This helps generalize the use of groups inside zulint.
Introduce list_files to return `by_lang` files dict.
Add feature to create custom groups.
Make custom groups for backend and frontend files.
This makes linting rules in zulint more general. Make necessary
changes in tools/lint and tools/custom_check.py to run with the new
RuleList class.
Modify tests for `RuleList` class. Tests only include minor changes to
test with the new class.
This commit removes `tools/check-urls`. It was added as
a useful tool in preparation for the Django 1.10 migration.
Since we completed that migration, it is no longer needed.
Fixes#12180.
To support this, we add a pass_targets option to the main linter
library, because with current mypy, it's generally counterproductive
to pass the list of files in (can produce spurious errors; isn't
faster).
We start to use puppet-lint to lint puppet modules by default by
adding it to tools/lint (which controls our linter tool chain).
We also define a few puppet-lint rules to exclude.
Fixes: #9185.
Our CSS checker globs for .css files. Since the
SCSS cutover, it has been a no-op, so there's no
sense launching it. See #8894 for details on
future plans.
This reverts commit 66261f1cc. See parent commit for reason; here,
provision worked but `tools/run-dev.py` would give errors.
We need to figure out a test that reproduces these issues, then make a
version of these changes that keeps that test working, before we
re-merge them.
This causes `upgrade-zulip-from-git`, as well as a no-option run of
`tools/build-release-tarball`, to produce a Zulip install running
Python 3, rather than Python 2. In particular this means that the
virtualenv we create, in which all application code runs, is Python 3.
One shebang line, on `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`, explicitly
keeps Python 2, and at least one external ops script, `wal-e`, also
still runs on Python 2. See discussion on the respective previous
commits that made those explicit. There may also be some other
third-party scripts we use, outside of this source tree and running
outside our virtualenv, that still run on Python 2.
As part of extracting this, we exempt the library from all custom
checks on itself. This is expedient, since a lot of our
custom checks are naive about whether things are in strings, and
it is also a pain to configure individual rules.
In this commit we start to check for violations to PEP-E261 in our
codebase by default in our linters. Also we have introduced a
ignore list which has around 20 files still in violation to
PEP-E261 which we intend to clear up soon.