Allow rules to declare a list of valid values for an option.
For example, a rule like:
CONF = {'allowed-values': list}
... allowed any value to be passed in the list (including bad ones).
It is now possible to declare:
CONF = {'allowed-values': ['value1', 'value2', 'value3']}
... so that the list passed to the options must contain only values in
`['value1', 'value2', 'value3']`.
Before, it was required to specify all the options when customizing a
rule. For instance, one could use `empty-lines: enable` or `empty-lines:
{max: 1, max-start: 2, max-end: 2}`, but not just `empty-lines: {max:
1}` (it would fail with *invalid config: missing option "max-start" for
rule "empty-lines"*).
This was a minor problem for users, but it prevented the addition of new
options to existing rules, see [1] for an example. If a new option was
added, updating yamllint for all users that customize the rule would
produce a crash (*invalid config: missing option ...*).
To avoid that, let's embed default values inside the rules themselves,
instead of keeping them in `conf/default.yaml`.
This refactor should not have any impact on existing projects. I've
manually checked that it did not change the output of tests, on
different projects:
- ansible/ansible: `test/runner/ansible-test sanity --python 3.7 --test yamllint`
- ansible/molecule: `yamllint -s test/ molecule/`
- Neo23x0/sigma: `make test-yaml`
- markstory/lint-review: `yamllint .`
[1]: https://github.com/adrienverge/yamllint/pull/151
Example of configuration to use this feature:
# For all rules
ignore: |
*.dont-lint-me.yaml
/bin/
!/bin/*.lint-me-anyway.yaml
rules:
key-duplicates:
ignore: |
generated
*.template.yaml
trailing-spaces:
ignore: |
*.ignore-trailing-spaces.yaml
/ascii-art/*
Closes#43.
Although `yes` and `no` are recognized as booleans by the pyyaml parser,
the correct keywords are `true` and `false` (as highlighted by the newly
added `truthy` rule).
This commit replaces the use of `yes`/`no` by `true`/`false` and
advertise it in the docs, but also makes sure this change is
backward-compatible (so that `yes` and `no` still work).