haml-lint
is a tool to help keep your HAML files
clean and readable. In addition to HAML-specific style and lint checks, it
integrates with RuboCop to bring its
powerful static analysis tools to your HAML documents.
Experimental auto-correct features are also available.
You can run haml-lint
manually from the command line, or integrate it into
your SCM hooks.
- Requirements
- Installation
- Usage
- Autocorrection
- Configuration
- Linters
- Editor Integration
- Git Integration
- Rake Integration
- Documentation
- Contributing
- Community
- Changelog
- License
- Ruby 3+
- HAML 5.0+
gem install haml_lint
If you'd rather install haml-lint
using bundler
, don't require
it in your Gemfile
:
gem 'haml_lint', require: false
Then you can still use haml-lint
from the command line, but its source code won't be auto-loaded inside your application.
Run haml-lint
from the command line by passing in a directory (or multiple
directories) to recursively scan:
haml-lint app/views/
You can also specify a list of files explicitly:
haml-lint app/**/*.html.haml
haml-lint
will output any problems with your HAML, including the offending
filename and line number.
haml-lint
assumes all files are encoded in UTF-8.
Command Line Flag | Description |
---|---|
--auto-gen-config |
Generate a configuration file acting as a TODO list |
--auto-gen-exclude-limit |
Number of failures to allow in the TODO list before the entire rule is excluded |
-c /--config |
Specify which configuration file to use |
-e /--exclude |
Exclude one or more files from being linted |
-i /--include-linter |
Specify which linters you specifically want to run |
-x /--exclude-linter |
Specify which linters you don't want to run |
-r /--reporter |
Specify which reporter you want to use to generate the output |
-a /--auto-correct |
Enables auto-correct for safe to auto-correct lints |
-A /--auto-correct-all |
Enables auto-correct for unsafe and safe to auto-correct lints |
--auto-correct-only |
Only run auto-correct (in safe mode by default), uncorrectable linters are not run |
-p /--parallel |
Run linters in parallel using available CPUs |
--fail-fast |
Specify whether to fail after the first file with lint |
--fail-level |
Specify the minimum severity (warning or error) for which the lint should fail |
--[no-]color |
Whether to output in color |
--[no-]summary |
Whether to output a summary in the default reporter |
--show-linters |
Show all registered linters |
--show-reporters |
Display available reporters |
-s /--stdin FILE |
Pipe source from STDIN, using FILE in offense when combined with --auto-correct and --stdin |
--stderr |
Write all output to stderr |
-h /--help |
Show command line flag documentation |
-v /--version |
Show haml-lint version |
-V /--verbose-version |
Show haml-lint , haml , and ruby version information |
haml-lint
can automatically correct some of the errors that it detects. This includes
running RuboCop on the Ruby parts of your HAML templates.
- Run
haml-lint -a
to only do safe corrections (as defined by RuboCop) - Run
haml-lint -A
to also do unsafe corrections (as defined by RuboCop)
haml-lint
will automatically recognize and load any file with the name
.haml-lint.yml
as a configuration file. It loads the configuration based on
the directory haml-lint
is being run from, ascending until a configuration
file is found. Any configuration loaded is automatically merged with the
default configuration (see config/default.yml
).
Here's an example configuration file:
linters:
ImplicitDiv:
enabled: false
severity: error
LineLength:
max: 100
All linters have an enabled
option which can be true
or false
, which
controls whether the linter is run, along with linter-specific options. The
defaults are defined in config/default.yml
.
Option | Description |
---|---|
enabled |
If false , this linter will never be run. This takes precedence over any other option. |
include |
List of files or glob patterns to scope this linter to. This narrows down any files specified via the command line. |
exclude |
List of files or glob patterns to exclude from this linter. This excludes any files specified via the command line or already filtered via the include option. |
severity |
The severity of the linter. External tools consuming haml-lint output can use this to determine whether to warn or error based on the lints reported. |
The exclude
global configuration option allows you to specify a list of files
or glob patterns to exclude from all linters. This is useful for ignoring
third-party code that you don't maintain or care to lint. You can specify a
single string or a list of strings for this option.
Some static blog generators such as Jekyll include
leading frontmatter to the template for their own tracking purposes.
haml-lint
allows you to ignore these headers by specifying the
skip_frontmatter
option in your .haml-lint.yml
configuration:
skip_frontmatter: true
The inherits_from
global configuration option allows you to specify an
inheritance chain for a configuration file. It accepts either a scalar value of
a single file name or a vector of multiple files to inherit from. The inherited
files are resolved in a first in, first out order and with "last one wins"
precedence. For example:
inherits_from:
- .shared_haml-lint.yml
- .personal_haml-lint.yml
First, the default configuration is loaded. Then the .shared_haml-lint.yml
configuration is loaded, followed by .personal_haml-lint.yml
. Each of these
overwrite each other in the event of a collision in configuration value. Once
the inheritance chain is resolved, the base configuration is loaded and applies
its rules to overwrite any in the intermediate configuration.
Lastly, in order to match your RuboCop configuration style, you can also use the
inherit_from
directive, which is an alias for inherits_from
.
haml-lint
is an opinionated tool that helps you enforce a consistent style in
your HAML files. As an opinionated tool, we've had to make calls about what we
think are the "best" style conventions, even when there are often reasonable
arguments for more than one possible style. While all of our choices have a
rational basis, we think that the opinions themselves are less important than
the fact that haml-lint
provides us with an automated and low-cost means of
enforcing consistency.
Add the following to your configuration file:
require:
- './relative/path/to/my_first_linter.rb'
- 'absolute/path/to/my_second_linter.rb'
The files that are referenced by this config should have the following structure:
module HamlLint
# MyFirstLinter is the name of the linter in this example, but it can be anything
class Linter::MyFirstLinter < Linter
include LinterRegistry
def visit_tag
return unless node.tag_name == 'div'
record_lint(node, "You're not allowed divs!")
end
end
end
For more information on the different types on HAML node, please look through the HAML parser code: https://github.com/haml/haml/blob/main/lib/haml/parser.rb
Keep in mind that by default your linter will be disabled by default. So you will need to enable it in your configuration file to have it run.
One or more individual linters can be disabled locally in a file by adding a directive comment. These comments look like the following:
-# haml-lint:disable AltText, LineLength
[...]
-# haml-lint:enable AltText, LineLength
You can disable all linters for a section with the following:
-# haml-lint:disable all
A directive will disable the given linters for the scope of the block. This scope is inherited by child elements and sibling elements that come after the comment. For example:
-# haml-lint:disable AltText
#content
%img#will-not-show-lint-1{ src: "will-not-show-lint-1.png" }
-# haml-lint:enable AltText
%img#will-show-lint-1{ src: "will-show-lint-1.png" }
.sidebar
%img#will-show-lint-2{ src: "will-show-lint-2.png" }
%img#will-not-show-lint-2{ src: "will-not-show-lint-2.png" }
The #will-not-show-lint-1
image on line 2 will not raise an AltText
lint
because of the directive on line 1. Since that directive is at the top level of
the tree, it applies everywhere.
However, on line 4, the directive enables the AltText
linter for the remainder
of the #content
element's content. This means that the #will-show-lint-1
image on line 5 will raise an AltText
lint because it is a sibling of the
enabling directive that appears later in the #content
element. Likewise, the
#will-show-lint-2
image on line 7 will raise an AltText
lint because it is
a child of a sibling of the enabling directive.
Lastly, the #will-not-show-lint-2
image on line 8 will not raise an AltText
lint because the enabling directive on line 4 exists in a separate element and
is not a sibling of the it.
If there are multiple directives for the same linter in an element, the last directive wins. For example:
-# haml-lint:enable AltText
%p Hello, world!
-# haml-lint:disable AltText
%img#will-not-show-lint{ src: "will-not-show-lint.png" }
There are two conflicting directives for the AltText
linter. The first one
enables it, but the second one disables it. Since the disable directive came
later, the #will-not-show-lint
element will not raise an AltText
lint.
You can use this functionality to selectively enable directives within a file by
first using the haml-lint:disable all
directive to disable all linters in the
file, then selectively using haml-lint:enable
to enable linters one at a time.
Adding a new linter into a project that wasn't previously using one can be a daunting task. To help ease the pain of starting to use Haml-Lint, you can generate a configuration file that will exclude all linters from reporting lint in files that currently have lint. This gives you something similar to a to-do list where the violations that you had when you started using Haml-Lint are listed for you to whittle away, but ensuring that any views you create going forward are properly linted.
To use this functionality, call Haml-Lint like:
haml-lint --auto-gen-config
This will generate a .haml-lint_todo.yml
file that contains all existing lint
as exclusions. You can then add inherits_from: .haml-lint_todo.yml
to your
.haml-lint.yml
configuration file to ensure these exclusions are used whenever
you call haml-lint
.
By default, any rules with more than 15 violations will be disabled in the todo-file.
You can increase this limit with the auto-gen-exclude-limit
option:
haml-lint --auto-gen-config --auto-gen-exclude-limit 100
If you use vim
, you can have haml-lint
automatically run against your HAML
files after saving by using the
Syntastic plugin. If you already
have the plugin, just add let g:syntastic_haml_checkers = ['haml_lint']
to
your .vimrc
.
If you use vim
8+ or Neovim
, you can have haml-lint
automatically run against your HAML files as you type by using the Asynchronous Lint Engine (ALE) plugin. ALE will automatically lint your HAML files if it detects haml-lint
in your PATH
.
If you use SublimeLinter 3
with Sublime Text 3
you can install the
SublimeLinter-haml-lint
plugin using Package Control.
If you use atom
, you can install the linter-haml plugin.
If you use TextMate 2
, you can install the Haml-Lint.tmbundle bundle.
If you use Visual Studio Code
, you can install the Haml Lint extension
If you use RubyMine
, you can install the HamlLint plugin.
If you'd like to integrate haml-lint
into your Git workflow, check out our
Git hook manager, overcommit.
To execute haml-lint
via a Rake task, make
sure you have rake
included in your gem path (e.g. via Gemfile
) add the
following to your Rakefile
:
require 'haml_lint/rake_task'
HamlLint::RakeTask.new
By default, when you execute rake haml_lint
, the above configuration is
equivalent to running haml-lint .
, which will lint all .haml
files in the
current directory and its descendants.
You can customize your task by writing:
require 'haml_lint/rake_task'
HamlLint::RakeTask.new do |t|
t.config = 'custom/config.yml'
t.files = ['app/views', 'custom/*.haml']
t.quiet = true # Don't display output from haml-lint to STDOUT
end
You can also use this custom configuration with a set of files specified via the command line:
# Single quotes prevent shell glob expansion
rake 'haml_lint[app/views, custom/*.haml]'
Files specified in this manner take precedence over the task's files
attribute.
Code documentation is generated with YARD and hosted by RubyDoc.info.
We love getting feedback with or without pull requests. If you do add a new feature, please add tests so that we can avoid breaking it in the future.
Speaking of tests, we use Appraisal to test against both HAML 4 and 5. We use
rspec
to write our tests. To run the test suite, execute the following from
the root directory of the repository:
appraisal bundle install
appraisal bundle exec rspec
To run the test suite faster (about 4x), you can skip the RuboCop invocations for testing auto-correct with this command:
STUB_RUBOCOP=true appraisal bundle exec rspec
All major discussion surrounding HAML-Lint happens on the GitHub issues page.
If you're interested in seeing the changes and bug fixes between each version
of haml-lint
, read the HAML-Lint Changelog.
This project is released under the MIT license.