Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Danny Mösch 77050e8c40 Enable a fully statically linked Linux executable (#6211)
If SwiftLint is built from this state using the Swift SDK, we'll get a
large self-contained Linux executable that runs without loading SourceKit.
It can do that by disabling any rule that requires SourceKit.

With `SWIFTLINT_DISABLE_SOURCEKIT` set on a normally (dynamically linked)
binary, the behavior is the same. That's different from the previously
reported more serious warnings.
2025-08-30 10:02:38 -04:00
Danny Mösch c1ffdfe891 Enable prefer_condition_list rule (#6163) 2025-07-12 09:41:00 -04:00
Danny Mösch 599e51a5a2 Format code (#6151) 2025-07-02 17:50:53 -04:00
JP Simard 3a922d41f9 Add ConditionallySourceKitFree to migrate custom rules to SwiftSyntax (#6127)
The protocol will be used to tag rules that may or may not require
SourceKit depending on its configuration. I only expect this to be used
for custom rules as utility to help transition to a fully SwiftSyntax
based approach.
2025-06-21 15:54:56 -04:00
JP Simard 81474e36d0 Enforce SourceKitFreeRule contract with fatal error (#6107) 2025-06-20 07:25:01 -04:00
Danny Mösch c810459e6a Enforce mandatory trailing comma and fix all violations (#5640) 2024-06-28 05:36:50 +00:00
Danny Mösch 58928b7e40 Enforce any on existential types (#5273)
This makes syntactically clear which types are rather expensive.
2023-10-12 08:37:23 +02:00
JP Simard 86d60400c1 Move core SwiftLint functionality to new SwiftLintCore module
Over the years, SwiftLintFramework had become a fairly massive monolith,
containing over 400 source files with both core infrastructure and
rules.

Architecturally, the rules should rely on the core infrastructure but
not the other way around. There are two exceptions to this:
`custom_rules` and `superfluous_disable_command` which need special
integration with the linter infrastructure.

Now the time has come to formalize this architecture and one way to do
that is to move the core SwiftLint functionality out of
SwiftLintFramework and into a new SwiftLintCore module that the rules
can depend on.

Beyond enforcing architectural patterns, this also has the advantage of
speeding up incremental compilation by skipping rebuilding the core
functionality when iterating on rules.

Because the core functionality is always useful when building rules, I'm
opting to import SwiftLintCore in SwiftLintFramework as `@_exported` so
that it's implicitly available to all files in SwiftLintFramework
without needing to import it directly.

In a follow-up I'll also split the built-in rules and the extra rules
into their own modules. More modularization is possible from there, but
not planned.

The bulk of this PR just moves files from `Source/SwiftLintFramework/*`
to `Source/SwiftLintCore/*`. There are some other changes that can't be
split up into their own PRs:

* Change jazzy to document the SwiftLintCore module instead of
  SwiftLintFramework.
* Change imports in unit tests to reflect where code was moved to.
* Update `sourcery` make rule to reflect where code was moved to.
* Create a new `coreRules` array and register those rules with the
  registry. This allows the `custom_rules` and
  `superfluous_disable_command` rule implementations to remain internal
  to the SwiftLintCore module, preventing more implementation details
  from leaking across architectural layers.
* Move `RuleRegistry.registerAllRulesOnce()` out of the type declaration
  and up one level so it can access rules defined downstream from
  SwiftLintCore.
2023-04-26 21:10:19 -04:00