On Mon, Sep 17, 2018 at 6:25 PM Matthew DeVore <matvore@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > tests: Add linter check for pipe placement style Until now, the various "lint" checks have been for genuine portability problems (except perhaps 'test-lint-duplicates'). This new lint check makes style violations worthy of failing "make test". Is the indeed the direction we want to go? (Genuine question. I can formulate arguments for either side.) > --- > diff --git a/t/Makefile b/t/Makefile > @@ -101,6 +101,16 @@ test-lint-filenames: > +test-lint-pipes: > + @# Do not use \ to join lines when the next line starts with a > + @# pipe. Instead, end the prior line with the pipe, and allow that to > + @# join the lines implicitly. > + @bad="$$(${PERL_PATH} -n0e 'm/(\n[^\n|]+\\\n[\t ]+\|[^\n]*)/ and \ > + print qq{$$ARGV:$$1\n\n}' $(T))"; \ > + test -z "$$bad" || { \ > + printf >&2 "pipe at start of line in file(s):\n%s\n" "$$bad"; \ > + exit 1; } If we're going in the direction of linting style violations, then maybe generalize this by calling it "test-lint-style" rather than "test-lint-pipes", and perhaps move the body of the test to a new script check-shell-style.pl (or something), much as portability violations are housed in check-non-portable-shell.pl.