tree-sitter-cfengine 1.0.12

CFEngine grammar for tree-sitter
Documentation

Tree sitter grammar for CFEngine policy language

This tree-sitter grammar parses CFEngine policy language and turns it into an abstract syntax tree. It is used to provide syntax highlighting in the Zed editor, via this extension:

https://github.com/olehermanse/zed-cfengine

The grammar currently supports all major features of the language, including:

  • Bundle blocks
  • Body blocks
  • Promise type definition blocks
  • Promise types, class guards, promises, stakeholders (promisees)
  • Macros
  • Function calls
  • Lists, strings, expansions (with $() and @())

Todos

  • Using the grammar for linting / syntax checking (language server)
  • Highlighting inside strings and comments
  • Recognizing when there is JSON inside policy
  • Class guards which are quoted strings
  • Using the grammar for code indentation
  • Using the grammar for extensions to other editors

Before contributing for the first time, it's recommended to go through the tree-sitter tutorial for getting familiar with how everything works:

https://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/creating-parsers

Inspired by Lars Erik Wik's initial implementation available here:

https://github.com/larsewi/tree-sitter-cfengine

Run containerized tests locally:

docker build --tag tree-sitter-cfengine .

Making changes

After making changes to grammar.js, run the the commands below to generate, build, and test:

tree-sitter generate && tree-sitter build && tree-sitter test

In tree-sitter projects, it is normal to commit the files generated / edited by the tree-sitter tooling. Once it is working and tests are passing, commit the changes (including src/ folder with generated files).

Creating a new release

Creating a release in GitHub will not work. To create a new release, you need to make a commit and tag locally, and push it. First ensure you have a clean git repo without any uncommitted changes. Then, run the following commands:

tree-sitter version 1.2.3
git add -A
git commit -S -s -m "Bump to version 1.2.3"
git tag -s -a 1.2.3 -m 1.2.3
git push --tags

GitHub Actions will start when a tag is pushed, and the action will create the "Release" in GitHub, as well as pypi, npm, and crates.io: