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<img alt="modum logo" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/eboody/modum/main/modum-logo.svg" width="360">
<p>Modum enforces consistent module naming, import style, and public API paths across a Rust workspace.</p>
<p>
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<a href="https://docs.rs/modum"><img src="https://docs.rs/modum/badge.svg" alt="docs.rs" /></a>
</p>
</div>
# modum
It is a lint tool. It reports diagnostics. It does not rewrite code.
## Why It Exists
These API shapes are legal Rust, but they add noise:
```rust
use http::Client;
use user::UserRepository;
pub use partials::error::Error;
```
These read more clearly:
```rust
use http;
use user;
pub use partials::Error;
```
And these public paths usually read better:
```rust
user::Repository
user::error::InvalidEmail
partials::Error
```
instead of:
```rust
user::UserRepository
user::error::InvalidEmailError
partials::error::Error
```
`modum` enforces that style across an entire workspace.
## Mental Model
`modum` follows three rules:
1. Keep namespace context visible at call sites.
2. Keep public paths meaningful without redundancy.
3. Use modules for domain boundaries, not file organization.
## Quick Usage
```bash
cargo install modum
cargo modum check --root .
cargo modum check --root . --mode warn
cargo modum check --root . --format json
```
`cargo install modum` installs both `modum` and the Cargo subcommand `cargo-modum`, so either of these is valid:
```bash
modum check --root .
cargo modum check --root .
```
### Neovim
`modum` works well with `nvim-lint`. Use `--mode warn` so diagnostics do not fail the editor job, and use `--format json` for stable parsing.
```lua
local lint = require("lint")
lint.linters.modum = {
cmd = "modum",
stdin = false,
stream = "stdout",
args = { "check", "--root", vim.fn.getcwd(), "--mode", "warn", "--format", "json" },
parser = function(output, bufnr)
if output == "" then
return {}
end
local decoded = vim.json.decode(output)
local current_file = vim.api.nvim_buf_get_name(bufnr)
local diagnostics = {}
for _, item in ipairs(((decoded or {}).report or {}).diagnostics or {}) do
if item.file == current_file then
diagnostics[#diagnostics + 1] = {
bufnr = bufnr,
lnum = math.max((item.line or 1) - 1, 0),
col = 0,
severity = item.level == "Error"
and vim.diagnostic.severity.ERROR
or vim.diagnostic.severity.WARN,
source = "modum",
code = item.code,
message = item.message,
}
end
end
return diagnostics
end,
}
lint.linters_by_ft.rust = { "modum" }
```
If you edit multiple crates from one Neovim session, replace `vim.fn.getcwd()` with your workspace root resolver. `modum` is workspace-oriented, so it is usually better to run it on save than on every `InsertLeave`.
If you are developing `modum` itself:
```bash
cargo run -p modum -- check --root .
```
Environment:
```bash
Default mode is `deny`.
## CI Usage
Use `modum` the same way you would use `clippy` or `cargo-deny`: run it as a normal command in CI, not from `build.rs`.
```yaml
- run: cargo install modum
- run: cargo modum check --root .
```
## Exit Behavior
- `0`: clean, or warnings allowed via `--mode warn`
- `2`: warning-level policy violations found in `deny` mode
- `1`: hard errors, including parse/configuration failures and error-level policy violations such as `api_organizational_submodule_flatten`
## Configuration
Configure the lints in any workspace with Cargo metadata:
```toml
[workspace.metadata.modum]
generic_nouns = ["Id", "Repository", "Service", "Error", "Command", "Request", "Response"]
weak_modules = ["storage", "transport", "infra", "common", "misc", "helpers", "helper", "types", "util", "utils"]
catch_all_modules = ["common", "misc", "helpers", "helper", "types", "util", "utils"]
organizational_modules = ["error", "errors"]
namespace_preserving_modules = ["auth", "command", "components", "email", "error", "http", "page", "partials", "policy", "query", "repo", "store", "storage", "transport", "infra"]
```
Use `[package.metadata.modum]` inside a member crate to override workspace defaults for that package.
Tuning guide:
- `generic_nouns`: generic leaves like `Repository`, `Error`, or `Request`
- `namespace_preserving_modules`: modules that should stay visible at call sites, such as `http`, `email`, `partials`, or `components`
- `organizational_modules`: modules that should not leak into the public API surface, such as `error`
## Lint Categories
### Import Style
These warn when imports or re-exports flatten a namespace that should stay visible.
- `namespace_flat_use`
Warning for flattened imports of generic nouns when there is an actionable namespace-visible call-site form that adds net context, such as `storage::Repository` or `http::StatusCode`. It skips cases where the only preserved form would still be redundant, such as `error::Error` or `response::Response`.
- `namespace_flat_use_preserve_module`
Warning for flattened imports from configured namespace-preserving modules when the preserved call-site form still adds net context.
- `namespace_flat_use_redundant_leaf_context`
Warning for flattened imports or actionable rename-heavy aliases whose leaf repeats parent context. For plain imports, this only fires when the shorter leaf would be an actionable generic noun such as `Repository`, `Error`, or `Id`. For rename aliases, this only fires when the qualified form would still preserve real context, such as `http::StatusCode` or `page::Event`.
- `namespace_redundant_qualified_generic`
Warning for qualified call-site paths whose module only repeats a generic category already named by the leaf, such as `response::Response` or `error::Error`.
- `namespace_parent_surface`
- `namespace_flat_pub_use`
- `namespace_flat_pub_use_preserve_module`
- `namespace_flat_pub_use_redundant_leaf_context`
Examples:
- `use storage::Repository;`
- `use http::Client;`
- `use user::UserRepository;`
- `response::Response`
- `use crate::error::Error;` inside a crate whose root surface already exposes `Error`
- `pub use auth::{login, logout};`
Canonical parent-surface re-exports are allowed. `pub use error::{Error, Result};` is valid when that is how a module intentionally exposes `module::Error` and `module::Result`. The same applies to broader UI surfaces such as exposing both `components::Button` and `partials::Button`.
### Public API Paths
These warn when public leaves are too generic for a weak parent, or when the path repeats context it already has.
- `api_missing_parent_surface_export`
- `api_weak_module_generic_leaf`
- `api_redundant_leaf_context`
- `api_redundant_category_suffix`
Examples:
- `partials::button::Button` when the intended surface should also expose `partials::Button`
- `storage::Repository`
- `user::UserRepository`
- `user::error::InvalidEmailError`
Private organizational child modules are allowed to flatten their family items back to the parent surface. For example, `mod auth_shell; pub use auth_shell::{AuthShell, AuthShellVariant};` is treated as a valid parent-surface export shape.
### Module Boundaries
These catch weak or redundant public module structure.
- `api_catch_all_module`
- `api_repeated_module_segment`
Examples:
- `helpers`
- `error::error`
### Structural Errors
This rule is an error, not a warning.
- `api_organizational_submodule_flatten`
Example:
- `partials::error::Error` should usually be `partials::Error`
## What It Does Not Check
Some naming-guide rules stay advisory because they are too semantic to lint reliably without compiler-grade context.
Examples:
- choosing the best public path among several plausible domain decompositions
- deciding when an internal long name plus `pub use ... as ...` is the right tradeoff
- deciding whether a new module level adds real meaning or only mirrors the file tree in edge cases
## Scope
Default discovery:
- package root: scans `<root>/src`
- workspace root: scans each member crate's `src`
Override discovery with `--include`:
```bash
modum check --root . --include crates/api/src --include crates/domain/src
```
## False Positives And False Negatives
The broader import-style lints only inspect module-scope `use` items. They do not scan local block imports inside functions or tight test scopes, because those scopes often benefit from flatter imports.
To reduce false negatives:
- extend `namespace_preserving_modules` for domain modules like `user`, `billing`, or `tenant`
- keep `generic_nouns` aligned with the generic leaves your API actually uses
- keep `organizational_modules` configured so `partials::error::Error`-style paths stay blocked