# Precious - One Code Quality Tool to Rule Them All
Who doesn't love linters and tidiers? I sure love them. I love them so much
that in many of my projects I might easily have five or ten of them enabled!
Wouldn't it be great if you could run all of them with just one command?
Wouldn't it be great if that command just had one config file to define what
tools to run on each part of your project? Wouldn't it be great if Sauron were
our ruler?
Now with Precious you can say "yes" to all of those questions.
## Why Precious?
In all seriousness, managing code quality tools can be a bit of a pain. It
becomes **much** more painful when you have a multi-language project. You may
have multiple tools per language, each of which runs on some subset of your
codebase. Then you need to hook these tools into your commit hooks and CI
system.
With Precious you can configure all of your code quality tool rules in one
place and easily run `precious` from your commit hooks and in CI.
## Installation
There are several ways to install this tool.
### Use ubi
Install my [universal binary installer
(ubi)](https://github.com/houseabsolute/ubi) tool and you can use it to
download `precious` and many other tools.
```
$> ubi --project houseabsolute/precious --in ~/bin
```
### Binary Releases
You can grab a binary release from the [releases
page](https://github.com/houseabsolute/precious/releases). Untar the tarball
and put the executable it contains somewhere in your path and you're good to
go.
### Cargo
You can also install this via `cargo` by running `cargo install precious`. See
[the cargo
documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/commands/cargo-install.html) to
understand where the binary will be installed.
## Examples
Check out this repo's [examples directory](examples), which has
`precious.toml` config files for several languages. Contributions for other
languages are welcome!
Also check out [the example
`install-dev-tools.sh`](examples/bin/install-dev-tools.sh) script. You can
customize this as needed to install only the tools you need for your project.
## Configuration
Precious is configured via a single `precious.toml` or `.precious.toml` file
that lives in your project root. The file is in [TOML
format](https://github.com/toml-lang/toml).
There is just one key that can be set in the top level table of the config file:
| `exclude` | array of strings | no | Each array member is a pattern that will be matched against potential files when `precious` is run. These patterns are matched in the same way as patterns in a [gitignore file](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore#_pattern_format). <br> You can use lines starting with a `!` to negate the meaning of previous rules in the list, so that anything that matches is _not_ excluded even if it matches previous rules. |
All other configuration is on a per-command basis. A command is something that
either tidies (aka pretty prints or beautifies), lints, or does both. These
commands are external programs which precious will execute as needed.
Each command is defined in a block named something like
`[commands.command-name]`. Each name after the `commands.` prefix must be
unique. You **can** have run the same executable differently with different
commands as long as each command has a unique name.
Commands are run in the same order as they appear in the config file.
### Command Invocation
There are three configuration keys for command invocation. All of them are
optional. If none are specified, `precious` defaults to this:
```toml
invoke = "per-file"
working_dir = "root"
path_args = "file"
```
This runs the command once per file with the working directory for the command
as the project root. The command will be passed a relative path to the file
from the root as a single argument to the command.
#### `invoke`
The `invoke` key tells `precious` how the command should be invoked.
| `"per-file"` | Run this command once for each matching file. **This is the default.** |
| `"per-dir"` | Run this command once for each matching directory. |
| `"once"` | Run this command once. |
#### `working_dir`
The `working_dir` key tells precious what the working directory should be when the
command is run.
| `"root"` | The working directory is the project root. **This is the default.** |
| `"dir"` | The working directory is the directory containing the matching files. This means `precious` will `chdir` into each matching directory in turn as it executes the command. |
| `.chdir_to = "path"` | The working directory will be the given path when executing the command. **This path must be relative to the project root.** |
##### `working_dir.chdir_to = "path"`
The final option for `working_dir` is to set an explicit path as the working
directory.
With this option, the working directory will be set to the given subdirectory
when the command is executed. Relative paths passed to the command will be relative to this
subdirectory rather than the project root.
#### `path_args`
The `path_args` key tells precious how paths should be passed when the command
is run.
| `"file"` | Passes the path to the matching file relative to the root. **This is the default.** <br> With `working_directory.chdir_to` the path is relative to the given working directory. |
| `"dir"` | Passes the path to the directory containing the matching files relative to the root. <br> With `working_directory.chdir_to` the path is relative to the given working directory. |
| `"none"` | No paths are passed to the command at all. |
| `"dot"` | Always pass `.` as the path. This is useful when `working_dir = "dir"` and the command still requires a path to be passed. |
| `"absolute-file"` | Passes the path to the matching file as an absolute path from the filesystem's root directory. |
| `"absolute-dir"` | Passes the path to the directory containing the matching files as an absolute path from the filesystem's root directory. |
#### Nonsensical Combinations
Most combinations of these configuration keys are allowed, but there are some
nonsensical combinations that will cause `precious` to exit with an error.
```
invoke = "per-file"
path_args = "dir", "none", "dot", or "absolute-dir"
```
You cannot invoke a command once per file without passing the filename.
```
invoke = "per-dir"
path_args = "none" or "dot"
working_dir = "root"
# ... or ...
working_dir.chdir_to = "whatever"
```
You cannot invoke a command once per directory from a root without passing the
directory name or a list of file names. If you want to run a command once per
directory with no path arguments or using `.` as the path then you _must_ set
`working_dir = "dir"`.
```
invoke = "once"
working_dir = "dir"
```
You cannot invoke a command once if the working directory is set to each
matching directory in turn.
#### Invocation Examples
See the [Invocation Examples documentation](docs/invocation-examples.md) for
comprehensive examples of every possible set of options.
### Other Per-Command Configuration Keys
The other keys allowed for each command are as follows:
| `type` | string | **yes** | all | | This must be either `lint`, `tidy`, or `both`. This defines what type of command this is. A command which is `both` **must** define `lint_flags` or `tidy_flags` as well. |
| `include` | string or array of strings | **yes** | all | | Each array member is a [gitignore pattern](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore#_pattern_format) that tells `precious` what files this command applies to. <br> You can use lines starting with a `!` to negate the meaning of previous rules in the list, so that anything that matches is _not_ included even if it matches previous rules. |
| `exclude` | string or array of strings | no | all | | Each array member is a [gitignore pattern](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore#_pattern_format) that tells `precious` what files this command should not be applied to. <br> You can use lines starting with a `!` to negate the meaning of previous rules in the list, so that anything that matches is _not_ excluded even if it matches previous rules. |
| `cmd` | string or array of strings | **yes** | all | | This is the executable to be run followed by any arguments that should always be passed. |
| `env` | table - values are strings | no | all | | This key allows you to set one or more environment variables that will be set when the command is run. The values in this table must be strings. |
| `path_flag` | string | no | all | | By default, `precious` will pass the path being operated on to the command it executes as the final, positional, argument(s). If the command takes paths via a flag you need to specify that flag with this key. |
| `lint_flags` | string or array of strings | no | combined linter & tidier | | If a command is both a linter and tidier then it may take extra flags to operate in linting mode. This is how you set that flag. |
| `tidy_flags` | string or array of strings | no | combined linter & tidier | | If a command is both a linter and tidier then it may take extra flags to operate in tidying mode. This is how you set that flag. |
| `ok_exit_codes` | integer or array of integers | **yes** | all | | Any exit code that **does not** indicate an abnormal exit should be here. For most commands this is just `0` but some commands may use other exit codes even for a normal exit. |
| `lint_failure_exit_codes` | integer or array of integers | no | linters | | If the command is a linter then these are the status codes that indicate a lint failure. These need to be specified so `precious` can distinguish an exit because of a lint failure versus an exit because of some unexpected issue. |
| `ignore_stderr` | string or array of strings | all | all | | By default, `precious` assumes that when a command sends output to `stderr` that indicates a failure to lint or tidy. This parameter can specify one or more regexes. These regexes will be matched against the command's stderr output. If _any_ of the regexes match, the stderr output is ignored. |
### Referencing the Project Root
For commands that can be run from a subdirectory, you may need to specify
config files in terms of the project root. You can do this by using the string
`$PRECIOUS_ROOT` in any element of the `cmd` configuration key. So for example
you might write something like this:
```toml
cmd = ["some-tidier", "--config", "$PRECIOUS_ROOT/some-tidier.conf"]
```
The `$PRECIOUS_ROOT` string will be replaced by the absolute path to the
project root.
## Running Precious
To get help run `precious --help`.
The root command takes the following options:
| `-c`, `--config` `<config>` | Path to the precious config file |
| `-j`, `--jobs` `<jobs>` | Number of parallel jobs (threads) to run (defaults to one per core) |
| `-q`, `--quiet` | Suppresses most output |
| `-a`, `--ascii` | Replace super-fun Unicode symbols with terribly boring ASCII |
| `-v`, `--verbose` | Enable verbose output |
| `-V`, `--version` | Prints version information |
| `-d`, `--debug` | Enable debugging output |
| `-t`, `--trace` | Enable tracing output (maximum logging) |
| `-h`, `--help` | Prints help information |
### Parallel Execution
Precious will always execute commands in parallel, with one process per CPU by
default. The execution is parallelized based on the command's invocation
configuration. For example, on a 12 CPU system, a command that has `invoke = "per-file"` will be executed up to 12 times in parallel, with each command
execution receiving one file.
You can disable parallel execution by passing `--jobs 1`.
### Subcommands
The `precious` command has two subcommands, `lint` and `tidy`. You must always
specify one of these. These subcommands take the same options.
#### Selecting Paths to Operate On
When you run `precious` you must tell it what paths to operate on. There are
several options for this:
| All paths | `-a`, `--all` | Run on all files under the project root (the directory containing the precious config file). |
| Modified files according to git | `-g`, `--git` | Run on all files that git reports as having been modified. |
| Staged files according to git | `-s`, `--staged` | Run on all files that git reports as having been staged. |
| Staged files according to git, with unstaged changes stashed | `--staged-with-stash` | This is like `--stashed`, but it will stash unstaged changes while it runs and pop the stash at the end. This ensures that commands only run against the staged version of your codebase. This can cause issues with many editors or other tools that watch for file changes, so exercise care with this option. |
| Paths given on CLI | | If you don't pass any of the above flags then `precious` will expect one or more paths to be passed on the command line after all other options. If any of these paths are directories then that entire directory tree will be included. |
#### Running One Command
You can tidy or lint with just a single command by passing the `--command` flag:
```
$> precious lint --command some-command --all
```
The name passed to `--command` must match the name of the command in your
config file. So in the above example, this would look for a command defined as
`[commands.some-command]` in your config.
#### Default Exclusions
When selecting paths `precious` _always_ respects your ignore files. Right now
it only knows how this works for git, and it will respect all of the following
ignore files:
- Per-directory `.ignore` and `.gitignore` files.
- The `.git/info/exclude` file.
- Global gitignore globs, usually found in `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/ignore`.
This is implemented using the [rust `ignore`
crate](https://crates.io/crates/ignore), so adding support for other VCS
systems should be proposed there.
In addition, you can specify excludes for all commands by setting a global
`exclude` key.
Finally, you can specify per-command `include` and `exclude` keys.
#### How Include and Exclude Are Applied
When `precious` runs it does the following to determine which commands apply to
which paths.
- The base files to operate on are selected based on the command line option
specified. This is one of:
- `--all` - All files under the project root (the directory containing the
precious config file).
- `--git` - All files in the git repo that have been modified.
- `--staged` - All files in the git repo that have been staged.
- paths passed on the CLI - If a path is a file it is added to the list
as-is. If the path is a directory then all the files under that directory
(recursively) are found.
- VCS ignore rules are applied to remove files from this list.
- The global exclude rules are applied to remove files from this list.
- Based on the command's `invoke` key, a list of files to be checked is
generated and the command's include/exclude rules are applied. To be
included, a file must match at least one include rule _and_ not match any
exclude rules to be accepted.
- If `invoke` is `per-file`, then the rules are applied one file at a time.
- If `invoke` is `per-dir`, then if any file in the directory matches the
rules, the command will be run on that directory.
- If `invoke` is `once`, then the rules are applied to all of the files at
once. If any one of those files matches the include rule, the command will
be run.
## Configuration Recommendations
Here are some recommendations for how to get the best experience with precious.
### Choosing How to `invoke` the Command
Some commands might work equally well with `invoke` set to either `per-dir` or
`root`. The right run mode to choose depends on how you are using precious.
In general, if you either have a very small set of directories, _or_ you are
running precious on most or all of the directories at once, then `once` will
be faster.
However, if you have a larger set of directories and you usually only need to
lint or tidy a small subset of these at once, then `per-dir` mode will be
faster.
### Quiet Flags
Many commands will accept a "quiet" flag of some sort. In general, you
probably _do not_ want to run commands in a quiet mode with precious.
In the case of a successful tidy or lint command execution, precious already
hides all stdout from the command that it runs. If the command fails somehow,
precious will print out the command's stdout and stderr output.
By default, precious treats _any_ output to stderr as an error in the command
(as opposed to a linting failure). You can use the `ignore_stderr` to specify
one or more regexes for allowed stderr output.
In addition, you can see all stdout and stderr output from a comment by
running precious in `--debug` mode.
All of which is to say that in general there's no value to running a command
in quiet mode with precious. All that does is make it harder to debug issues
with that command when lint checks fail or other issues occur.
## Exit Codes
When running in `--tidy` mode, precious always exits with `0`, whether or not
any files are tidied.
When running in `--lint` mode, precious will exit with `0` when all files pass
linting. If any lint commands fail it will exit with `1`.
In both modes, if any commands fail, either by returning exit codes that
aren't listed as ok or by printing to stderr unexpectedly, then precious will
exit with a non-0 exit code.
## Common Scenarios
There are some configuration scenarios that you may need to handle. Here are
some examples:
### Command runs just once for the entire source tree
Some commands, such as [rust-clippy](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy),
expect to run just once across the entire source tree, rather than once per
file or directory.
In order to make that happen you should use the following config:
```toml
include = "**/*.rs"
invoke = "once"
path_args = "dot" # or "none"
```
This will cause `precious` to run the command exactly once in the project
root.
### Command runs in the same directory as the files it lints and does not accept path as arguments
If you want to run the command without passing the path being operated on to
the command, set `invoke = "per-dir"` and `path_args = "none"`:
```toml
include = "**/*.rs"
invoke = "per-dir"
path_args = "none"
```
### You want a command to exclude an entire directory (tree) except for one or more files
Use an ignore pattern starting with `!` in the `exclude` list:
```toml
[commands.rustfmt]
type = "both"
include = "**/*.rs"
exclude = [
"path/to/dir",
"!path/to/dir/included.rs",
]
cmd = ["rustfmt"]
lint_flags = "--check"
ok_exit_codes = [0]
lint_failure_exit_codes = [1]
```
### You want to run Precious as a commit hook
Simply run `precious lint -s` in your hook. It will exit with a non-zero
status if any of the lint commands indicate a linting problem.
### You want to run commands in a specific order
As of version 0.1.2, commands are run in the same order as they appear in the
config file.
## Build Status
### Build and Test

### Cargo Audit Nightly

### Cargo Audit On Push
