- Editor/IDE styling standardization
- Pre-push static analysis with Lefthook
- Database migrations
- JavaScript
- SCSS
- Ruby
- Go
- Shell commands (Ruby)
- Shell scripting
- Markdown
- Documentation
- Python
- Misc
Development style guides
Editor/IDE styling standardization
We use EditorConfig to automatically apply certain styling standards before files are saved
locally. Some editors and IDEs honor the .editorconfig
settings automatically by default.
If your editor or IDE does not automatically support .editorconfig
, we suggest investigating to
see if a plugin exists. For example, a
plugin for vim.
Pre-push static analysis with Lefthook
Lefthook is a Git hooks manager that allows
custom logic to be executed prior to Git committing or pushing. GitLab comes with
Lefthook configuration (lefthook.yml
), but it must be installed.
We have a lefthook.yml
checked in but it is ignored until Lefthook is installed.
Uninstall Overcommit
We were using Overcommit prior to Lefthook, so you may want to uninstall it first with overcommit --uninstall
.
Install Lefthook
-
You can install lefthook in different ways. If you do not choose to install it globally (for example, via Homebrew or package managers), and only want to use it for the GitLab project, you can install the Ruby gem via:
bundle install
-
Install Lefthook managed Git hooks:
# If installed globally lefthook install # Or if installed via ruby gem bundle exec lefthook install
-
Test Lefthook is working by running the Lefthook
pre-push
Git hook:# If installed globally lefthook run pre-push # Or if installed via ruby gem bundle exec lefthook run pre-push
This should return the Lefthook version and the list of executable commands with output.
Lefthook configuration
Lefthook is configured with a combination of:
- Project configuration in
lefthook.yml
. - Any local configuration.
Lefthook auto-fixing files
We have a custom lefthook target to run all the linters with auto-fix capabilities, but just on the files which changed in your branch.
# If installed globally
lefthook run auto-fix
# Or if installed via ruby gem
bundle exec lefthook run auto-fix
Disable Lefthook temporarily
To disable Lefthook temporarily, you can set the LEFTHOOK
environment variable to 0
. For instance:
LEFTHOOK=0 git push ...
Run Lefthook hooks manually
To run the pre-push
Git hook, run:
bundle exec lefthook run pre-push
For more information, check out Lefthook documentation.
Skip Lefthook checks per tag
To skip some checks based on tags when pushing, you can set the LEFTHOOK_EXCLUDE
environment variable. For instance:
LEFTHOOK_EXCLUDE=frontend,documentation git push ...
As an alternative, you can create lefthook-local.yml
with this structure:
pre-push:
exclude_tags:
- frontend
- documentation
For more information, check out Lefthook documentation.
Skip or enable a specific Lefthook check
To skip or enable a check based on its name when pushing, you can add skip: true
or skip: false
to the lefthook-local.yml
section for that hook. For instance,
you might want to enable the gettext check to detect issues with locale/gitlab.pot
:
pre-push:
commands:
gettext:
skip: false
For more information, check out Lefthook documentation Skipping commands section.
Database migrations
See the dedicated Database Migrations Style Guide.
JavaScript
See the dedicated JS Style Guide.
SCSS
See the dedicated SCSS Style Guide.
Ruby
See the dedicated Ruby Style Guide.
Go
See the dedicated Go standards and style guidelines.
Shell commands (Ruby)
See the dedicated Guidelines for shell commands in the GitLab codebase.
Shell scripting
See the dedicated Shell scripting standards and style guidelines.
Markdown
We’re following Ciro Santilli’s Markdown Style Guide.
Documentation
See the dedicated Documentation Style Guide.
Guidelines for good practices
Good practice examples demonstrate encouraged ways of writing code while comparing with examples of practices to avoid. These examples are labeled as Bad or Good. In GitLab development guidelines, when presenting the cases, it’s recommended to follow a first-bad-then-good strategy. First demonstrate the Bad practice (how things could be done, which is often still working code), and then how things should be done better, using a Good example. This is typically an improved example of the same code.
Consider the following guidelines when offering examples:
- First, offer the Bad example, and then the Good one.
- When only one bad case and one good case is given, use the same code block.
- When more than one bad case or one good case is offered, use separated code blocks for each. With many examples being presented, a clear separation helps the reader to go directly to the good part. Consider offering an explanation (for example, a comment, or a link to a resource) on why something is bad practice.
- Better and best cases can be considered part of the good cases’ code block.
In the same code block, precede each with comments:
# Better
and# Best
.
Although the bad-then-good approach is acceptable for the GitLab development guidelines, do not use it for user documentation. For user documentation, use Do and Don’t. For examples, see the Pajamas Design System.
Python
See the dedicated Python Development Guidelines.
Misc
Code should be written in US English.