On Thu, Sep 1, 2022 at 8:32 AM Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, Sep 01 2022, Eric Sunshine via GitGitGadget wrote: > > From: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > [...] > > diff --git a/t/chainlint.pl b/t/chainlint.pl > > I really like this overall direction... Thanks for running an eye over the patches. > > +use warnings; > > +use strict; > > I think that in general we're way overdue for at least a : > > use v5.10.1; > > Or even something more aggresive, I think we can definitely depend on a > newer version for this bit of dev tooling. Being stuck with an 11+ year-old primary development machine which can't be upgraded to a newer OS due to vendor end-of-life declaration, and with old tools installed, I have little or no interest in bumping the minimum version, especially since older Perl versions are perfectly adequate for this task. Undertaking such a version bump would also be outside the scope of this patch series (and I simply don't have the free time or desire to pursue it). > That makes a lot of things in this series more pleasing to look > at. E.g. you could use named $+{} variables for regexes. Perhaps, but (1) that would not be very relevant for this script which typically only extracts "$1", and (2) I've rarely found cases when named variables help significantly with clarity, but then most of my real-life regexes generally only extract one or two bits of information, periodically three, and those bits ("$1", "$2", etc.) are immediately assigned to variables with meaningful names. > > +package ScriptParser; > > I really wish this could be changed to just put this in > t/chainlint/ScriptParser.pm early on, we could set @INC appropriately > and "use" these, which... I intentionally avoided splitting this into multiple modules because I wanted it to be easy drop into or adapt to other projects (i.e. sharness[1]). Of course, it is effectively a shell parser written in Perl, and it's conceivable that the parser part of it could have uses outside of Git, so modularizing it might be a good idea, but that's a task for some future date if such a need arises. [1]: https://github.com/chriscool/sharness > > +my $getnow = sub { return time(); }; > > +my $interval = sub { return time() - shift; }; > > Would eliminate any scoping concerns about this sort of thing. As above, this is easily addressed if/when someone ever wants to reuse the code outside of Git for some other purpose. I doubt it's worth worrying about now. > > +if (eval {require Time::HiRes; Time::HiRes->import(); 1;}) { > > + $getnow = sub { return [Time::HiRes::gettimeofday()]; }; > > + $interval = sub { return Time::HiRes::tv_interval(shift); }; > > +} > > Is this "require" even needed, Time::HiRes is there since 5.7.* says > "corelist -l Time::HIRes". Unfortunately, this is needed. The Windows CI instances the Git project uses don't have Time::HiRes installed (and it's outside the scope of this series to address shortcomings in the CI infrastructure). > > +sub check_script { > > + my ($id, $next_script, $emit) = @_; > > + my ($nscripts, $ntests, $nerrs) = (0, 0, 0); > > + while (my $path = $next_script->()) { > > + $nscripts++; > > + my $fh; > > + unless (open($fh, "<", $path)) { > > + $emit->("?!ERR?! $path: $!\n"); > > If we can depend on v5.10.1 this can surely become: > > use autodie qw(open close); > > No? No. It's clipped in your response, but the full snippet looks like this: unless (open($fh, "<", $path)) { $emit->("?!ERR?! $path: $!\n"); next; } The important point is that I _don't_ want the program to "die" if it can't open an input file; instead, it should continue processing all the other input files, and the open-failure should be reported as just another error/problem it encountered along the way.