Popularity
6.4
Declining
Activity
0.0
Stable
3
10
0

Monthly Downloads: 27
Programming language: Haskell
License: GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 only
Tags: Development    
Latest version: v0.4.1

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README

Checkmate

Build Status Hackage GitHub release

Checkmate is a small program to generate human-readable checklists from a given patch (or pull request). Leave CHECK comments (that are the same fashion as FIXME or TODO comments); then Checkmate detects when a diff touches some code scopes having any CHECK comments, and lists the checks.

It helps contributors and reviewers to remind matters that require attention when a part of the code is changed.

Situation

Let's say there's a dictionary, and we should update the manual when a key is added to or removed from it:

TARGET_LANGUAGES = {
    # CHECK: Please update the manual on the project wiki when you add/remove
    # a language.

    'c': '*.c',
    'java': '*.java',
    'javascript': '*.js',
    'python': '*.py',
}

The above example may be artificial, but suppose lines of the dictionary are lengthy. Such tasks should be done outside of the source code repository so that they cannot be automated by simply eliminating code duplicates. Contributors and reviewers altogether are easy to forget about such tasks.

To remind peers of such tasks, Checkmate detects CHECK comments like the above example when a relevant code block is touched and show peers a checklist.

Listing relevant checks: overlapped blocks

How does Checkmate list only relevant checks to a diff? It currently doesn't have any language-specific algorithms, but only a language-agnostic heuristics on indented blocks.

Suppose the following diff:

diff --git a/langs.py b/langs.py
--- a/langs.py
+++ b/langs.py
@@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ TARGET_LANGUAGES = {
     'c': '*.c',
     'java': '*.java',
     'javascript': '*.js',
+    'haskell': '*.hs',
     'python': '*.py',
 }

Since it touched a code block with a CHECK comment, Checkmate generates the following checklist:

  • Please update the manual on the project wiki when you add/remove a language.

Suppose a patch touches only code blocks without any CHECK comments too, e.g.:

diff --git a/langs.py b/langs.py
--- a/langs.py
+++ b/langs.py
@@ -8,6 +8,7 @@ TARGET_LANGUAGES = {
     'python': '*.py',
 }

 OTHER_DATA = {
     # This code block is not relevant to TARGET_LANGUAGES.
+    'haskell': '*.hs',
 }

Since the touched block doesn't have any CHECK comments, Checkmate generates an empty checklist.

Note that it doesn't parse code's semantics, but only scans blocks through indentation. Even if a block is wrapped in curly braces without indentation, it isn't counted as a block.

Directory-level checklist

Some checks may need to be listed for a whole directory. Checkmate recognizes files named .check or CHECK in a directory and include checks in that to the checklist if any file in the directory are changed. Its syntax is basically a simple bullet list and a bullet can be */-/+/CHECK or digits followed by ./), e.g.:

- Check 1
- Check 2

+ A plus sign too can be a bullet.
* An asterisk too.

1. Numbered-bullets also can be used.
2) A closing parenthesis as well can follow instead of a period.

CHECK: For consistency `CHECK` keyword also can be a bullet as well.
CHECK And a colon can be omitted.
Lines without any bullet is continued from previous line(s).

Download

We provide an official Linux x86_64 binary for every release. See also the latest release. Note that official binaries are distributed as statically-linked standalone executable, and they aren't gzipped. Download and give an +x permission; then it's ready.

On the other platforms you can download and install using Haskell Cabal or Stack since source tarballs also are distributed on Hackage:

stack install checkmate

Note: if you experience an error like ConnectionFailure Network.BSD.getProtocolByName: does not exist (no such protocol name: tcp) on Debian/Ubuntu Linux, try to install netbase package. (Read this explanation for details.)

Integration with CI

Since Checkmate usually is executed as a part of CI build, we show examples for widely-used CI services.

All examples assume the environment variables are defined:

  • GITHUB_TOKEN contains the access token to leave comments on a corresponding GitHub repository. See also GitHub's official article about personal API tokens.
  • CHECKMATE_DOWNLOAD_URL contains the download link to the prebuilt binary of the latest release, i.e.:

    CHECKMATE_DOWNLOAD_URL=https://github.com/dahlia/checkmate/releases/download/0.4.1/checkmate-linux-x86_64
    

Travis CI

install:
- curl -L -o ~/bin/checkmate "$CHECKMATE_DOWNLOAD_URL"
- chmod +x ~/bin/checkmate
script:
- ~/bin/checkmate github-travis --token "$GITHUB_TOKEN"

Circle CI

dependencies:
  post:
  - curl -L -o ~/bin/checkmate "$CHECKMATE_DOWNLOAD_URL"
  - chmod +x ~/bin/checkmate
test:
  post:
  - ~/bin/checkmate github-circle --token "$GITHUB_TOKEN"

Other CI softwares/services

You can run checkmate github command with explicit arguments:

curl -L -o ~/bin/checkmate "$CHECKMATE_DOWNLOAD_URL"
chmod +x ~/bin/checkmate
# Suppose we're running a build of github.com/foo/bar/pull/123
~/bin/checkmate github \
    --token "$GITHUB_TOKEN" \
    --login foo \
    --repo bar \
    --pr 123

If you're using GitHub Enterprise on premise use --endpoint option. Further reading: checkmate github --help.