Bandit automatically [uses any .bandit file] within the directories on
which it is invoked. Since ALE invokes bandit on stdin, it does not
load a .bandit file automatically. Add support for automatically
finding a .bandit file and passing it to bandit via the --ini option
along with a variable to disable this behavior if desired.
Note: This is useful for the skips and tests configuration options, but
not exclude which would require invoking bandit using a file name, which
may or may not be a good trade-off.
[uses any .bandit file]: https://github.com/PyCQA/bandit/blob/1.5.1/bandit/cli/main.py#L70-L73
Signed-off-by: Kevin Locke <kevin@kevinlocke.name>
Although using %t to lint changes was desirable, many pylama checks use
surrounding paths and file contents (e.g. C0103 module name, E0402
relative import beyond top, etc.) The more such errors I find during
testing, the less %t seems like a good idea. Switch to %s.
Also set `lint_file` to 1 and mark Pylama as a file linter in the docs.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Locke <kevin@kevinlocke.name>
ale#Escape function seems to prepend and append ' to the file name, which
are not present in the pydocstyle output. Having the parsing regexp match
the file name was overkill anyway, since there is an obvious 1:1
correspondence between the buffer number and the (potential) errors
reported by pydocstyle.
The linter can correctly parse pydocstyle output with any of the following
command-line options enabled: --explain, --source, --debug, and/or
--verbose
When set to true, and the buffer is currently inside a pipenv,
GetExecutable will return "pipenv", which will trigger the existing
functionality to append the correct pipenv arguments to run each linter.
Defaults to false.
I was going to implement ale#python#PipenvPresent by invoking
`pipenv --venv` or `pipenv --where`, but it seemed to be abominably
slow, even to the point where the test suite wasn't even finishing
("Tried to run tests 3 times"). The diff is:
diff --git a/autoload/ale/python.vim b/autoload/ale/python.vim
index 7baae079..8c100d41 100644
--- a/autoload/ale/python.vim
+++ b/autoload/ale/python.vim
@@ -106,5 +106,9 @@ endfunction
" Detects whether a pipenv environment is present.
function! ale#python#PipenvPresent(buffer) abort
- return findfile('Pipfile.lock', expand('#' . a:buffer . ':p:h') . ';') isnot# ''
+ let l:cd_string = ale#path#BufferCdString(a:buffer)
+ let l:output = systemlist(l:cd_string . 'pipenv --where')[0]
+ " `pipenv --where` returns the path to the dir containing the Pipfile
+ " if in a pipenv, or some error text otherwise.
+ return strpart(l:output, 0, 18) !=# "No Pipfile present"
endfunction
Using vim's `findfile` is much faster, behaves correctly in the majority
of situations, and also works reliably when the `pipenv` command doesn't
exist.