames FILENAMES [FILENAMES ...]] [--debug] [--github-username GITHUB_USERNAME] [--github-password GITHUB_PASSWORD] [--no-post] [--authenticated] [--pr-number PR_NUMBER] [--cache-directory CACHE_DIRECTORY] [--linter LINTER [LINTER ...]] [--shallow]
[--github-domain GITHUB_DOMAIN] [--report-file-violations] [--dir-override DIR_OVERRIDE]
Posts static analysis results to github.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--config-file CONFIG_FILE
Configuration file in json.
--repo_name REPO_NAME
Github repository name in owner/repo format
--commit COMMIT The sha of the commit to run static analysis on.
--origin-commit ORIGIN_COMMIT
Commit to use as the comparison point.
--filenames FILENAMES [FILENAMES ...]
filenames you want static analysis to be limited to.
--debug Will dump debugging output and won't clean up after itself.
--github-username GITHUB_USERNAME
Github user to post comments as.
--github-password GITHUB_PASSWORD
Github password for the above user.
--no-post [DEBUG] will print out comments rather than posting to github.
--authenticated Indicates the repository requires authentication
--pr-number PR_NUMBER
Number of the pull request to comment on
--cache-directory CACHE_DIRECTORY
Path to directory to cache the repository
--linter LINTER [LINTER ...]
Path to linters to run, e.g. 'imhotep.tools:PyLint'
--shallow Performs a shallow clone of the repo
--github-domain GITHUB_DOMAIN
You can provide an alternative domain, if you're using github enterprise, for instance
--report-file-violations
Report file-level violations, i.e. those not on individual lines
--dir-override DIR_OVERRIDE
Override the full path to the local repository.
Note: if you get a error where the plugin cannot find imhotep.tools
, make
sure you installed imhotep into your virtualenv with pip install -e .
. See
the Installation instructions above.
If it finds violations, it will post those violations to GitHub. New linting tools are encouraged!
By default, imhotep runs all plugins it can find on your source
code. If you'd like to only run a subset of linters, you should
specify the --linter
directive with a dotted path to the module. An
example of this is imhotep.tools:PyLint
or
imhotep_pep8.plugin:Pep8Linter
. If you want to specify multiple
tools, just pass multiple things to the --linter
flag.
Imhotep supports adding linters through a plugin API based around Python's setuptools entrypoints. This means that plugins can live as separate Python packages which are installable alongside imhotep.
To write your own tool, subclass the Tool
class
and override the process_line
, get_file_extensions
, and
get_command
methods. If you need greater control over how the tool
is run, you can override the invoke
method which gives you maximal
control over how the tools are run.
To make your plugin discoverable, you need to add an entry_points
stanza to your setup.py
. It looks like this.
setup(
# ...
entry_points={"imhotep_linter": [".py = path.to.module:ToolClassName"]}
# ...
)
The key pieces of this are the name of the entrypoint which must
be imhotep_linter
. This is how we know where to find the
plugins. The list that follows it is a list of strings that map file
extensions to a tool that knows how to lint them. So for the entry
above, we'll do something like from path.to.module import ToolClassName
and run that on all .py
files in the repository.
You can find a working example of a setup.py
file in the
imhotep_pep8
repository.
Imhotep, the first Egyptian architect, is known as "the one who comes in peace". In keeping with that name, the goal of this tool is to keep code reviews peaceful and productive by having robots point out the nitpicky details, leaving people to critique bigger picture things, not spacing and misspelling issues.
Backwards incompatible change:
- Dropped support for Python < 3.9 and pypy.
Bugfixes:
- Improved discovery of build tools
This is the first release where I'm tracking release notes. This release is majoritively the work of danpalmer. Thanks, Dan!
Features:
- Support for file level violations
Backwards incompatible change:
- The printer reporter was broken, not using the correct interface for reporting individual lines. I've chosen to not bump the major version, because this change was to get something to work. Any work built on top of this class would have not be operational code, so I'm not worried about breaking someone.
Bugfixes:
- Different reporters that report errors on the same line don't clobber each other.
- File extensions are properly filtered before reporting.