protolint is the pluggable linting/fixing utility for Protocol Buffer files (proto2+proto3):
- Runs fast because this works without compiler.
- Easy to follow the official style guide. The rules and the style guide correspond to each other exactly.
- Fixer automatically fixes all the possible official style guide violations.
- Allows to disable rules with a comment in a Protocol Buffer file.
- It is useful for projects which must keep API compatibility while enforce the style guide as much as possible.
- Some rules can be automatically disabled by inserting comments to the spotted violations.
- Loads plugins to contain your custom lint rules.
- Undergone testing for all rules.
- Many integration supports.
- protoc plugin
- Editor integration
- GitHub Action
- CI Integration
For example, vim-protolint works like the following.
protolint can be installed for Mac or Linux using Homebrew via the yoheimuta/protolint tap.
brew tap yoheimuta/protolint
brew install protolint
Since homebrew-core includes protolint,
you can also install it by just brew install protolint.
This is the default tap that is installed by default. It's easier, but not maintained by the same author. To keep it updated, I recommend you run brew tap yoheimuta/protolint
first.
You can also download a pre-built binary from this release page:
In the downloads section of each release, you can find pre-built binaries in .tar.gz packages.
protolint ships a Docker image yoheimuta/protolint that allows you to use protolint as part of your Docker workflow.
❯❯❯ docker run --volume "$(pwd):/workspace" --workdir /workspace yoheimuta/protolint lint _example/proto
[_example/proto/invalidFileName.proto:1:1] File name should be lower_snake_case.proto.
[_example/proto/issue_88/oneof_options.proto:11:5] Found an incorrect indentation style " ". " " is correct.
[_example/proto/issue_88/oneof_options.proto:12:5] Found an incorrect indentation style " ". " " is correct.
The binary can be installed from source if Go is available. However, I recommend using one of the pre-built binaries instead because it doesn't include the version info.
go install github.com/yoheimuta/protolint/cmd/protolint@latest
You can use protolint
using your nodejs package manager like npm
or yarn
.
$ npm install protolint --save-dev
This will add a reference to a development dependency to your local package.json
.
During install, the install.mjs script will be called. It will download the matching protolint
from github. Just like @electron/get, you can bypass the download using the following environment variables:
Environment Variable | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
PROTOLINT_MIRROR_HOST | https://github.com | HTTP/Web server base url hosting the binaries |
PROTOLINT_MIRROR_REMOTE_PATH | yoheimuta/protolint/download/releases | Path to the archives on the remote host |
PROTOLINT_MIRROR_USERNAME | HTTP Basic auth user name | |
PROTOLINT_MIRROR_PASSWORD | HTTP Basic auth password | |
PROTOLINT_PROXY | HTTP(S) Proxy with optional auth data |
Within the remote path, the archives from the releases page must be mirrored.
After that, you can use npx protolint
(with all supplied protolint arguments) within your dev-scripts.
{
...
"scripts": {
"protoc": "....",
"preprotoc": "npx protolint"
},
...
}
You can add a protolint
node to your package.json
which may contain the content of protolint.yml
below the lint
node, i.e. the root element of the configuration will be protolint
.
If you want to get an output that matches the TSC compiler, use reporter tsc
.
You can use protolint
as a linter within your python projects, the wheel protolint-bin
on pypi contains the pre-compiled binaries for various platforms. Just add the desired version to
your pyproject.toml
or requirements.txt
.
The wheels downloaded will contain the compiled go binaries for protolint
and protoc-gen-protolint
. Your platform must
be compatible with the supported binary platforms.
You can add the linter configuration to the tools.protolint
package in pyproject.toml
.
protolint lint example.proto example2.proto # file mode, specify multiple specific files
protolint lint . # directory mode, search for all .proto files recursively
protolint . # same as "protolint lint ."
protolint lint -config_path=path/to/your_protolint.yaml . # use path/to/your_protolint.yaml
protolint lint -config_dir_path=path/to . # search path/to for .protolint.yaml
protolint lint -fix . # automatically fix some of the problems reported by some rules
protolint lint -fix -auto_disable=next . # this is preferable when you want to fix problems while maintaining the compatibility. Automatically fix some problems and insert disable comments to the other problems. The available values are next and this.
protolint lint -auto_disable=next . # automatically insert disable comments to the other problems.
protolint lint -v . # with verbose output to investigate the parsing error
protolint lint -no-error-on-unmatched-pattern . # exits with success code even if no file is found (file & directory mode)
protolint lint -reporter junit . # output results in JUnit XML format
protolint lint -output_file=path/to/out.txt # output results to path/to/out.txt
protolint lint -plugin ./my_custom_rule1 -plugin ./my_custom_rule2 . # run custom lint rules.
protolint list # list all current lint rules being used
protolint version # print protolint version
protolint does not require configuration by default, for the majority of projects it should work out of the box.
protolint is available as a pre-commit hook. Add this to your .pre-commit-config.yaml
in your repository to run protolint with Go:
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/yoheimuta/protolint
rev: <version> # Select a release here like v0.44.0
hooks:
- id: protolint
or alternatively use this to run protolint with Docker:
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/yoheimuta/protolint
rev: <version> # Select a release here like v0.44.0
hooks:
- id: protolint-docker
Visual Studio Code
JetBrains IntelliJ IDEA, GoLand, WebStorm, PHPStorm, PyCharm...
Vim(ALE engine)
Vim(Syntastic)
A GitHub Action to run protolint in your workflows
- github/super-linter
- plexsystems/protolint-action
- yoheimuta/action-protolint - Integrated with reviewdog
Jenkins Plugins
- warnings-ng and any that use violatons-lib
It is possible to format your linting according to the formatting of the CI/CD environment. The environment must be set using the output format. Currently, the following output is realized:
Environment | Command Line Value | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Github Actions | ci-gh | Github Help | ::warning file=example.proto,line=10,col=20,title=ENUM_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE::EnumField name \"SECOND.VALUE\" must be CAPITALS_WITH_UNDERSCORES |
Azure DevOps | ci-az | Azure DevOps Help | ##vso[task.logissue type=warning;sourcepath=example.proto;linenumber=10;columnnumber=20;code=ENUM_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE;]EnumField name \"SECOND.VALUE\" must be CAPITALS_WITH_UNDERSCORES |
Gitlab CI/CD | ci-glab | Reverse Engineered from Examples | WARNING: ENUM_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE example.proto(10,20) : EnumField name \"SECOND.VALUE\" must be CAPITALS_WITH_UNDERSCORES |
You can also use the generic ci
formatter, which will create a generic problem matcher.
With the ci-env
value, you can specify the template from the following environment variables:
Environment Variable | Priority | Meaning |
---|---|---|
PROTOLINT_CIREPORTER_TEMPLATE_STRING | 1 | String containing a Go-template |
PROTOLINT_CIREPORTER_TEMPLATE_FILE | 2 | Path to a file containing a Go-template |
The resulting line-feed must not be added, as it will be added automatically.
The following fields are available:
Severity
: The severity as string (either note, warning or error)
File
: Path to the file containing the error
Line
: Line within the file
containing the error (starting position)
Column
: Column within the file
containing the error (starting position)
Rule
: The name of the rule that is faulting
Message
: The error message that descibes the error
You can create a specific output matching your CI/CD environment and also create an output file, e.g. for your static code analysis tools like github CodeQL or SonarQube.
This can be done by adding the --add-reporter
flag.
Please note, that the value must be formatted <reporter-name>:<output-file-path>
(omitting <
and >
).
$ protolint --reporter ci-gh --add-reporter sarif:/path/to/my/output.sarif.json proto/*.proto
protolint also maintains a binary protoc-gen-protolint that performs the lint functionality as a protoc plugin. See cmd/protoc-gen-protolint/README.md in detail.
This is useful in situations where you already have a protoc plugin workflow.
You can also use protolint from Go code. See Go Documentation and lib/lint_test.go in detail.
args := []string{"-config_path", "path/to/your_protolint.yaml", "."}
var stdout bytes.Buffer
var stderr bytes.Buffer
err := lib.Lint(test.inputArgs, &stdout, &stderr)
See internal/addon/rules
in detail.
The rule set follows:
- Official Style Guide. This is enabled by default. Basically, these rules can fix the violations by appending
-fix
option. - Unofficial Style Guide. This is disabled by default. You can enable each rule with
.protolint.yaml
.
The -fix
option on the command line can automatically fix all the problems reported by fixable rules.
See Fixable columns below.
The -auto_disable
option on the command line can automatically disable all the problems reported by auto-disable rules.
This feature is helpful when fixing the existing violations breaks the compatibility.
See AutoDisable columns below.
- *1: These rules are not supposed to support AutoDisable because the fixes don't break their compatibilities. You should run the protolint with
-fix
.
Official | Fixable | AutoDisable | ID | Purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_PREFIX | Verifies that enum field names are prefixed with its ENUM_NAME_UPPER_SNAKE_CASE. |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_UPPER_SNAKE_CASE | Verifies that all enum field names are CAPITALS_WITH_UNDERSCORES. |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_ZERO_VALUE_END_WITH | Verifies that the zero value enum should have the suffix (e.g. "UNSPECIFIED", "INVALID"). The default is "UNSPECIFIED". You can configure the specific suffix with .protolint.yaml . |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | ENUM_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE | Verifies that all enum names are CamelCase (with an initial capital). |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | FILE_NAMES_LOWER_SNAKE_CASE | Verifies that all file names are lower_snake_case.proto. You can configure the excluded files with .protolint.yaml . |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | FIELD_NAMES_LOWER_SNAKE_CASE | Verifies that all field names are underscore_separated_names. |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | IMPORTS_SORTED | Verifies that all imports are sorted. |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | MESSAGE_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE | Verifies that all message names are CamelCase (with an initial capital). |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | ORDER | Verifies that all files should be ordered in the specific manner. |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | PACKAGE_NAME_LOWER_CASE | Verifies that the package name should only contain lowercase letters. |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | RPC_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE | Verifies that all rpc names are CamelCase (with an initial capital). |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | SERVICE_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE | Verifies that all service names are CamelCase (with an initial capital). |
Yes | ✅ | ✅ | REPEATED_FIELD_NAMES_PLURALIZED | Verifies that repeated field names are pluralized names. |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | QUOTE_CONSISTENT | Verifies that the use of quote for strings is consistent. The default is double quoted. You can configure the specific quote with .protolint.yaml . |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | INDENT | Enforces a consistent indentation style. The default style is 2 spaces. Inserting appropriate new lines is also forced by default. You can configure the detail with .protolint.yaml . |
Yes | ✅ | *1 | PROTO3_FIELDS_AVOID_REQUIRED | Verifies that all fields should avoid required for proto3. |
Yes | _ | ✅ | PROTO3_GROUPS_AVOID | Verifies that all groups should be avoided for proto3. |
Yes | _ | *1 | MAX_LINE_LENGTH | Enforces a maximum line length. The length of a line is defined as the number of Unicode characters in the line. The default is 80 characters. You can configure the detail with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | SERVICE_NAMES_END_WITH | Enforces a consistent suffix for service names. You can configure the specific suffix with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | FIELD_NAMES_EXCLUDE_PREPOSITIONS | Verifies that all field names don't include prepositions (e.g. "for", "during", "at"). You can configure the specific prepositions and excluded keywords with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | MESSAGE_NAMES_EXCLUDE_PREPOSITIONS | Verifies that all message names don't include prepositions (e.g. "With", "For"). You can configure the specific prepositions and excluded keywords with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | RPC_NAMES_CASE | Verifies that all rpc names conform to the specified convention. You need to configure the specific convention with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | MESSAGES_HAVE_COMMENT | Verifies that all messages have a comment. You can configure to enforce Golang Style comments with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | SERVICES_HAVE_COMMENT | Verifies that all services have a comment. You can configure to enforce Golang Style comments with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | RPCS_HAVE_COMMENT | Verifies that all rps have a comment. You can configure to enforce Golang Style comments with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | FIELDS_HAVE_COMMENT | Verifies that all fields have a comment. You can configure to enforce Golang Style comments with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | ENUMS_HAVE_COMMENT | Verifies that all enums have a comment. You can configure to enforce Golang Style comments with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | ENUM_FIELDS_HAVE_COMMENT | Verifies that all enum fields have a comment. You can configure to enforce Golang Style comments with .protolint.yaml . |
No | _ | - | FILE_HAS_COMMENT | Verifies that a file starts with a doc comment. |
No | _ | - | SYNTAX_CONSISTENT | Verifies that syntax is a specified version. The default is proto3. You can configure the version with .protolint.yaml . |
I recommend that you add all_default: true
in .protolint.yaml
, because all linters above are automatically enabled so that you can always enjoy maximum benefits whenever protolint is updated.
Here are some examples that show good style enabled by default.
-
is a bad style, +
is a good style:
ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_PREFIX
enum FooBar {
- UNSPECIFIED = 0;
+ FOO_BAR_UNSPECIFIED = 0;
}
ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_UPPER_SNAKE_CASE
enum Foo {
- firstValue = 0;
+ FIRST_VALUE = 0;
- second_value = 1;
+ SECOND_VALUE = 1;
}
ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_ZERO_VALUE_END_WITH
enum Foo {
- FOO_FIRST = 0;
+ FOO_UNSPECIFIED = 0;
}
ENUM_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE
- enum foobar {
+ enum FooBar {
FIRST_VALUE = 0;
SECOND_VALUE = 1;
}
FIELD_NAMES_LOWER_SNAKE_CASE
message SongServerRequest {
- required string SongName = 1;
+ required string song_name = 1;
}
IMPORTS_SORTED
- import public "new.proto";
+ import "myproject/other_protos.proto";
- import "myproject/other_protos.proto";
+ import public "new.proto";
import "google/protobuf/empty.proto";
import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";
MESSAGE_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE
- message song_server_request {
+ message SongServerRequest {
required string SongName = 1;
required string song_name = 1;
}
ORDER
- option java_package = "com.example.foo";
- syntax = "proto3";
- package examplePb;
- message song_server_request { }
- import "other.proto";
+ syntax = "proto3";
+ package examplePb;
+ import "other.proto";
+ option java_package = "com.example.foo";
+ message song_server_request { }
PACKAGE_NAME_LOWER_CASE
- package myPackage
+ package my.package
RPC_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE
service FooService {
- rpc get_something(FooRequest) returns (FooResponse);
+ rpc GetSomething(FooRequest) returns (FooResponse);
}
RPC_NAMES_UPPER_CAMEL_CASE
- service foo_service {
+ service FooService {
rpc get_something(FooRequest) returns (FooResponse);
rpc GetSomething(FooRequest) returns (FooResponse);
}
REPEATED_FIELD_NAMES_PLURALIZED
- repeated string song_name = 1;
+ repeated string song_names = 1;
INDENT
enum enumAllowingAlias {
UNKNOWN = 0;
- option allow_alias = true;
+ option allow_alias = true;
STARTED = 1;
- RUNNING = 2 [(custom_option) = "hello world"];
+ RUNNING = 2 [(custom_option) = "hello world"];
- }
+}
- message TestMessage { string test_field = 1; }
+ message TestMessage {
+ string test_field = 1;
+}
QUOTE_CONSISTENT
option java_package = "com.example.foo";
- option go_package = 'example';
+ option go_package = "example";
protolint is the pluggable linter so that you can freely create custom lint rules.
A complete sample project (aka plugin) is included in this repo under the _example/plugin directory.
protolint comes with several built-in reporters(aka. formatters) to control the appearance of the linting results.
You can specify a reporter using the -reporter flag on the command line. For example, -reporter junit
uses the junit reporter.
The built-in reporter options are:
- plain (default)
- junit
- json
- sarif
- sonar (SonarQube generic issue format)
- unix
- tsc (compatible to TypeScript compiler)
Disable rules in a Protocol Buffer file
Rules can be disabled with a comment inside a Protocol Buffer file with the following format. The rules will be disabled until the end of the file or until the linter sees a matching enable comment:
// protolint:disable <ruleID1> [<ruleID2> <ruleID3>...]
...
// protolint:enable <ruleID1> [<ruleID2> <ruleID3>...]
It's also possible to modify a disable command by appending :next or :this for only applying the command to this(current) or the next line respectively.
For example:
enum Foo {
// protolint:disable:next ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_UPPER_SNAKE_CASE
firstValue = 0; // no error
second_value = 1; // protolint:disable:this ENUM_FIELD_NAMES_UPPER_SNAKE_CASE
THIRD_VALUE = 2; // spits out an error
}
Setting the command-line option -auto_disable
to next
or this
inserts disable commands whenever spotting problems.
You can specify -fix
option together. The rules supporting auto_disable suppress the violations instead of fixing them that cause a schema incompatibility.
Config file
protolint can operate using a config file named .protolint.yaml
.
Refer to _example/config/.protolint.yaml for the config file specification.
protolint will automatically search a current working directory for the config file by default
and successive parent directories all the way up to the root directory of the filesystem.
And it can search the specified directory with -config_dir_path
flag.
It can also search the specified file with --config_path
flag.
When linting files, protolint will exit with one of the following exit codes:
0
: Linting was successful and there are no linting errors.1
: Linting was successful and there is at least one linting error.2
: Linting was unsuccessful due to all other errors, such as parsing, internal, and runtime errors.
There exists the similar protobuf linters as of 2018/12/20.
One is a plug-in for Google's Protocol Buffers compiler.
- When you just want to lint the files, it may be tedious to create the compilation environment.
- And it generally takes a lot of time to compile the files than to parse the files.
Other is a command line tool which also lints Protocol Buffer files.
- While it has a lot of features other than lint, it seems cumbersome for users who just want the linter.
- The lint rule slants towards to be opinionated.
- Further more, the rule set and the official style guide don't correspond to each other exactly. It requires to understand both rules and the guide in detail, and then to combine the rules accurately.
I wrote an article comparing various Protocol Buffer Linters, including protolint, on 2019/12/17.
- https://qiita.com/yoheimuta/items/da7678fcd046b93a2637
- NOTE: This one is written in Japanese.
The MIT License (MIT)