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Solium is a linter for Solidity which uses Abstract Syntax Trees and allows the user to enable/disable existing rules and add their own ones!
It internally uses solparse to parse your solidity code into a Spider Monkey compliant AST
Solium aims to comply with the official Solidity Style Guide. Follow our blog in order to stay up to date with the latest news.
npm install -g solium
In the root directory of your DApp, run the following:
solium --init
This creates .soliumrc.json
and .soliumignore
inside your root directory, which have the configuration for the enabled and custom rules and files and folders to ignore while running the linter respectively.
You can disable a particular rule by setting its value to false
in .soliumrc.json
In order to lint a specific file, use:
solium --file foobar.sol
To run the linter over your entire project, use the following command in your root directory:
solium --dir .
This lints all the files inside your project with .sol
extension.
Use solium --watch
to enable Hot loading (Hot swapping).
When new rules are added in subsequent versions and you update Solium, you need not re-initialize with --init
. Simply run solium --sync
in your root directory and it automatically adds the newly added rules to your .soliumrc.json
. The sync option doesn't change anything else in your configuration files.
Use solium --dir <DIRECTORY_NAME>
to run the linter over a particular directory
Use solium --reporter=gcc
or solium --reporter=pretty
to configure the output
-> Open up the .soliumrc.json
configuration file and set the value of custom-rules-filename
to the path of the file that defines your rules. You can either provide an absolute path or a path relative to the directory in which .soliumrc.json resides. For example: "custom-rules-filename": "./my-rules.js"
The format for writing your custom rule file (for example, my-rules.js
) is:
module.exports = {
'my-rule-name-1': function (context) {
//Solium internally uses EventEmitter and emits an event every time it enters or leaves a node during the Depth First Traversal of the AST
context.on ('IfStatement', function (emittedObject) {
//exit property is set to true if we are leaving the node
if (emittedObject.exit) {
return;
}
//View the node representing an If Statement
console.log (emittedObject.node);
//report an error
context.report ({
node: emittedObject.node,
message: 'I JUST ENTERED AN IF STATEMENT!!',
location: { //optional
line: 1, //optional
column: 2 //optional
}
});
});
},
'my-rule-name-2': function (context) {
context.on ('ContractStatement', function (emittedObject) {
//similarly define this rule to do something with Contract Declarations
});
}
};
NOTE: The best way to know which event you're looking for is to simply install solparse or solidity-parser, then parse your code into the AST and see the value of the type
field of the node that you wish to target.
See the existing rules to get an idea of how the rules are making use of the context object being provided to them.
-> Then, inside the rules
object in the same file, set your rule names to true
. For instance:
"rules": {
"my-rule-name-1": true,
"my-rule-name-2": true
}
NOTE: If you write a rule whose name clashes with the name of a pre-defined rule, your custom rule overrides the pre-defined one.
To access Solium's API, first install it:
npm install --save solium
let Solium = require ('solium'),
sourceCode = 'contract fOO_bar { function HELLO_WORLD () {} }';
//sourceCode can alternatively be a Buffer object
let errorObjects = Solium.lint (sourceCode, {
'custom-rules-filename': null, //see above if you wish to add custom rules
rules: {
camelcase: true,
mixedcase: true
}
});
errorObjects.forEach ( (err) => {
console.log (err);
});
For a list of all available rules, see solium.json.
Please see the Developer Guide to understand how to contribute rules to this repository.
Clone the repository, traverse to the root directory of the project, then install dependencies:
npm install
npm test
Travis has released Solium for Atom
FAQs
Linter to identify and fix Style & Security issues in Solidity
The npm package solium receives a total of 1,084 weekly downloads. As such, solium popularity was classified as popular.
We found that solium demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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