X-Git-Url: https://git.madduck.net/etc/vim.git/blobdiff_plain/62bfbd6a63dcac2f6f31eb014f69397c9eb967d2..95c03b9638e44eb76611a0e005d447472a4f2f97:/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md?ds=inline diff --git a/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md b/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md index 6b70e0b..9b38fe1 100644 --- a/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md +++ b/docs/contributing/gauging_changes.md @@ -37,25 +37,59 @@ If you're running locally yourself to test black on lots of code try: ### CLI arguments -```text -Usage: black-primer [OPTIONS] +```{program-output} black-primer --help - primer - prime projects for blackening... 🏴 +``` + +## diff-shades + +diff-shades is a tool similar to black-primer, it also runs _Black_ across a list of Git +cloneable OSS projects recording the results. The intention is to eventually fully +replace black-primer with diff-shades as it's much more feature complete and supports +our needs better. + +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. Black-primer's results would usually be filled with changes +caused by pre-existing code in Black drowning out the (new) changes we want to see. It +operates similarly to black-primer but crucially it saves the results as a JSON file +which allows for the rich comparison features alluded to above. + +For more information, please see the [diff-shades documentation][diff-shades]. -Options: - -c, --config PATH JSON config file path [default: /Users/cooper/repos/ - black/src/black_primer/primer.json] +### CI integration - --debug Turn on debug logging [default: False] - -k, --keep Keep workdir + repos post run [default: False] - -L, --long-checkouts Pull big projects to test [default: False] - -R, --rebase Rebase project if already checked out [default: - False] +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: - -w, --workdir PATH Directory path for repo checkouts [default: /var/fol - ders/tc/hbwxh76j1hn6gqjd2n2sjn4j9k1glp/T/primer.20200 - 517125229] +| | 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 | - -W, --workers INTEGER Number of parallel worker coroutines [default: 2] - -h, --help Show this message and exit. +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