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makem.sh
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makem.sh
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# * makem.sh --- Script to aid building and testing Emacs Lisp packages
# URL: https://github.com/alphapapa/makem.sh
# Version: 0.7.1
# * Commentary:
# makem.sh is a script that helps to build, lint, and test Emacs Lisp
# packages. It aims to make linting and testing as simple as possible
# without requiring per-package configuration.
# It works similarly to a Makefile in that "rules" are called to
# perform actions such as byte-compiling, linting, testing, etc.
# Source and test files are discovered automatically from the
# project's Git repo, and package dependencies within them are parsed
# automatically.
# Output is simple: by default, there is no output unless errors
# occur. With increasing verbosity levels, more detail gives positive
# feedback. Output is colored by default to make reading easy.
# The script can run Emacs with the developer's local Emacs
# configuration, or with a clean, "sandbox" configuration that can be
# optionally removed afterward. This is especially helpful when
# upstream dependencies may have released new versions that differ
# from those installed in the developer's personal configuration.
# * License:
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# * Functions
function usage {
cat <<EOF
$0 [OPTIONS] RULES...
Linter- and test-specific rules will error when their linters or tests
are not found. With -vv, rules that run multiple rules will show a
message for unavailable linters or tests.
Rules:
all Run all lints and tests.
compile Byte-compile source files.
lint Run all linters, ignoring unavailable ones.
lint-checkdoc Run checkdoc.
lint-compile Byte-compile source files with warnings as errors.
lint-declare Run check-declare.
lint-elsa Run Elsa (not included in "lint" rule).
lint-indent Lint indentation.
lint-package Run package-lint.
lint-regexps Run relint.
test, tests Run all tests, ignoring missing test types.
test-buttercup Run Buttercup tests.
test-ert Run ERT tests.
test-ert-interactive Run ERT tests interactively.
batch Run Emacs in batch mode, loading project source and test files
automatically, with remaining args (after "--") passed to Emacs.
interactive Run Emacs interactively, loading project source and test files
automatically, with remaining args (after "--") passed to Emacs.
Options:
-d, --debug Print debug info.
-h, --help I need somebody!
-v, --verbose Increase verbosity, up to -vvv.
--no-color Disable color output.
--debug-load-path Print load-path from inside Emacs.
-E, --emacs PATH Run Emacs at PATH.
-e, --exclude FILE Exclude FILE from linting and testing.
-f, --file FILE Check FILE in addition to discovered files.
-c, --compile-batch Batch-compile files (instead of separately; quicker, but
may hide problems).
-C, --no-compile Don't compile files automatically.
Sandbox options:
-s[DIR], --sandbox[=DIR] Run Emacs with an empty config in a sandbox DIR.
If DIR does not exist, make it. If DIR is not
specified, use a temporary sandbox directory and
delete it afterward, implying --install-deps and
--install-linters.
--install-deps Automatically install package dependencies.
--install-linters Automatically install linters.
-i, --install PACKAGE Install PACKAGE before running rules.
An Emacs version-specific subdirectory is automatically made inside
the sandbox, allowing testing with multiple Emacs versions. When
specifying a sandbox directory, use options --install-deps and
--install-linters on first-run and omit them afterward to save time.
Source files are automatically discovered from git, or may be
specified with options. Package dependencies are discovered from
"Package-Requires" headers in source files, from -pkg.el files, and
from a Cask file.
Checkdoc's spell checker may not recognize some words, causing the
`lint-checkdoc' rule to fail. Custom words can be added in file-local
or directory-local variables using the variable
`ispell-buffer-session-localwords', which should be set to a list of
strings.
EOF
}
# ** Elisp
# These functions return a path to an elisp file which can be loaded
# by Emacs on the command line with -l or --load.
function elisp-buttercup-file {
# The function buttercup-run, which is called by buttercup-run-discover,
# signals an error if it can't find any Buttercup test suites. We don't
# want that to be an error, so we define advice which ignores that error.
local file=$(mktemp)
cat >$file <<EOF
(defun makem-buttercup-run (oldfun &rest r)
"Call buttercup-run only if \`buttercup-suites' is non-nil."
(when buttercup-suites
(apply oldfun r)))
(advice-add #'buttercup-run :around #'makem-buttercup-run)
EOF
echo $file
}
function elisp-elint-file {
local file=$(mktemp)
cat >$file <<EOF
(require 'cl-lib)
(require 'elint)
(defun makem-elint-file (file)
(let ((errors 0))
(cl-letf (((symbol-function 'orig-message) (symbol-function 'message))
((symbol-function 'message) (symbol-function 'ignore))
((symbol-function 'elint-output)
(lambda (string)
(cl-incf errors)
(orig-message "%s" string))))
(elint-file file)
;; NOTE: \`errors' is not actually the number of errors, because
;; it's incremented for non-error header strings as well.
(kill-emacs errors))))
EOF
echo "$file"
}
function elisp-checkdoc-file {
# Since checkdoc doesn't have a batch function that exits non-zero
# when errors are found, we make one.
local file=$(mktemp)
cat >$file <<EOF
(defvar makem-checkdoc-errors-p nil)
(defun makem-checkdoc-files-and-exit ()
"Run checkdoc-file on files remaining on command line, exiting non-zero if there are warnings."
(let* ((files (mapcar #'expand-file-name command-line-args-left))
(checkdoc-create-error-function
(lambda (text start end &optional unfixable)
(let ((msg (concat (checkdoc-buffer-label) ":"
(int-to-string (count-lines (point-min) (or start (point-min))))
": " text)))
(message msg)
(setq makem-checkdoc-errors-p t)
;; Return nil because we *are* generating a buffered list of errors.
nil))))
(put 'ispell-buffer-session-localwords 'safe-local-variable #'list-of-strings-p)
(mapcar #'checkdoc-file files)
(when makem-checkdoc-errors-p
(kill-emacs 1))))
(setq checkdoc-spellcheck-documentation-flag t)
(makem-checkdoc-files-and-exit)
EOF
echo $file
}
function elisp-byte-compile-file {
# This seems to be the only way to make byte-compilation signal
# errors for warnings AND display all warnings rather than only
# the first one.
local file=$(mktemp)
# TODO: Add file to $paths_temp in other elisp- functions.
paths_temp+=("$file")
cat >"$file" <<EOF
(defun makem-batch-byte-compile (&rest args)
""
(let ((num-errors 0)
(num-warnings 0))
;; NOTE: Only accepts files as args, not directories.
(dolist (file command-line-args-left)
(pcase-let ((\`(,errors ,warnings) (makem-byte-compile-file file)))
(cl-incf num-errors errors)
(cl-incf num-warnings warnings)))
(zerop num-errors)))
(defun makem-byte-compile-file (filename &optional load)
"Call \`byte-compile-warn', returning the number of errors and the number of warnings."
(let ((num-warnings 0)
(num-errors 0))
(cl-letf (((symbol-function 'byte-compile-warn)
(lambda (format &rest args)
;; Copied from \`byte-compile-warn'.
(cl-incf num-warnings)
(setq format (apply #'format-message format args))
(byte-compile-log-warning format t :warning)))
((symbol-function 'byte-compile-report-error)
(lambda (error-info &optional fill &rest args)
(cl-incf num-errors)
;; Copied from \`byte-compile-report-error'.
(setq byte-compiler-error-flag t)
(byte-compile-log-warning
(if (stringp error-info) error-info
(error-message-string error-info))
fill :error))))
(byte-compile-file filename load))
(list num-errors num-warnings)))
EOF
echo "$file"
}
function elisp-check-declare-file {
# Since check-declare doesn't have a batch function that exits
# non-zero when errors are found, we make one.
local file=$(mktemp)
cat >$file <<EOF
(require 'check-declare)
(defun makem-check-declare-files-and-exit ()
"Run check-declare-files on files remaining on command line, exiting non-zero if there are warnings."
(let* ((files (mapcar #'expand-file-name command-line-args-left))
(errors (apply #'check-declare-files files)))
(when errors
(with-current-buffer check-declare-warning-buffer
(print (buffer-string)))
(kill-emacs 1))))
EOF
echo $file
}
function elisp-lint-indent-file {
# This function prints warnings for indentation errors and exits
# non-zero when errors are found.
local file=$(mktemp)
cat >"$file" <<EOF
(require 'cl-lib)
(defun makem-lint-indent-batch-and-exit ()
"Print warnings for files which are not indented properly, then exit.
Exits non-zero if mis-indented lines are found. Checks files in
'command-line-args-left'."
(let ((errors-p))
(cl-labels ((lint-file (file)
(find-file file)
(let ((inhibit-message t))
(indent-region (point-min) (point-max)))
(when buffer-undo-list
;; Indentation changed: warn for each line.
(dolist (line (undo-lines buffer-undo-list))
(message "%s:%s: Indentation mismatch" (buffer-name) line))
(setf errors-p t)))
(undo-pos (entry)
(cl-typecase (car entry)
(number (car entry))
(string (abs (cdr entry)))))
(undo-lines (undo-list)
;; Return list of lines changed in UNDO-LIST.
(nreverse (cl-loop for elt in undo-list
for pos = (undo-pos elt)
when pos
collect (line-number-at-pos pos)))))
(mapc #'lint-file (mapcar #'expand-file-name command-line-args-left))
(when errors-p
(kill-emacs 1)))))
EOF
echo "$file"
}
function elisp-package-initialize-file {
local file=$(mktemp)
cat >$file <<EOF
(require 'package)
(setq package-archives (list (cons "gnu" "https://elpa.gnu.org/packages/")
(cons "melpa" "https://melpa.org/packages/")
(cons "melpa-stable" "https://stable.melpa.org/packages/")))
(package-initialize)
EOF
echo $file
}
# ** Emacs
function run_emacs {
# NOTE: The sandbox args need to come before the package
# initialization so Emacs will use the sandbox's packages.
local emacs_command=(
"${emacs_command[@]}"
-Q
--eval "(setq load-prefer-newer t)"
"${args_debug[@]}"
"${args_sandbox[@]}"
-l $package_initialize_file
$arg_batch
"${args_load_paths[@]}"
)
# Show debug message with load-path from inside Emacs.
[[ $debug_load_path ]] \
&& debug $("${emacs_command[@]}" \
--batch \
--eval "(message \"LOAD-PATH: %s\" load-path)" \
2>&1)
# Set output file.
output_file=$(mktemp) || die "Unable to make output file."
paths_temp+=("$output_file")
# Run Emacs.
debug "run_emacs: ${emacs_command[@]} $@ &>\"$output_file\""
"${emacs_command[@]}" "$@" &>"$output_file"
# Check exit code and output.
exit=$?
[[ $exit != 0 ]] \
&& debug "Emacs exited non-zero: $exit"
[[ $verbose -gt 1 || $exit != 0 ]] \
&& cat $output_file
return $exit
}
# ** Compilation
function batch-byte-compile {
debug "batch-byte-compile: ERROR-ON-WARN:$compile_error_on_warn"
[[ $compile_error_on_warn ]] && local error_on_warn=(--eval "(setq byte-compile-error-on-warn t)")
run_emacs \
--load "$(elisp-byte-compile-file)" \
"${error_on_warn[@]}" \
--eval "(unless (makem-batch-byte-compile) (kill-emacs 1))" \
"$@"
}
function byte-compile-file {
debug "byte-compile: ERROR-ON-WARN:$compile_error_on_warn"
local file="$1"
[[ $compile_error_on_warn ]] && local error_on_warn=(--eval "(setq byte-compile-error-on-warn t)")
# FIXME: Why is the line starting with "&& verbose 3" not indented properly? Emacs insists on indenting it back a level.
run_emacs \
--load "$(elisp-byte-compile-file)" \
"${error_on_warn[@]}" \
--eval "(pcase-let ((\`(,num-errors ,num-warnings) (makem-byte-compile-file \"$file\"))) (when (or (and byte-compile-error-on-warn (not (zerop num-warnings))) (not (zerop num-errors))) (kill-emacs 1)))" \
&& verbose 3 "Compiling $file finished without errors." \
|| { verbose 3 "Compiling file failed: $file"; return 1; }
}
# ** Files
function submodules {
# Echo a list of submodules's paths relative to the repo root.
# TODO: Parse with bash regexp instead of cut.
git submodule status | awk '{print $2}'
}
function project-root {
# Echo the root of the project (or superproject, if running from
# within a submodule).
root_dir=$(git rev-parse --show-superproject-working-tree)
[[ $root_dir ]] || root_dir=$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
[[ $root_dir ]] || error "Can't find repo root."
echo "$root_dir"
}
function files-project {
# Echo a list of files in project; or with $1, files in it
# matching that pattern with "git ls-files". Excludes submodules.
[[ $1 ]] && pattern="/$1" || pattern="."
local excludes
for submodule in $(submodules)
do
excludes+=(":!:$submodule")
done
git ls-files -- "$pattern" "${excludes[@]}"
}
function dirs-project {
# Echo list of directories to be used in load path.
files-project-feature | dirnames
files-project-test | dirnames
}
function files-project-elisp {
# Echo list of Elisp files in project.
files-project 2>/dev/null \
| egrep "\.el$" \
| filter-files-exclude-default \
| filter-files-exclude-args
}
function files-project-feature {
# Echo list of Elisp files that are not tests and provide a feature.
files-project-elisp \
| grep -E -v "$test_files_regexp" \
| filter-files-feature
}
function files-project-test {
# Echo list of Elisp test files.
files-project-elisp | grep -E "$test_files_regexp"
}
function dirnames {
# Echo directory names for files on STDIN.
while read file
do
dirname "$file"
done
}
function filter-files-exclude-default {
# Filter out paths (STDIN) which should be excluded by default.
grep -E -v "(/\.cask/|-autoloads\.el|\.dir-locals)"
}
function filter-files-exclude-args {
# Filter out paths (STDIN) which are excluded with --exclude.
if [[ ${files_exclude[@]} ]]
then
(
# We use a subshell to set IFS temporarily so we can send
# the list of files to grep -F. This is ugly but more
# correct than replacing spaces with line breaks. Note
# that, for some reason, using IFS="\n" or IFS='\n' doesn't
# work, and a literal line break seems to be required.
IFS="
"
grep -Fv "${files_exclude[*]}"
)
else
cat
fi
}
function filter-files-feature {
# Read paths on STDIN and echo ones that (provide 'a-feature).
while read path
do
grep -E "^\\(provide '" "$path" &>/dev/null \
&& echo "$path"
done
}
function args-load-files {
# For file in $@, echo "--load $file".
for file in "$@"
do
sans_extension=${file%%.el}
printf -- '--load %q ' "$sans_extension"
done
}
function args-load-path {
# Echo load-path arguments.
for path in $(dirs-project | sort -u)
do
printf -- '-L %q ' "$path"
done
}
function test-files-p {
# Return 0 if $files_project_test is non-empty.
[[ "${files_project_test[@]}" ]]
}
function buttercup-tests-p {
# Return 0 if Buttercup tests are found.
test-files-p || die "No tests found."
debug "Checking for Buttercup tests..."
grep "(require 'buttercup)" "${files_project_test[@]}" &>/dev/null
}
function ert-tests-p {
# Return 0 if ERT tests are found.
test-files-p || die "No tests found."
debug "Checking for ERT tests..."
# We check for this rather than "(require 'ert)", because ERT may
# already be loaded in Emacs and might not be loaded with
# "require" in a test file.
grep "(ert-deftest" "${files_project_test[@]}" &>/dev/null
}
function package-main-file {
# Echo the package's main file.
file_pkg=$(files-project "*-pkg.el" 2>/dev/null)
if [[ $file_pkg ]]
then
# Use *-pkg.el file if it exists.
echo "$file_pkg"
else
# Use shortest filename (a sloppy heuristic that will do for now).
for file in "${files_project_feature[@]}"
do
echo ${#file} "$file"
done \
| sort -h \
| head -n1 \
| sed -r 's/^[[:digit:]]+ //'
fi
}
function dependencies {
# Echo list of package dependencies.
# Search package headers. Use -a so grep won't think that an Elisp file containing
# control characters (rare, but sometimes necessary) is binary and refuse to search it.
grep -E -a -i '^;; Package-Requires: ' $(files-project-feature) $(files-project-test) \
| grep -E -o '\([^([:space:]][^)]*\)' \
| grep -E -o '^[^[:space:])]+' \
| sed -r 's/\(//g' \
| grep -E -v '^emacs$' # Ignore Emacs version requirement.
# Search Cask file.
if [[ -r Cask ]]
then
grep -E '\(depends-on "[^"]+"' Cask \
| sed -r -e 's/\(depends-on "([^"]+)".*/\1/g'
fi
# Search -pkg.el file.
if [[ $(files-project "*-pkg.el" 2>/dev/null) ]]
then
sed -nr 's/.*\(([-[:alnum:]]+)[[:blank:]]+"[.[:digit:]]+"\).*/\1/p' $(files-project- -- -pkg.el 2>/dev/null)
fi
}
# ** Sandbox
function sandbox {
verbose 2 "Initializing sandbox..."
# *** Sandbox arguments
# MAYBE: Optionally use branch-specific sandbox?
# Check or make user-emacs-directory.
if [[ $sandbox_dir ]]
then
# Directory given as argument: ensure it exists.
if ! [[ -d $sandbox_dir ]]
then
debug "Making sandbox directory: $sandbox_dir"
mkdir -p "$sandbox_dir" || die "Unable to make sandbox dir."
fi
# Add Emacs version-specific subdirectory, creating if necessary.
sandbox_dir="$sandbox_dir/$(emacs-version)"
if ! [[ -d $sandbox_dir ]]
then
mkdir "$sandbox_dir" || die "Unable to make sandbox subdir: $sandbox_dir"
fi
else
# Not given: make temp directory, and delete it on exit.
local sandbox_dir=$(mktemp -d) || die "Unable to make sandbox dir."
paths_temp+=("$sandbox_dir")
fi
# Make argument to load init file if it exists.
init_file="$sandbox_dir/init.el"
# Set sandbox args. This is a global variable used by the run_emacs function.
args_sandbox=(
--title "makem.sh: $(basename $(pwd)) (sandbox: $sandbox_dir)"
--eval "(setq user-emacs-directory (file-truename \"$sandbox_dir\"))"
--load package
--eval "(setq package-user-dir (expand-file-name \"elpa\" user-emacs-directory))"
--eval "(setq user-init-file (file-truename \"$init_file\"))"
)
# Add package-install arguments for dependencies.
if [[ $install_deps ]]
then
local deps=($(dependencies))
debug "Installing dependencies: ${deps[@]}"
# Ensure built-in packages get upgraded to newer versions from ELPA.
args_sandbox_package_install+=(--eval "(setq package-install-upgrade-built-in t)")
for package in "${deps[@]}"
do
args_sandbox_package_install+=(--eval "(package-install '$package)")
done
fi
# Add package-install arguments for linters.
if [[ $install_linters ]]
then
debug "Installing linters: package-lint relint"
args_sandbox_package_install+=(
--eval "(package-install 'elsa)"
--eval "(package-install 'package-lint)"
--eval "(package-install 'relint)")
fi
# *** Install packages into sandbox
if [[ ${args_sandbox_package_install[@]} ]]
then
# Initialize the sandbox (installs packages once rather than for every rule).
verbose 1 "Installing packages into sandbox..."
run_emacs \
--eval "(package-refresh-contents)" \
"${args_sandbox_package_install[@]}" \
&& success "Packages installed." \
|| die "Unable to initialize sandbox."
fi
verbose 2 "Sandbox initialized."
}
# ** Utility
function cleanup {
# Remove temporary paths (${paths_temp[@]}).
for path in "${paths_temp[@]}"
do
if [[ $debug ]]
then
debug "Debugging enabled: not deleting temporary path: $path"
elif [[ -r $path ]]
then
rm -rf "$path"
else
debug "Temporary path doesn't exist, not deleting: $path"
fi
done
}
function echo-unset-p {
# Echo 0 if $1 is set, otherwise 1. IOW, this returns the exit
# code of [[ $1 ]] as STDOUT.
[[ $1 ]]
echo $?
}
function ensure-package-available {
# If package $1 is available, return 0. Otherwise, return 1, and
# if $2 is set, give error otherwise verbose. Outputting messages
# here avoids repetition in callers.
local package=$1
local direct_p=$2
if ! run_emacs --load $package &>/dev/null
then
if [[ $direct_p ]]
then
error "$package not available."
else
verbose 2 "$package not available."
fi
return 1
fi
}
function ensure-tests-available {
# If tests of type $1 (like "ERT") are available, return 0. Otherwise, if
# $2 is set, give an error and return 1; otherwise give verbose message. $1
# should have a corresponding predicate command, like ert-tests-p for ERT.
local test_name=$1
local test_command="${test_name,,}-tests-p" # Converts name to lowercase.
local direct_p=$2
if ! $test_command
then
if [[ $direct_p ]]
then
error "$test_name tests not found."
else
verbose 2 "$test_name tests not found."
fi
return 1
fi
}
function echo_color {
# This allows bold, italic, etc. without needing a function for
# each variation.
local color_code="COLOR_$1"
shift
if [[ $color ]]
then
echo -e "${!color_code}${@}${COLOR_off}"
else
echo "$@"
fi
}
function debug {
if [[ $debug ]]
then
function debug {
echo_color yellow "DEBUG ($(ts)): $@" >&2
}
debug "$@"
else
function debug {
true
}
fi
}
function error {
echo_color red "ERROR ($(ts)): $@" >&2
((errors++))
return 1
}
function die {
[[ $@ ]] && error "$@"
exit $errors
}
function log {
echo "LOG ($(ts)): $@" >&2
}
function log_color {
local color_name=$1
shift
echo_color $color_name "LOG ($(ts)): $@" >&2
}
function success {
if [[ $verbose -ge 2 ]]
then
log_color green "$@" >&2
fi
}
function verbose {
# $1 is the verbosity level, rest are echoed when appropriate.
if [[ $verbose -ge $1 ]]
then
[[ $1 -eq 1 ]] && local color_name=blue
[[ $1 -eq 2 ]] && local color_name=cyan
[[ $1 -ge 3 ]] && local color_name=white
shift
log_color $color_name "$@" >&2
fi
}
function ts {
date "+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
}
function emacs-version {
# Echo Emacs version number.
# Don't use run_emacs function, which does more than we need.
"${emacs_command[@]}" -Q --batch --eval "(princ emacs-version)" \
|| die "Unable to get Emacs version."
}
function rule-p {
# Return 0 if $1 is a rule.
[[ $1 =~ ^(lint-?|tests?)$ ]] \
|| [[ $1 =~ ^(batch|interactive)$ ]] \
|| [[ $(type -t "$2" 2>/dev/null) =~ function ]]
}
# * Rules
# These functions are intended to be called as rules, like a Makefile.
# Some rules test $1 to determine whether the rule is being called
# directly or from a meta-rule; if directly, an error is given if the
# rule can't be run, otherwise it's skipped.
function all {
verbose 1 "Running all rules..."
lint
tests
}
function compile-batch {
[[ $compile ]] || return 0
unset compile # Only compile once.
verbose 1 "Compiling..."
verbose 2 "Batch-compiling files..."
debug "Byte-compile files: ${files_project_byte_compile[@]}"
batch-byte-compile "${files_project_byte_compile[@]}"
}
function compile-each {
[[ $compile ]] || return 0
unset compile # Only compile once.
verbose 1 "Compiling..."
debug "Byte-compile files: ${files_project_byte_compile[@]}"
local compile_errors
for file in "${files_project_byte_compile[@]}"
do
verbose 2 "Compiling file: $file..."
byte-compile-file "$file" \
|| compile_errors=t
done
[[ ! $compile_errors ]]
}
function compile {
if [[ $compile = batch ]]
then
compile-batch "$@"
else
compile-each "$@"
fi
local status=$?
if [[ $compile_error_on_warn ]]
then
# Linting: just return status code, because lint rule will print messages.
[[ $status = 0 ]]
else
# Not linting: print messages here.
[[ $status = 0 ]] \
&& success "Compiling finished without errors." \
|| error "Compiling failed."
fi
}
function batch {
# Run Emacs in batch mode with ${args_batch_interactive[@]} and
# with project source and test files loaded.
verbose 1 "Executing Emacs with arguments: ${args_batch_interactive[@]}"
run_emacs \
$(args-load-files "${files_project_feature[@]}" "${files_project_test[@]}") \
"${args_batch_interactive[@]}"
}
function interactive {
# Run Emacs interactively. Most useful with --sandbox and --install-deps.
local load_file_args=$(args-load-files "${files_project_feature[@]}" "${files_project_test[@]}")
verbose 1 "Running Emacs interactively..."
verbose 2 "Loading files: ${load_file_args//--load /}"
[[ $compile ]] && compile
unset arg_batch
run_emacs \
$load_file_args \
--eval "(load user-init-file)" \
"${args_batch_interactive[@]}"
arg_batch="--batch"
}
function lint {
verbose 1 "Linting..."
lint-checkdoc
lint-compile
lint-declare
# NOTE: Elint doesn't seem very useful at the moment. See comment
# in lint-elint function.
# lint-elint
lint-indent
lint-package
lint-regexps
}
function lint-checkdoc {
verbose 1 "Linting checkdoc..."
local checkdoc_file="$(elisp-checkdoc-file)"
paths_temp+=("$checkdoc_file")
run_emacs \
--load="$checkdoc_file" \
"${files_project_feature[@]}" \
&& success "Linting checkdoc finished without errors." \
|| error "Linting checkdoc failed."
}
function lint-compile {
verbose 1 "Linting compilation..."
compile_error_on_warn=true
compile "${files_project_byte_compile[@]}" \
&& success "Linting compilation finished without errors." \
|| error "Linting compilation failed."
unset compile_error_on_warn
}
function lint-declare {
verbose 1 "Linting declarations..."
local check_declare_file="$(elisp-check-declare-file)"
paths_temp+=("$check_declare_file")
run_emacs \
--load "$check_declare_file" \
-f makem-check-declare-files-and-exit \
"${files_project_feature[@]}" \
&& success "Linting declarations finished without errors." \
|| error "Linting declarations failed."
}
function lint-elsa {
verbose 1 "Linting with Elsa..."
# MAYBE: Install Elsa here rather than in sandbox init, to avoid installing
# it when not needed. However, we should be careful to be clear about when
# packages are installed, because installing them does execute code.
run_emacs \
--load elsa \
-f elsa-run-files-and-exit \
"${files_project_feature[@]}" \
&& success "Linting with Elsa finished without errors." \
|| error "Linting with Elsa failed."
}
function lint-elint {
# NOTE: Elint gives a lot of spurious warnings, apparently because it doesn't load files
# that are `require'd, so its output isn't very useful. But in case it's improved in
# the future, and since this wrapper code already works, we might as well leave it in.
verbose 1 "Linting with Elint..."
local errors=0
for file in "${files_project_feature[@]}"
do
verbose 2 "Linting with Elint: $file..."
run_emacs \
--load "$(elisp-elint-file)" \
--eval "(makem-elint-file \"$file\")" \
&& verbose 3 "Linting with Elint found no errors." \
|| { error "Linting with Elint failed: $file"; ((errors++)) ; }
done
[[ $errors = 0 ]] \
&& success "Linting with Elint finished without errors." \
|| error "Linting with Elint failed."
}
function lint-indent {
verbose 1 "Linting indentation..."
# We load project source files as well, because they may contain
# macros with (declare (indent)) rules which must be loaded to set
# indentation.
run_emacs \
--load "$(elisp-lint-indent-file)" \
$(args-load-files "${files_project_feature[@]}" "${files_project_test[@]}") \
--funcall makem-lint-indent-batch-and-exit \
"${files_project_feature[@]}" "${files_project_test[@]}" \
&& success "Linting indentation finished without errors." \
|| error "Linting indentation failed."
}
function lint-package {
ensure-package-available package-lint $1 || return $(echo-unset-p $1)
verbose 1 "Linting package..."