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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

Local development

  • The complete test suite depends on having at least the following installed (possibly not a complete list)
    • git (Version 2.24.0 or above is required to run pre-merge-commit tests)
    • python3 (Required by a test which checks different python versions)
    • tox (or virtualenv)
    • ruby + gem
    • docker
    • conda
    • cargo (required by tests for rust dependencies)
    • go (required by tests for go dependencies)
    • swift

Setting up an environment

This is useful for running specific tests. The easiest way to set this up is to run:

  1. tox --devenv venv (note: requires tox>=3.13)
  2. . venv/bin/activate (or follow the activation instructions for your platform)

This will create and put you into a virtualenv which has an editable installation of pre-commit. Hack away! Running pre-commit will reflect your changes immediately.

Running a specific test

Running a specific test with the environment activated is as easy as: pytest tests -k test_the_name_of_your_test

Running all the tests

Running all the tests can be done by running tox -e py37 (or your interpreter version of choice). These often take a long time and consume significant cpu while running the slower node / ruby integration tests.

Alternatively, with the environment activated you can run all of the tests using: pytest tests

Setting up the hooks

With the environment activated simply run pre-commit install.

Documentation

Documentation is hosted at https://pre-commit.com

This website is controlled through https://github.com/pre-commit/pre-commit.github.io

Adding support for a new hook language

pre-commit already supports many programming languages to write hook executables with.

When adding support for a language, you must first decide what level of support to implement. The current implemented languages are at varying levels:

  • 0th class - pre-commit does not require any dependencies for these languages as they're not actually languages (current examples: fail, pygrep)
  • 1st class - pre-commit will bootstrap a full interpreter requiring nothing to be installed globally (current examples: go, node, ruby, rust)
  • 2nd class - pre-commit requires the user to install the language globally but will install tools in an isolated fashion (current examples: python, swift, docker).
  • 3rd class - pre-commit requires the user to install both the tool and the language globally (current examples: script, system)

"second class" is usually the easiest to implement first and is perfectly acceptable.

Ideally the language works on the supported platforms for pre-commit (linux, windows, macos) but it's ok to skip one or more platforms (for example, swift doesn't run on windows).

When writing your new language, it's often useful to look at other examples in the pre_commit/languages directory.

It might also be useful to look at a recent pull request which added a language, for example:

language api

here are the apis that should be implemented for a language

Note that these are also documented in pre_commit/lang_base.py

ENVIRONMENT_DIR

a short string which will be used for the prefix of where packages will be installed. For example, python uses py_env and installs a virtualenv at that location.

this will be None for 0th / 3rd class languages as they don't have an install step.

get_default_version

This is used to retrieve the default language_version for a language. If one cannot be determined, return 'default'.

You generally don't need to implement this on a first pass and can just use:

get_default_version = lang_base.basic_default_version

python is currently the only language which implements this api

health_check

This is used to check whether the installed environment is considered healthy. This function should return a detailed message if unhealthy or None if healthy.

You generally don't need to implement this on a first pass and can just use:

health_check = lang_base.basic_health_check

python is currently the only language which implements this api, for python it is checking whether some common dlls are still available.

install_environment

this is the trickiest one to implement and where all the smart parts happen.

this api should do the following things

  • (0th / 3rd class): install_environment = lang_base.no_install
  • (1st class): install a language runtime into the hook's directory
  • (2nd class): install the package at . into the ENVIRONMENT_DIR
  • (2nd class, optional): install packages listed in additional_dependencies into ENVIRONMENT_DIR (not a required feature for a first pass)

run_hook

This is usually the easiest to implement, most of them look the same as the node hook implementation:

https://github.com/pre-commit/pre-commit/blob/160238220f022035c8ef869c9a8642f622c02118/pre_commit/languages/node.py#L72-L74