If you are looking for a managed solution to observe your code's quality, check out UseAttractor
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Installation
- Usage
- CI Usage
- CLI Commands and Options
- Development
- Contributing
- Logo Attribution
- Contributors β¨
Many authors (Michael Feathers, Sandi Metz) have shown that an evaluation of churn vs complexity of files in software projects provide a valuable metric towards code quality. This is another take on the matter, for ruby code, using the churn
and flog
projects.
Here's an article on medium explaining the approach in greater detail.
Attractor's installation is standard for a Ruby gem:
gem install attractor
You'll also want to install some plugins to go along with the main gem:
gem install attractor-ruby # https://github.com/julianrubisch/attractor-ruby
gem install attractor-javascript # https://github.com/julianrubisch/attractor-javascript
You will most likely want to install Attractor using Bundler:
gem 'attractor'
gem 'attractor-ruby'
gem 'attractor-javascript'
And then execute:
bundle
To create a HTML report in attractor_output/index.html
:
attractor report
If you'd like to specify a directory, use the file prefix option:
attractor report --file_prefix app/models
Or shorter:
attractor report -p app/models
Check JavaScript:
attractor report -p app/javascript -t js
Watch for file changes:
attractor report -p app/models --watch
Serve at http://localhost:7890
:
attractor serve -p app/models
Enable rack-livereload:
attractor serve -p app/models --watch
Make sure you prefix these commands with bundle exec
if you are using Bundler.
If you have guard-livereload (or a similar service) running on your project, you can leverage the hot reloading functionality by specifying --watch|-w
. Attractor will then live-reload the browser window when a file watched by guard-livereload
changes.
To use this CLI in a CI environment, use the --ci
option, which will suppress automatic opening of a browser window.
There is a dedicated Github Action that will compile Attractor's output.
You can quickly integrate it into your action's workflow by grabbing it on the Marketplace.
The simplest use case is to store the attractor_output
directory as an artifact.
attractor:
stage: your-stage-label
image: ruby:latest
script:
- gem install attractor
- attractor report --ci
artifacts:
when: on_success
paths:
- attractor_output
Initialize the local cache:
attractor init
--file_prefix|-p app/models
--type|-t rb|js
--start_ago|-s (e.g. 5y, 3m, 7w)
--minimum_churn|-c (minimum times a file must have changed to be processed)
--ignore|-i 'spec/*_spec.rb,db/schema.rb,tmp'
Print a simple output to console:
attractor calc
--file_prefix|-p app/models
--type|-t rb|js
--watch|-w
--start_ago|-s (e.g. 5y, 3m, 7w)
--minimum_churn|-c (minimum times a file must have changed to be processed)
--ignore|-i 'spec/*_spec.rb,db/schema.rb,tmp'
Generate a full report
attractor report
--file_prefix|-p app/models
--type|-t rb|js
--watch|-w
--no-open-browser|--ci
--start_ago|-s (e.g. 5y, 3m, 7w)
--minimum_churn|-c (minimum times a file must have changed to be processed)
--ignore|-i 'spec/*_spec.rb,db/schema.rb,tmp'
Serve the output on http://localhost:7890
attractor serve
--file_prefix|-p app/models
--watch|-w
--no-open-browser|--ci
--start_ago|-s (e.g. 5y, 3m, 7w)
--minimum_churn|-c (minimum times a file must have changed to be processed)
--ignore|-i 'spec/*_spec.rb,db/schema.rb,tmp'
Clear the local cache:
attractor clean
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To run all tests, run bin/test
. You can run the specs by themselves with bundle exec rspec
, and the cucumber features with bundle exec cucumber
.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub.
Black Hole by Eynav Raphael from the Noun Project
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
Julian Rubisch π» π |
Olivier π§ |
Andrew Mason π» π π |
Ernesto Tagwerker π» |
Manuel Tancoigne π» |
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!