Table of Contents
How to write a custom linter
Use go/analysis
and take a look at this tutorial: it shows how to write go/analysis
linter
from scratch and integrate it into golangci-lint
.
How to add a public linter to golangci-lint
You need to implement a new linter using go/analysis
API. We don't accept not go/analysis
linters.
After that:
- Implement functional tests for the linter: add one file into directory
test/testdata
. RunT=yourlintername.go make test_linters
to ensure that test fails. - Add a new file
pkg/golinters/{yourlintername}.go
. Look at other linters in this directory. Implement linter integration and check that test passes. - Add the new struct for the linter (which you've implemented in
pkg/golinters/{yourlintername}.go
) to the list of all supported linters inpkg/lint/lintersdb/lintersdb.go
to the functionGetAllSupportedLinterConfigs
. Enable it by default only if you are sure. - Find out what options do you need to configure for the linter. For example,
govet
has only 1 option:check-shadowing
. Choose default values to not being annoying for users of golangci-lint. Add configuration options to:
- .golangci.example.yml - the example of a configuration file. You can also add them to .golangci.yml if you think that this project needs not default values.
- config struct - don't forget
about
mapstructure
tag for proper configuration files parsing by pflag.
- Take a look at the example of Pull Request with new linter support.
How to add a private linter to golangci-lint
Some people and organizations may choose to have custom made linters run as a part of golangci-lint
.
Typically, these linters can't be open-sourced or too specific.
Such linters can be added through Go's plugin library.
Configure a Plugin
If you already have a linter plugin available, you can follow these steps to define it's usage in a projects
.golangci.yml
file. An example linter can be found at here. If you're looking for
instructions on how to configure your own custom linter, they can be found further down.
- If the project you want to lint does not have one already, copy the .golangci.yml to the root directory.
- Adjust the yaml to appropriate
linters-settings:custom
entries as so:
linters-settings:custom:example:path: /example.sodescription: The description of the linteroriginal-url: github.com/golangci/example-linter
That is all the configuration that is required to run a custom linter in your project. Custom linters are enabled by default,
but abide by the same rules as other linters. If the disable all option is specified either on command line or in
.golangci.yml
files linters:disable-all: true
, custom linters will be disabled; they can be re-enabled by adding them
to the linters:enable
list, or providing the enabled option on the command line, golangci-lint run -Eexample
.
Create a Plugin
Your linter must implement one or more golang.org/x/tools/go/analysis.Analyzer
structs.
Your project should also use go.mod
. All versions of libraries that overlap golangci-lint
(including replaced
libraries) MUST be set to the same version as golangci-lint
. You can see the versions by running go version -m golangci-lint
.
You'll also need to create a go file like plugin/example.go
. This MUST be in the package main
, and define a
variable of name AnalyzerPlugin
. The AnalyzerPlugin
instance MUST implement the following interface:
type AnalyzerPlugin interface {GetAnalyzers() []*analysis.Analyzer}
The type of AnalyzerPlugin
is not important, but is by convention type analyzerPlugin struct {}
. See
plugin/example.go for more info.
To build the plugin, from the root project directory, run go build -buildmode=plugin plugin/example.go
. This will create a plugin *.so
file that can be copied into your project or another well known location for usage in golangci-lint.