Pull requests are welcome, preferably against main
. Feel free to develop spotless any way you like, but if you like Eclipse and Gradle Buildship then gradlew equoIde
will install an IDE and set it up for you.
Spotless' most basic element is the FormatterStep
, which has one method that really matters: String format(String rawUnix, File file)
. Each step is guaranteed that its input string will contain only unix newlines, and the step's output should also contain only unix newlines. The file argument is provided only to allow path-dependent formatting (e.g. special formatting for package-info.java
), but most formatters are path-independent and won't use that argument.
In order to use and combine FormatterStep
, you first create a Formatter
, which has the following parameters:
- an encoding
- a list of
FormatterStep
- a line endings policy (
LineEnding.GIT_ATTRIBUTES
is almost always the best choice)
Once you have an instance of Formatter
, you can call boolean isClean(File)
, or void applyTo(File)
to either check or apply formatting to a file. Spotless will then:
- parse the raw bytes into a String according to the encoding
- normalize its line endings to
\n
- pass the unix string to each
FormatterStep
one after the other - apply line endings according to the policy
You can also use lower-level methods like String compute(String unix, File file)
if you'd like to do lower-level processing.
All FormatterStep
implement Serializable
, equals
, and hashCode
, so build systems that support up-to-date checks can easily and correctly determine if any actions need to be taken.
Spotless also provides PaddedCell
, which makes it easy to diagnose and correct idempotence problems.
For the folders below in monospace text, they are published on MavenCentral at the coordinate com.diffplug.spotless:spotless-${FOLDER_NAME}
. The other folders are dev infrastructure.
Folder | Description |
---|---|
lib |
Contains all of Spotless' core infrastructure and most of its FormatterStep - has no external dependencies. |
testlib |
Contains testing infrastructure and all test resources, so that they can be reused in plugin-specific integration tests. Also contains tests for lib . |
lib-extra |
Contains the optional parts of Spotless which require external dependencies. LineEnding.GIT_ATTRIBUTES won't work unless lib-extra is available. |
plugin-gradle |
Integrates spotless and all of its formatters into Gradle. |
plugin-maven |
Integrates spotless and all of its formatters into Maven. |
The easiest way to create a FormatterStep is FormatterStep createNeverUpToDate(String name, FormatterFunc function)
, which you can use like this:
FormatterStep identityStep = FormatterStep.createNeverUpToDate("identity", unixStr -> unixStr)
This creates a step which will fail up-to-date checks (it is equal only to itself), and will use the function you passed in to do the formatting pass.
To create a step which can handle up-to-date checks properly, use the method <State extends Serializable> FormatterStep create(String name, State state, Function<State, FormatterFunc> stateToFormatter)
. Here's an example:
public final class ReplaceStep {
private ReplaceStep() {}
public static FormatterStep create(String name, CharSequence target, CharSequence replacement) {
return FormatterStep.create(name,
new State(target, replacement),
State::toFormatter);
}
private static final class State implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
private final CharSequence target;
private final CharSequence replacement;
State(CharSequence target, CharSequence replacement) {
this.target = target;
this.replacement = replacement;
}
FormatterFunc toFormatter() {
return unixStr -> unixStr.replace(target, replacement);
}
}
}
The FormatterStep
created above implements equals
and hashCode
based on the serialized representation of its State
. This trick makes it quick and easy to write steps which properly support up-to-date checks.
Oftentimes, a rule's state will be expensive to compute. EclipseFormatterStep
, for example, depends on a formatting file. Ideally, we would like to only pay the cost of the I/O needed to load that file if we have to - we'd like to create the FormatterStep now but load its state lazily at the last possible moment. For this purpose, each of the FormatterStep.create
methods has a lazy counterpart. Here are their signatures:
FormatterStep createNeverUpToDate (String name, FormatterFunc function )
FormatterStep createNeverUpToDateLazy(String name, Supplier<FormatterFunc> functionSupplier)
FormatterStep create (String name, State state , Function<State, FormatterFunc> stateToFormatter)
FormatterStep createLazy(String name, Supplier<State> stateSupplier, Function<State, FormatterFunc> stateToFormatter)
If your formatting step only needs to call one or two methods of the external dependency, you can pull it in at runtime and call it via reflection. See the logic for EclipseFormatterStep
or GoogleJavaFormatStep
.
Here's a checklist for creating a new step for Spotless:
- Class name ends in Step,
SomeNewStep
. - Class has a public static method named
create
that returns aFormatterStep
. - Has a test class named
SomeNewStepTest
that usesStepHarness
orStepHarnessWithFile
to test the step.- Start with
StepHarness.forStep(myStep).supportsRoundTrip(false)
, and then add round trip support as described in the next section.
- Start with
- Test class has test methods to verify behavior.
- Test class has a test method
equality()
which tests equality usingStepEqualityTester
(see existing methods for examples).
In order to support Gradle's configuration cache, all FormatterStep
must be round-trip serializable. This is a bit tricky because step equality is based on the serialized form of the state, and transient
is used to take absolute paths out of the equality check. To make this work, roundtrip compatible steps actually have two states:
RoundtripState
which must be roundtrip serializable but has no equality constraintsFileSignature.Promised
for settings files andJarState.Promised
for the classpath
EqualityState
which will never be reserialized and its serialized form is used for equality / hashCode checksFileSignature
for settings files andJarState
for the classpath
FormatterStep create(String name,
RoundtripState roundTrip,
SerializedFunction<RoundtripState, EqualityState> equalityFunc,
SerializedFunction<EqualityState, FormatterFunc> formatterFunc)
FormatterStep createLazy(String name,
Supplier<RoundtripState> roundTrip,
SerializedFunction<RoundtripState, EqualityState> equalityFunc,
SerializedFunction<EqualityState, FormatterFunc> formatterFunc)
Most formatters are going to use some kind of third-party jar. Spotless integrates with many formatters, some of which have incompatible transitive dependencies. To address this, we resolve third-party dependencies using JarState
. To call methods on the classes in that JarState
, you can either use reflection or a compile-only source set. See #524 for examples of both approaches.
- Adding a compile-only sourceset is easier to read and probably a better approach for most cases.
- Reflection is more flexible, and might be a better approach for a very simple API.
In order for Spotless' model to work, each step needs to look only at the String
input, otherwise they cannot compose. However, there are some cases where the source File
is useful, such as to look at the file extension. In this case, you can pass a FormatterFunc.NeedsFile
instead of a FormatterFunc
. This should only be used in rare circumstances, be careful that you don't accidentally depend on the bytes inside of the File
!
There are many great formatters (prettier, clang-format, black, etc.) which live entirely outside the JVM. We have two main strategies for these:
- shell out to an external command for every file (used by clang-format and black)
- open a headless server and make http calls to it from Spotless (used by our npm-based formatters such as prettier)
Because of Spotless' up-to-date checking and git ratcheting, Spotless actually doesn't have to call formatters very often, so even an expensive shell call for every single invocation isn't that bad. Anything that works is better than nothing, and we can always speed things up later if it feels too slow (but it probably won't).
The gist of it is that you will have to:
- Use the build system's user-interface to define a "format" as a set of files, and the list of
FormatterStep
the user would like enforced on those files. - Use the build system's execution logic to create a
Formatter
with the appropriateFormatterStep
, and pass it the files to be formatted and/or checked. - To use the good
FormatterStep
likeEclipseFormatterStep
orGoogleJavaFormatStep
, you'll need to implementProvisioner
, which is a generic API for the build system's native mechanism for resolving dependencies from maven:Set<File> provisionWithDependencies(Collection<String> mavenCoordinates)
. - (Optional) Tie into the build system's native up-to-date mechanism.
- (Optional) Use
PaddedCell
to proactively catch and resolve idempotence issues.
plugin-gradle
is the canonical example which uses everything that Spotless has to offer. It's only ~700 lines.
If you get something running, we'd love to host your plugin within this repo as a peer to plugin-gradle
and plugin-maven
.
To run all tests, simply do
gradlew test
Since that takes some time, you might only want to run the tests concerning what you are working on:
# Run only from test from the "lib" project
gradlew :testlib:test --tests com.diffplug.spotless.generic.IndentStepTest
# Run only one test from the "plugin-maven" project
gradlew :plugin-maven:test --tests com.diffplug.spotless.maven.pom.SortPomMavenTest
# Run only one test from the "plugin-gradle" project
gradlew :plugin-gradle:test --tests com.diffplug.gradle.spotless.FreshMarkExtensionTest
Before creating a pull request, you might want to format (yes, spotless is formatted by spotless) the code and check for possible bugs
./gradlew spotlessApply
./gradlew spotbugsMain
These checks are also run by the automated pipeline when you submit a pull request, if the pipeline fails, first check if the code is formatted and no bugs were found.
First, run ./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
in your local checkout of Spotless. Now, in any other project on your machine, you can use the following snippet in your settings.gradle
(for Gradle 6.0+).
pluginManagement {
repositories {
mavenLocal {
content {
includeGroup 'com.diffplug.spotless'
}
}
gradlePluginPortal()
}
resolutionStrategy {
eachPlugin {
if (requested.id.id == 'com.diffplug.spotless') {
useModule('com.diffplug.spotless:spotless-plugin-gradle:{latest-SNAPSHOT}')
}
}
}
}
In Gradle 6.0+, you can use the following snippet in your settings.gradle
.
pluginManagement {
repositories {
maven {
url 'https://jitpack.io'
content {
includeGroup 'com.github.{{user-or-org}}.spotless'
}
}
gradlePluginPortal()
}
resolutionStrategy {
eachPlugin {
if (requested.id.id == 'com.diffplug.spotless') {
useModule('com.github.{{USER_OR_ORG}}.spotless:spotless-plugin-gradle:{{SHA_OF_COMMIT_YOU_WANT}}')
}
}
}
}
If it doesn't work, you can check the JitPack log at https://jitpack.io/com/github/{{USER_OR_ORG}}/spotless/{{SHA_OF_COMMIT_YOU_WANT}}/build.log
.
Run ./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
to publish this to your local repository. You can also use the JitPack artifacts, using the same principles as Gradle above.
By contributing your code, you agree to license your contribution under the terms of the APLv2: https://github.com/diffplug/spotless/blob/main/LICENSE.txt
All files are released with the Apache 2.0 license as such:
Copyright 2020 DiffPlug
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.