You might try a TDD approach and add tests within the test
directory,
to try different configs, you may find it easier to try out changes in
a separate local directory.
You can run npm link
for this purpose,
pointing from your project to this project. For example, while in your project
root and with eslint-plugin-jsdoc
as a sibling, run:
npm link ../eslint-plugin-jsdoc
After running npm install
to get the latest dependencies and devDependencies,
you can run the following command to update the dist
files, with dist/index.js
being the main
entrance point from package.json
:
npm run build
The project follows ESLint rules from canonical
and testing follows its subconfig, canonical/mocha
.
Tests are expected. Each rule file should be in CamelCase (despite the rule names themselves being hyphenated) and should be added within test/assertions
and then imported/required by
test/rules/index.js
.
Each rule file should be an ESM default export of an object which has valid
and invalid
array properties containing the tests. Tests of each type should be provided.
parserOptions
will be ecmaVersion: 6
by default, but tests can override parserOptions
with their own.
See ESLint’s RuleTester
for more on the allowable properties (e.g., code
, errors
(for invalid rules),
options
, settings
, etc.).
Note that besides npm test
, there is npm run test-cov
which shows more
detailed information on coverage. Coverage should be maintained at 100%, and
if there are a few guards in place for future use, the code block in question
can be ignored by being preceded by /* istanbul ignore next */
(including
for warnings where the block is never passed over (i.e., the block is always
entered)). If you want to test without coverage at all, you can use
npm run test-no-cov
. To only test rules rather than other files, you
can use npm run test-index
.
To test specific rules, you can supply a comma-separated list with the --rule
flag passed to test-index
, e.g., for check-examples
and require-example
:
npm run --rule=check-examples,require-example test-index
.
You can further limit this by providing --invalid
and/or --valid
flags
with a comma-separated list of 0-based indexes that you wish to include (also
accepts negative offsets from the end, e.g., -1
for the last item). For
example, to check the first and third invalid tests of check-examples
alon with the second valid test, you can run:
npm run --rule=check-examples --invalid=0,2 --valid=1 test-index
.
PRs should be mergeable, rebasing
first against the latest master
.
The number of commits will ideally be limited in number, unless extra commits can better show a progression of features.
Commit messages should be worded clearly and the reason for any PR made clear by linking to an issue or giving a full description of what it achieves.
We use semantic-release
for preparing releases, so the commit messages (or at least the merge that
brings them into master
) must follow the
AngularJS commit guidelines with a special format such as feat: describe new feature
in order for the releasing to occur and for the described items to be added
to the release notes.