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Minimal standards checks |
A typical standards check will look like:
{{< highlight Python "linenos=table" >}} def check_playbook_for_something(candidate, settings): result = Result(candidate.path) # empty result is a success with no output with open(candidate.path, 'r') as f: for (lineno, line) in enumerate(f): if line is dodgy: # enumerate is 0-based so add 1 to lineno result.errors.append(Error(lineno+1, "Line is dodgy: reasons")) return result {{< /highlight >}}
All standards check take a candidate object, which has a path attribute.
The type can be inferred from the class name (i.e. type(candidate).__name__
)
or from the table here.
They return a Result
object, which contains a possibly empty list of Error
objects. Error
objects are formed of a line number and a message. If the
error applies to the whole file being reviewed, set the line number to None
.
Line numbers are important as ansible-later
can review just ranges of files
to only review changes (e.g. through piping the output of git diff
to
ansible-later
).