#+TITLE: melpazoid 🤖 #+OPTIONS: toc:3 author:t creator:nil num:nil #+AUTHOR: Chris Rayner #+EMAIL: dchrisrayner@gmail.com [[https://travis-ci.org/riscy/melpazoid][https://travis-ci.org/riscy/melpazoid.svg?branch=master]] /melpazoid/ is a bundle of scripts for testing Emacs packages, primarily submissions to [[https://github.com/melpa/][MELPA]]. I've been using this to help check MELPA [[https://github.com/melpa/melpa/pulls][pull requests]]. The ambition is checks that run in a "clean" environment, either through CI or through a container on your local machine. This is a work in progress -- feedback and pull requests are welcome ([[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid/search?q=TODO&unscoped_q=TODO][search for TODO]]s, [[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid/issues][raise an issue]], whatever). Note my current aim is to make this code simpler before I make it any more complicated. The checks are a combination of: 1. [[https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Byte-Compilation.html#Byte-Compilation][byte-compile-file]] 2. [[https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/CheckDoc][checkdoc]] 3. [[https://github.com/purcell/package-lint][package-lint]] 4. a license checker (in [[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid/blob/master/melpazoid/melpazoid.py][melpazoid.py]]) 5. some elisp checks (in [[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid/blob/master/melpazoid/melpazoid.el][melpazoid.el]]) 1--4 are on the [[https://github.com/melpa/melpa/blob/master/.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md][MELPA checklist]], so you should always try to get those right. In normal circumstances the build will exit with a failure if there is any byte-compile or package-lint `error` -- leeway is given for any `warning`. The license checker (4) is currently very crude. The elisp checks (5) are not foolproof, sometimes opinionated, and may raise false positives. * Usage You can [[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid#fork-it-and-let-ci-do-the-work][fork it and let CI do the work]], or [[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid#use-it-locally][use it locally]]. ** Fork it and let CI do the work If you don't want to install this software or its dependencies, you are encouraged to fork this repository and let CI do the work. Then enable [[https://travis-ci.org][Travis-CI]] on your fork, or just open a pull request against this repository (I won't merge it). The eventual build information will report any issues. Your fork will need to point to the Emacs package you want to build, which can be done by modifying the [[https://github.com/riscy/melpazoid/blob/master/.travis.yml#L6][.travis.yml]] file in one of the following ways. *** Test a recipe before you even open a pull request to MELPA Modify the ~env~ field and specify your clone URL and your recipe: #+begin_src yaml env: - RECIPE='(my-package :repo "me/my-package-repo" :fetcher github)' #+end_src Note the apostrophes around the RECIPE. *** Test a MELPA pull request you've already opened Modify the ~env~ field and specify your open MELPA PR: #+begin_src yaml env: - MELPA_PR_URL=https://github.com/melpa/melpa/pull/6713 #+end_src ** Use it locally You will need Python ≥ 3.6 (and the ~requests~ package) and Docker. An image will be built with (hopefully) all of your requirements installed. By default, it will be run with no network access. The output scroll will report any discovered issues. *** Test your recipe #+begin_src bash RECIPE='(shx :repo "riscy/shx-for-emacs" :fetcher github)' make #+end_src Note the apostrophes around the RECIPE. *** Test an open MELPA PR #+begin_src bash MELPA_PR_URL=https://github.com/melpa/melpa/pull/6718 make #+end_src *** Run in an unending loop This currently only works in macOS; it monitors the clipboard for new MELPA PR's, then automatically runs the checks on them. #+begin_src bash make #+end_src