X-Git-Url: https://git.madduck.net/etc/vim.git/blobdiff_plain/3d96b7f10a56fcf826693e98f08b673dad8ac256..dab1be38e670b822777ac5338b9b2dfef4c34690:/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md diff --git a/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md b/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md index b41c7a3..59c40eb 100644 --- a/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md +++ b/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md @@ -9,34 +9,52 @@ enough to cause frustration to projects that are already "black formatted". ## black-primer -`black-primer` is a tool built for CI (and humans) to have _Black_ `--check` a number of -Git accessible projects in parallel. (configured in `primer.json`) _(A PR will be -accepted to add Mercurial support.)_ +`black-primer` is an obsolete tool (now replaced with `diff-shades`) that was used to +gauge the impact of changes in _Black_ on open-source code. It is no longer used +internally and will be removed from the _Black_ repository in the future. -### Run flow +## diff-shades -- Ensure we have a `black` + `git` in PATH -- Load projects from `primer.json` -- Run projects in parallel with `--worker` workers (defaults to CPU count / 2) - - Checkout projects - - Run black and record result - - Clean up repository checkout _(can optionally be disabled via `--keep`)_ -- Display results summary to screen -- Default to cleaning up `--work-dir` (which defaults to tempfile schemantics) -- Return - - 0 for successful run - - \< 0 for environment / internal error - - \> 0 for each project with an error +diff-shades is a tool that runs _Black_ across a list of Git cloneable OSS projects +recording the results. The main highlight feature of diff-shades is being able to +compare two revisions of _Black_. This is incredibly useful as it allows us to see what +exact changes will occur, say merging a certain PR. -### Speed up runs 🏎 +For more information, please see the [diff-shades documentation][diff-shades]. -If you're running locally yourself to test black on lots of code try: +### CI integration -- Using `-k` / `--keep` + `-w` / `--work-dir` so you don't have to re-checkout the repo - each run +diff-shades is also the tool behind the "diff-shades results comparing ..." / +"diff-shades reports zero changes ..." comments on PRs. The project has a GitHub Actions +workflow which runs diff-shades twice against two revisions of _Black_ according to +these rules: -### CLI arguments +| | Baseline revision | Target revision | +| --------------------- | ----------------------- | ---------------------------- | +| On PRs | latest commit on `main` | PR commit with `main` merged | +| On pushes (main only) | latest PyPI version | the pushed commit | -```{program-output} black-primer --help +Once finished, a PR comment will be posted embedding a summary of the changes and links +to further information. If there's a pre-existing diff-shades comment, it'll be updated +instead the next time the workflow is triggered on the same PR. +The workflow uploads 3-4 artifacts upon completion: the two generated analyses (they +have the .json file extension), `diff.html`, and `.pr-comment.json` if triggered by a +PR. The last one is downloaded by the `diff-shades-comment` workflow and shouldn't be +downloaded locally. `diff.html` comes in handy for push-based or manually triggered +runs. And the analyses exist just in case you want to do further analysis using the +collected data locally. + +Note that the workflow will only fail intentionally if while analyzing a file failed to +format. Otherwise a failure indicates a bug in the workflow. + +```{tip} +Maintainers with write access or higher can trigger the workflow manually from the +Actions tab using the `workflow_dispatch` event. Simply select "diff-shades" +from the workflows list on the left, press "Run workflow", and fill in which revisions +and command line arguments to use. + +Once finished, check the logs or download the artifacts for local use. ``` + +[diff-shades]: https://github.com/ichard26/diff-shades#readme