d987e18e69
Unlike most of the other OpenStack projects hacking is not automatically syncronsed to projecst via the proposal-bot. My understanding of this is because new hacking tests could cause unexpected gate failures which it was automatically syncronised and/or did not always take into account project style. The downside of this is that we have alarge number of projects still using older hacking releases. This has come to a head with the release of pbr 2.0.0 which conflicts with 0.9.x and 0.10.x hacking branches. While it isn't possible to get all projecst up to the newest hacking it it is possible to remove the cap on PBR and allow project that still want older hacking releasee to work with the new PBR release. Change-Id: Iabf27cc0648c12c3c090f01facd15c3ec52a4861 Related-Bug: 1668848 |
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doc/source | ||
hacking | ||
integration-test | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitreview | ||
.mailmap | ||
.testr.conf | ||
CONTRIBUTING.rst | ||
HACKING.rst | ||
LICENSE | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
README.rst | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
test-requirements.txt | ||
tox.ini |
README.rst
Introduction
hacking is a set of flake8 plugins that test and enforce the OpenStack Style Guidlines.
Installation
hacking is available from pypi, so just run:
pip install hacking
This will install flake8
with the hacking
and pyflake
plugins
Origin
Most of the additional style guidelines that OpenStack has taken on came from the Google Python Style Guide.
Since then, a few more OpenStack specific ones have been added or modified.
Versioning
hacking uses the major.minor.maintenance release notation, where maintenance releases cannot contain new checks. This way projects can gate on hacking by pinning on the major.minor number while accepting maintenance updates without being concerned that a new version will break the gate with a new check.
Adding additional checks
Each check is a pep8 plugin so read
Requirements
- The check must already have community support. We do not want to dictate style, only enforce it.
- The canonical source of the OpenStack Style Guidelines is HACKING.rst, and
hacking just enforces them; so when adding a new check, it must be in
HACKING.rst
- False negatives are ok, but false positives are not
- Cannot be project specific, project specific checks should be Local Checks
- Docstring tests
- Registered as entry_points in setup.cfg
- Error code must be in the relevant
Hxxx
group
Local Checks
hacking supports having local changes in a source tree. They can be configured to run in two different ways. They can be registered individually, or with a factory function.
For individual registration, put a comma separated list of pep8 compatible check functions into the hacking section of tox.ini. E.g.:
[hacking]
local-check = nova.tests.hacking.bad_code_is_terrible
Alternately, you can specify the location of a callable that will be called at registration time and will be passed the registration function. The callable should expect to call the passed in function on everything if wants to register. Such as:
[hacking]
local-check-factory = nova.tests.hacking.factory