check_please 0.1.0 → 0.2.0
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/Gemfile.lock +1 -1
- data/README.md +129 -3
- data/bin/check_please +1 -67
- data/lib/check_please.rb +5 -3
- data/lib/check_please/cli.rb +29 -0
- data/lib/check_please/cli/flag.rb +39 -0
- data/lib/check_please/cli/parser.rb +58 -0
- data/lib/check_please/cli/runner.rb +79 -0
- data/lib/check_please/error.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/check_please/printers.rb +2 -2
- data/lib/check_please/version.rb +3 -1
- metadata +7 -2
checksums.yaml
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 1c16110449be99d5ff509c720c4365b2fe6f176f23094784628db2de0e5f3bf9
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data.tar.gz: b45c9d1b7dea9b4405f4ca80dbce5f04d0aec14ad50e4e919802e09b469c86c8
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 023b9fdd6f227f8381dfba06a82d30961adab9b2ab5a2b5a0d820c8b8697d300f59d416c801808e88e7e625720776f1cec4cf0a6f57d1eec07e6cb656881d4b8
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data.tar.gz: eca955971798d00dd45bf5e068779aebeb33b304fe592d84534081d0068eaa981f6b765fd5c4ea9a30e7d65b2edd456ed9093c039964e3691c646e0c7d23b2b0
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data/Gemfile.lock
CHANGED
data/README.md
CHANGED
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
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#
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# check_please
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Check for differences between two JSON strings (or Ruby data structures parsed from them).
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@@ -20,24 +20,150 @@ Or install it yourself as:
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## Usage
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### Terminology
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CheckPlease uses a few words in a jargony way:
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* **Reference** is always used to refer to the "target" or "source of truth."
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We assume you're comparing two things because you want one of them to be like
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the other; the **reference** is what you're aiming for.
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* **Candidate** is always used to refer to some JSON you'd like to compare
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against the **reference**. _(We could've also used "sample," but it turns
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out that "reference" and "candidate" are the same length, which makes code
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line up neatly in a monospaced font...)_
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* A **diff** is what CheckPlease calls an individual discrepancy between the
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**reference** and the **candidate**. More on this in "Understanding the Output",
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below.
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### CLI
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Use the `bin/check_please` executable. (To get started, run it with the '-h' flag.)
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Note that the executable assumes you've saved your **reference** to a file.
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Once that's done, you can either save the **candidate** to a file as well if
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that fits your workflow, **or** you can pipe it to `bin/check_please` in lieu
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of giving it a second filename as the argument. (This is especially useful if
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you're copying an XHR response out of a web browser's dev tools and have a tool
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like MacOS's `pbpaste` utility.)
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### RSpec Matcher
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See [check_please_rspec_matcher](https://github.com/RealGeeks/check_please_rspec_matcher).
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### From Within Ruby
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Create two JSON strings and pass them to `CheckPlease.render_diff`. You'll get
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back a third string containing a nicely formatted report of all the differences
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CheckPlease found in the two JSON strings. (See also: ./usage_examples.rb.)
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CheckPlease found in the two JSON strings. (See also: [./usage_examples.rb](usage_examples.rb).)
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(You can also parse the JSON strings yourself and pass the resulting data
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structures in, if you're into that. I mean, I wrote this to help compare JSON
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data that's too big and complicated to scan through visually, but you do you!
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### Understanding the Output
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CheckPlease follows the Unix philosophy of "no news is good news". If your
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**candidate** matches your **reference**, you'll get an empty message.
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But let's be honest: how often is that going to happen? No, you're using this
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tool because you want a human-friendly summary of all the places that your
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**candidate** fell short.
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When CheckPlease compares your two samples, it generates a list of diffs to
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describe any discrepancies it encounters. (By default, it prints that list in a
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tabular format, but if you want to incorporate this into another toolchain,
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CheckPlease can also print these diffs as JSON to facilitate parsing.)
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An example would probably help here.
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_(NOTE: these examples may fall out of date with the code. They're swiped
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from [the CLI integration spec](spec/cli_integration_spec.rb), so please
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consider that more authoritative than this README. If you do spot a
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difference, please feel free to open an issue!)_
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Given the following **reference** JSON:
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```
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{
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"id": 42,
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"name": "The Answer",
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"words": [ "what", "do", "you", "get", "when", "you", "multiply", "six", "by", "nine" ],
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"meta": { "foo": "spam", "bar": "eggs", "yak": "bacon" }
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}
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```
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And the following **candidate** JSON:
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```
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{
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"id": 42,
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"name": [ "I am large, and contain multitudes." ],
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"words": [ "what", "do", "we", "get", "when", "I", "multiply", "six", "by", "nine", "dude" ],
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"meta": { "foo": "foo", "yak": "bacon" }
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}
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```
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CheckPlease should produce the following output:
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|
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```
|
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TYPE | PATH | REFERENCE | CANDIDATE
|
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--------------|-----------|------------|-------------------------------
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type_mismatch | /name | The Answer | ["I am large, and contain m...
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mismatch | /words/3 | you | we
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mismatch | /words/6 | you | I
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extra | /words/11 | | dude
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missing | /meta/bar | eggs |
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mismatch | /meta/foo | spam | foo
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```
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Let's start with the leftmost column...
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#### Diff Types
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The above example is intended to illustrate every possible type of diff that
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CheckPlease defines:
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* **type_mismatch** means that both the **reference** and the **candidate** had
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a value at the given path, but one value was an Array or a Hash and the other
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was not. **When CheckPlease encounters a type mismatch, it does not compare
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anything "below" the given path.** producing a lot of "garbage" diffs.
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_(Technical note: CheckPlease uses a "recursive descent" strategy to
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traverse the **reference** data structure, and it stops when it encounters a
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type mismatch in order to avoid producing a lot of "garbage" diff output.
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Also, the way these get displayed is likely to change.)_
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* **mismatch** means that both the **reference** and the **candidate** had a
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value at the given path, and neither value was an Array or a Hash.
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* "**extra**" means that, inside an Array or a Hash, the **candidate**
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contained values that were not found in the **reference**.
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* "**missing**" is the opposite of **extra**: inside an Array or a Hash, the
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**reference** contained values that were not found in the **candidate**.
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#### Paths
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The second column contains a path expression. This is extremely basic:
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* The first element in the data structure is defined as "/".
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* If an element in the data structure is an array, its child elements will have
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a **one-based** index appended to their parent's path.
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* If an element in the data structure is an object ("Hash" in Ruby), the key
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for each element will be appended to their parent's path, and the values will
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be compared.
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_**Being primarily a Ruby developer, I'm quite ignorant of conventions in the
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JS community; if there's an existing convention for paths, please open an
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issue!**_
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#### Output Formats
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CheckPlease produces tabular output by default. (It leans heavily on the
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amazing [table_print](http://tableprintgem.com) gem for this.)
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If you want to incorporate CheckPlease into some other toolchain, it can also
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print diffs as JSON to facilitate parsing. In Ruby, pass `format: :json` to
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`CheckPlease.render_diff`; in the CLI, use the `-f`/`--format` switch.
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## TODO
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* rspec custom matcher (separate gem?)
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* command line flags for :allthethings:!
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* --fail-fast
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* limit to first N
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* sort by path?
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* max depth (for iterative refinement?)
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data/bin/check_please
CHANGED
@@ -1,70 +1,4 @@
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#!/usr/bin/env ruby
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require 'optparse'
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require_relative '../lib/check_please'
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argv = ARGV.dup
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-
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ref_file = argv.shift
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can_file = argv.shift
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diff_opts = {}
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-
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@parser = OptionParser.new do |opts|
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opts.banner = <<~EOF
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Usage: #{__FILE__} <reference> <candidate> <options>
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-
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Tool for parsing and diffing two JSON files.
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-
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Arguments:
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<reference> is the name of a file to use as the reference.
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<candidate> is the name of a file to compare against the reference.
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-
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NOTE: If the <candidate> arg is omitted, stdin will be used instead.
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This allows you to copy candidate JSON to the clipboard and (on a Mac) do:
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-
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$ pbpaste | #{__FILE__} <reference>
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-
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<options>:
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EOF
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formats = CheckPlease::Printers::FORMATS.join(", ")
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opts.on("-f FORMAT", "--format FORMAT", "specify the format (available options: [#{formats}]") do |val|
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diff_opts[:format] = val
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end
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end
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-
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def print_help_and_exit
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@parser.parse(%w[--help])
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exit # technically redundant but helps me feel better
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-
end
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-
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def read_file(filename)
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return nil if filename.to_s =~ /^\s*$/
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File.read(filename)
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rescue Errno::ENOENT
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# no such file, buddy
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return nil
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end
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-
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-
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-
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# First off, try to read in the files the user told us about...
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reference = read_file(ref_file)
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candidate = read_file(can_file) || $stdin.read
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-
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print_help_and_exit if reference.to_s =~ /^\s*$/
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print_help_and_exit if candidate.to_s =~ /^\s*$/
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-
|
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begin
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@parser.parse(argv)
|
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-
rescue OptionParser::InvalidOption, OptionParser::AmbiguousOption => e
|
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puts "\n>>> #{e.message}\n\n"
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print_help_and_exit
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-
end
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-
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-
report = CheckPlease.render_diff(reference, candidate, **diff_opts)
|
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puts report
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CheckPlease::CLI.run(__FILE__)
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data/lib/check_please.rb
CHANGED
@@ -1,12 +1,14 @@
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require_relative "check_please/version"
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require_relative "check_please/error"
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require_relative "check_please/path"
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require_relative "check_please/comparison"
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require_relative "check_please/diff"
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require_relative "check_please/diffs"
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require_relative "check_please/printers"
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require_relative "check_please/cli"
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module CheckPlease
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-
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ELEVATOR_PITCH = "Tool for parsing and diffing two JSON documents."
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def self.diff(reference, candidate)
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reference = maybe_parse(reference)
|
@@ -14,9 +16,9 @@ module CheckPlease
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Comparison.perform(reference, candidate)
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end
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-
def self.render_diff(reference, candidate,
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+
def self.render_diff(reference, candidate, options = {})
|
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diffs = diff(reference, candidate)
|
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-
Printers.render(diffs,
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Printers.render(diffs, options)
|
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end
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class << self
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@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
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require_relative 'cli/flag'
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# require_relative 'cli/flags'
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require_relative 'cli/parser'
|
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require_relative 'cli/runner'
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|
6
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module CheckPlease
|
7
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+
|
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module CLI
|
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def self.run(exe_file_name)
|
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Runner.new(__FILE__).run(*ARGV.dup)
|
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end
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+
|
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+
|
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+
|
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FLAGS = []
|
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def self.flag(*args, &block)
|
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flag = Flag.new(*args, &block)
|
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FLAGS << flag
|
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end
|
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+
|
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##### Define CLI flags here #####
|
22
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+
|
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flag "-f FORMAT", "--format FORMAT" do |f|
|
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f.desc = "format in which to present diffs (available options: [#{CheckPlease::Printers::FORMATS.join(", ")}])"
|
25
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+
f.set_key :format, :to_sym
|
26
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+
end
|
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end
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+
|
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end
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@@ -0,0 +1,39 @@
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module CheckPlease
|
2
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module CLI
|
3
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+
|
4
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class Flag
|
5
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+
ATTR_NAMES = %i[ short long desc key block ]
|
6
|
+
attr_accessor(*ATTR_NAMES)
|
7
|
+
|
8
|
+
def initialize(*args)
|
9
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+
self.short = args.shift if args.any?
|
10
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self.long = args.shift if args.any?
|
11
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+
|
12
|
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yield self if block_given?
|
13
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+
|
14
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+
missing = ATTR_NAMES.select { |e| self.send(e).nil? }
|
15
|
+
if missing.any?
|
16
|
+
raise ArgumentError, "Missing attributes: #{missing.join(', ')}"
|
17
|
+
end
|
18
|
+
end
|
19
|
+
|
20
|
+
def visit_option_parser(parser, options)
|
21
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+
parser.on(short, long, desc) do |value|
|
22
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+
block.call options, value
|
23
|
+
end
|
24
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+
end
|
25
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+
|
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|
+
def set_key(key, message = nil, &b)
|
27
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+
raise ArgumentError if message && b
|
28
|
+
raise ArgumentError if !message && !b
|
29
|
+
|
30
|
+
self.key = key
|
31
|
+
self.block = ->(options, value) {
|
32
|
+
b ||= message.to_sym.to_proc
|
33
|
+
options[key] = b.call(value)
|
34
|
+
}
|
35
|
+
end
|
36
|
+
end
|
37
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+
|
38
|
+
end
|
39
|
+
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
|
|
1
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+
require 'optparse'
|
2
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+
|
3
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+
module CheckPlease
|
4
|
+
module CLI
|
5
|
+
|
6
|
+
class Parser
|
7
|
+
class UnrecognizedOption < StandardError
|
8
|
+
include CheckPlease::Error
|
9
|
+
end
|
10
|
+
|
11
|
+
def initialize(exe_file_name)
|
12
|
+
@exe_file_name = exe_file_name
|
13
|
+
@optparse = OptionParser.new
|
14
|
+
@optparse.banner = banner
|
15
|
+
|
16
|
+
@options = {} # yuck
|
17
|
+
CheckPlease::CLI::FLAGS.each do |flag|
|
18
|
+
flag.visit_option_parser(@optparse, @options)
|
19
|
+
end
|
20
|
+
end
|
21
|
+
|
22
|
+
# Unfortunately, OptionParser *really* wants to use closures.
|
23
|
+
# I haven't yet figured out how to get around this...
|
24
|
+
def consume_flags!(args)
|
25
|
+
@optparse.parse!(args) # removes recognized flags from `args`
|
26
|
+
return @options
|
27
|
+
rescue OptionParser::InvalidOption, OptionParser::AmbiguousOption => e
|
28
|
+
raise UnrecognizedOption, e.message, cause: e
|
29
|
+
end
|
30
|
+
|
31
|
+
def help
|
32
|
+
@optparse.help
|
33
|
+
end
|
34
|
+
|
35
|
+
private
|
36
|
+
|
37
|
+
def banner
|
38
|
+
<<~EOF
|
39
|
+
Usage: #{@exe_file_name} <reference> <candidate> [FLAGS]
|
40
|
+
|
41
|
+
#{CheckPlease::ELEVATOR_PITCH}
|
42
|
+
|
43
|
+
Arguments:
|
44
|
+
<reference> is the name of a file to use as, well, the reference.
|
45
|
+
<candidate> is the name of a file to compare against the reference.
|
46
|
+
|
47
|
+
NOTE: If you have a utility like MacOS's `pbpaste`, you MAY omit
|
48
|
+
the <candidate> arg, and pipe the second document instead, like:
|
49
|
+
|
50
|
+
$ pbpaste | #{@exe_file_name} <reference>
|
51
|
+
|
52
|
+
FLAGS:
|
53
|
+
EOF
|
54
|
+
end
|
55
|
+
end
|
56
|
+
|
57
|
+
end
|
58
|
+
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
|
|
1
|
+
module CheckPlease
|
2
|
+
module CLI
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
class Runner
|
5
|
+
def initialize(exe_file_name)
|
6
|
+
@parser = Parser.new(exe_file_name)
|
7
|
+
end
|
8
|
+
|
9
|
+
# NOTE: unusually for me, I'm using Ruby's `or` keyword in this method.
|
10
|
+
# `or` short circuits just like `||`, but has lower precedence, which
|
11
|
+
# enables some shenanigans...
|
12
|
+
def run(*args)
|
13
|
+
args.flatten!
|
14
|
+
print_help_and_exit if args.empty?
|
15
|
+
|
16
|
+
begin
|
17
|
+
options = @parser.consume_flags!(args)
|
18
|
+
rescue Parser::UnrecognizedOption => e
|
19
|
+
print_help_and_exit e.message
|
20
|
+
end
|
21
|
+
|
22
|
+
# The reference MUST be the first arg...
|
23
|
+
reference = \
|
24
|
+
read_file(args.shift) \
|
25
|
+
or print_help_and_exit "Missing <reference> argument"
|
26
|
+
|
27
|
+
# The candidate MAY be the second arg, or it might have been piped in...
|
28
|
+
candidate = \
|
29
|
+
read_file(args.shift) \
|
30
|
+
|| read_piped_stdin \
|
31
|
+
or print_help_and_exit "Missing <candidate> argument, AND nothing was piped in"
|
32
|
+
|
33
|
+
# Looks like we're good to go!
|
34
|
+
diff_view = CheckPlease.render_diff(reference, candidate, options)
|
35
|
+
puts diff_view
|
36
|
+
end
|
37
|
+
|
38
|
+
|
39
|
+
|
40
|
+
private
|
41
|
+
|
42
|
+
def print_help_and_exit(message = nil)
|
43
|
+
puts "\n>>> #{message}\n\n" if message
|
44
|
+
puts @parser.help
|
45
|
+
exit
|
46
|
+
end
|
47
|
+
|
48
|
+
def read_file(filename)
|
49
|
+
return nil if filename.nil?
|
50
|
+
File.read(filename)
|
51
|
+
rescue Errno::ENOENT
|
52
|
+
return nil
|
53
|
+
end
|
54
|
+
|
55
|
+
# Unfortunately, ARGF won't help us here because it doesn't seem to want to
|
56
|
+
# read from stdin after it's already pulled a file out of ARGV. So, we
|
57
|
+
# have to read from stdin ourselves.
|
58
|
+
#
|
59
|
+
# BUT THAT'S NOT ALL! If the user didn't actually pipe any data,
|
60
|
+
# $stdin.read will block until they manually send EOF or hit Ctrl+C.
|
61
|
+
#
|
62
|
+
# Fortunately, we can detect whether $stdin.read will block by checking to
|
63
|
+
# see if it is a TTY. (Wait, what century is this again?)
|
64
|
+
#
|
65
|
+
# For fun and posterity, here's an experiment you can use to demonstrate this:
|
66
|
+
#
|
67
|
+
# $ ruby -e 'puts $stdin.tty? ? "YES YOU ARE A TTY" : "nope, no tty here"'
|
68
|
+
# YES YOU ARE A TTY
|
69
|
+
#
|
70
|
+
# $ cat foo | ruby -e 'puts $stdin.tty? ? "YES YOU ARE A TTY" : "nope, no tty here"'
|
71
|
+
# nope, no tty here
|
72
|
+
def read_piped_stdin
|
73
|
+
return nil if $stdin.tty?
|
74
|
+
return $stdin.read
|
75
|
+
end
|
76
|
+
end
|
77
|
+
|
78
|
+
end
|
79
|
+
end
|
@@ -12,8 +12,8 @@ module CheckPlease
|
|
12
12
|
FORMATS = PRINTERS_BY_FORMAT.keys.sort
|
13
13
|
DEFAULT_FORMAT = :table
|
14
14
|
|
15
|
-
def self.render(diffs,
|
16
|
-
format
|
15
|
+
def self.render(diffs, options = {})
|
16
|
+
format = options[:format] || DEFAULT_FORMAT
|
17
17
|
printer = PRINTERS_BY_FORMAT[format.to_sym]
|
18
18
|
printer.render(diffs)
|
19
19
|
end
|
data/lib/check_please/version.rb
CHANGED
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
|
|
1
1
|
--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
2
2
|
name: check_please
|
3
3
|
version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
4
|
-
version: 0.
|
4
|
+
version: 0.2.0
|
5
5
|
platform: ruby
|
6
6
|
authors:
|
7
7
|
- Sam Livingston-Gray
|
8
8
|
autorequire:
|
9
9
|
bindir: exe
|
10
10
|
cert_chain: []
|
11
|
-
date: 2020-11-
|
11
|
+
date: 2020-11-13 00:00:00.000000000 Z
|
12
12
|
dependencies:
|
13
13
|
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
14
14
|
name: table_print
|
@@ -74,9 +74,14 @@ files:
|
|
74
74
|
- bin/setup
|
75
75
|
- check_please.gemspec
|
76
76
|
- lib/check_please.rb
|
77
|
+
- lib/check_please/cli.rb
|
78
|
+
- lib/check_please/cli/flag.rb
|
79
|
+
- lib/check_please/cli/parser.rb
|
80
|
+
- lib/check_please/cli/runner.rb
|
77
81
|
- lib/check_please/comparison.rb
|
78
82
|
- lib/check_please/diff.rb
|
79
83
|
- lib/check_please/diffs.rb
|
84
|
+
- lib/check_please/error.rb
|
80
85
|
- lib/check_please/path.rb
|
81
86
|
- lib/check_please/printers.rb
|
82
87
|
- lib/check_please/printers/base.rb
|