superlint/docs/add-new-linter.md

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# How to add support for a new tool to super-linter
If you want to propose a _Pull Request_ to add **new** language support or a new
tool, do the following.
## Update documentation
- `README.md`
## Provide test cases
1. Create the `test/linters/<LANGUAGE_NAME>` directory.
2. Provide at least one test case with a file that is supposed to pass
validation, with the right file extension if needed:
`test/linters/<LANGUAGE_NAME>/<name-of-tool>-good`
3. Provide at least one test case with a file that is supposed to fail
validation, with the right file extension if needed:
`test/linters/<LANGUAGE_NAME>/<name-of-tool>-bad`. If the tool supports fix
mode, the test case supposed to fail validation should only contain
violations that the fix mode can automatically fix. Avoid test cases that
fail only because of syntax errors, when possible.
4. Update expected summary reports: `test/data/super-linter-summary`.
5. If the tool supports check-only mode or fix mode, add the `<LANGUGAGE>` to
the `LANGUAGES_WITH_FIX_MODE` array in `test/testUtils.sh`
## Update the test suite
Update the test suite to check for installed packages, the commands that your
new tool needs in the `PATH`, and the expected version command:
- `test/inspec/super-linter/controls/super_linter.rb`
## Install the tool
- Install the tool by pointing to specific package or container image versions:
- If there are PyPi packages, create a text file named
`dependencies/python/<name-of-tool>.txt` and list the packages there.
- If there are npm packages, update `dependencies/package.json` and
`dependencies/package-lock.json`. by adding the new packages.
- If there are Ruby Gems, update `dependencies/Gemfile` and
`dependencies/Gemfile.lock`
- If there are Maven or Java packages:
1. Create a directory named `dependencies/<name-of-tool>`.
2. Create a `dependencies/<name-of-tool>/build.gradle` file with the
following contents:
```gradle
repositories {
mavenLocal()
mavenCentral()
}
// Hold this dependency here so we can get automated updates using DependaBot
dependencies {
implementation 'your:dependency-here:version'
}
group 'com.github.super-linter'
version '1.0.0-SNAPSHOT'
```
3. Update the `dependencies` section in
`dependencies/<name-of-tool>/build.gradle` to install your dependencies.
4. Add the following content to the `Dockerfile`:
```dockerfile
COPY scripts/install-<name-of-tool>.sh /
RUN --mount=type=secret,id=GITHUB_TOKEN /<name-of-tool>.sh && rm -rf /<name-of-tool>.sh
```
5. Create `scripts/install-<name-of-tool>.sh`, and implement the logic to
install your tool. You get the version of a dependency from
`build.gradle`. Example:
```sh
GOOGLE_JAVA_FORMAT_VERSION="$(
set -euo pipefail
awk -F "[:']" '/google-java-format/ {print $4}' "google-java-format/build.gradle"
)"
```
6. Add the new to DependaBot configuration:
```yaml
- package-ecosystem: "gradle"
directory: "/dependencies/<name-of-tool>"
schedule:
interval: "weekly"
open-pull-requests-limit: 10
```
- If there is a container (Docker) image:
1. Add a new build stage to get the image:
```dockerfile
FROM your/image:version as <name-of-tool>
```
1. Copy the necessary binaries and libraries to the relevant locations.
Example:
```sh
COPY --from=<name-of-tool> /usr/local/bin/<name-of-command> /usr/bin/
```
## Run the new tool
- Update the orchestration scripts to run the new tool:
- `lib/globals/languages.sh`: add a new item to `LANGUAGES_ARRAY` array. Use
the "name" of the language, then a `_`, and finally the name of the tool. To
allow for future additions, use a language name and a tool name for the new
item. Example: `PYTHON_RUFF`. In the context of this document, to avoid
repetitions we reference this new item as `<LANGUAGE_NAME>`.
- Define the command to invoke the new tool:
- `lib/functions/linterCommands.sh`: add the command to invoke the tool.
Define a new variable: `LINTER_COMMANDS_ARRAY_<LANGUAGE_NAME>`. Example:
`LINTER_COMMANDS_ARRAY_GO_MODULES=(golangci-lint run --allow-parallel-runners)`
- If there are arguments that you can only pass using the command line,
and you think users might want to customize them, define a new variable
using `<LANGUAGE_NAME>_COMMAND_ARGS` and add it to the command if the
configuration provides it. Example:
```bash
<LANGUAGE_NAME>_COMMAND_ARGS="${<LANGUAGE_NAME>_COMMAND_ARGS:-""}"
if [ -n "${<LANGUAGE_NAME>_COMMAND_ARGS:-}" ]; then
export <LANGUAGE_NAME>_COMMAND_ARGS
AddOptionsToCommand "LINTER_COMMANDS_ARRAY_<LANGUAGE_NAME>" "${<LANGUAGE_NAME>_COMMAND_ARGS}"
fi
```
- `lib/globals/linterCommandsOptions.sh`: add "check only mode" and "fix
linting and formatting issues mode" options if the tool supports it.
Super-linter will automatically add them to the command to run the tool.
- If the tool runs in "fix linting and formatting issues mode" by default,
define a new variable with the options to add to the tool command to
enable "check only mode":
`<LANGUAGE_NAME>_CHECK_ONLY_MODE_OPTIONS=(....)`. Example:
`PYTHON_BLACK_CHECK_ONLY_MODE_OPTIONS=(--diff --check)`
- If the tool runs in "check only mode" by default, define a new variable
with the options to add to the tool command to enable "fix linting and
formatting issues mode": `<LANGUAGE_NAME>_FIX_MODE_OPTIONS=(...)`.
Example: `ANSIBLE_FIX_MODE_OPTIONS=(--fix)`
- If the tool needs option for both the "check only mode" and the fix
mode, define both variables as described in the previous points.
## Configure the new tool
If the new tool doesn't support a configuration file search mechanism, update
the command to run the new tool to set the path to the configuration file:
1. Define a new variable in `lib/globals/linterRules.sh`:
`<LANGUAGE_NAME>_FILE_NAME="${<LANGUAGE_NAME>_CONFIG_FILE:-"default-config-file-name.conf"}"`
where `default-config-file-name.conf` is the name of the new configuration
file for the new tool. Use one of the default recommended configurationfile
names for the new tool. Example:
`PYTHON_RUFF_FILE_NAME="${PYTHON_RUFF_CONFIG_FILE:-.ruff.toml}"`.
Super-linter automatically initializes the path to the configuration file in
the `<LANGUAGE_NAME>_LINTER_RULES` variable using the
`<LANGUAGE_NAME>_FILE_NAME`. Example: `PYTHON_RUFF_LINTER_RULES`
1. Create a new minimal configuration file in the `TEMPLATES` directory.
Example: `TEMPLATES/default-config-file-name.conf`.
1. Update `lib/functions/linterCommands.sh` to set the path to the configuration
file path. Example: `htmlhint --config "${HTML_LINTER_RULES}"`
### Configure the new tool for the Super-linter repository
If the default configuration of the new tool is unsuitable for the Super-linter
repository, create a new configuration file for the new tool using the default
filename:
- If the new tool supports a configuration file search mechanism, create the
configuration file in a location where the new tool will find it.
- If the new tool doesn't support a configuration file search mechanism and you
updated the new tool command to set the configuration file path, create the
configuration file in the `.github/linters` directory using its default
filename.
## Populate the file list
Provide the logic to populate the list of files or directories to examine:
`lib/functions/buildFileList.sh`
## Get the tool version
Provide the logic to populate the versions file: `scripts/linterVersions.sh`
## Detection logic
If necessary, provide elaborate logic to detect if the tool should examine a
file or a directory: `lib/functions/detectFiles.sh`
## Special cases
If the tool needs to take into account special cases, reach out to the
maintainers by creating a draft pull request and ask relevant questions there.
For example, you might need to provide new logic or customize the existing one
to:
- Validate the runtime environment: `lib/functions/validation.sh`.
- Get the installed version of the tool: `scripts/linterVersions.sh`
- Load configuration files: `lib/functions/linterRules.sh`
- Run the tool: `lib/functions/worker.sh`
- Compose the tool command: `lib/functions/linterCommands.sh`
- Modify the core Super-linter logic: `lib/linter.sh`