Intended to be used as a git pre-commit hook, git-vogue encourages developers to keep their Haskell code "en vogue" by providing a framework for checking code quality and some supporting plugins.
Currently, git-vogue ships with the following plugins:
- cabal
- hlint
- stylish-haskell with automatic fixing
- ghc-mod (not with ghc8 , yet)
cabal install git-vogue
OR
git clone https://github.com/christian-marie/git-vogue.git
cd git-vogue
stack install
If you wish to set up pre-commit hooks (recommended):
git vogue init
With pre-commit hooks set up, git vogue check
will be run before every
commit. If you wish to check the whole repository, run git vogue check --all
.
You can attempt to automatically rectify any problems discovered via git vogue fix
and git vogue fix --all
. The only plugin that currently supports this
auto-fixing is stylish-haskell.
Running git-vogue plugins
will show you which plugins are currently detected
and enabled. This set can be tweaked on a per-repository basis with git-vogue
enable and git-vogue disable.
Alternatively you can disable plugins on a per-system basis by adding the file
name to the vogue.disable
key in your git global configuration:
git config --global --add vogue.disable cabal
Checks your .cabal file for packaging problems. Can not fix problems automatically.
Checks .hs files for linting issues, respects HLint.hs
in the top level of
the repository. Can not fix problems automatically.
Checks .hs files (excluding HLint.hs
and Setup.hs
) as per ghc-mod check.
ghc-mod can be temperamental, so if this fails to run the plugin will allow the
commit to pass. Can not fix problems automatically.
Checks if .hs files would have been modified by stylish-haskell. Respects
.stylish-haskell.yaml
. Can fix problems automatically.
To remove a git-vogue init
configured pre-commit hook, run:
rm .git/hooks/pre-commit
Here are instructions for uninstalling a cabal package.
At Anchor Engineering, we're pretty un-dogmatic about using one editor or even one OS for development. As such, we've found ourselves in need of a common benchmark for linting, formatting and code quality checks.
We wanted a tool that would:
- Install in one command
- Require nothing to be learned for a new developer
- Tell that developer what they need to fix in the code that they modify and that code only.
git-vogue aims to satisfy these needs, whilst saving developers from the drudgery of installing, configuring and running each of these tools independently.
The interface for an executable (to be called by git-vogue) is a command line argument, one of {check,fix,name}, followed by a list of files that are to be checked, and then a list of all the files in the repository that are not ignored. These lists are newline separated.
The plugin can assume that the CWD will be set to the top-level directory of the package.
Here's how you might run stylish-haskell on all files in the current directory:
cd dir-to-check;
path-to-libexec/git-vogue-stylish check "$(find .)" "$(find .)"
name
will return a human-readable name one linecheck
will not modify any filescheck
will exit with a return code of:- No errors - 0
- Errors need fixing - 1
- Catastrophic failure to check - 2
fix
is idempotentfix
will exit with a return code of:- The code is now good (changes may or may not have been made) - 0
- Some errors remain - 1
- Catastrophic failure to check - 2
- If
fix
returns "success" (return code 0),check
must no longer fail