-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 103
/
perlcriticrc
202 lines (155 loc) · 8.5 KB
/
perlcriticrc
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
##############################################################################
# This file is an example of a Perl::Critic configuration file. This
# file is usually called ".perlcriticrc" and is usually located in
# your home directory or the working directory of your project.
# However, you can use the -profile option to tell Perl::Critic use a
# different file in another location.
#
# The area before any of the [Perl::Critic::Policy] sections is used
# to set default values for the arguments to the Perl::Critic engine.
# If you are using the "perlcritic" program, you can override these
# settings at the command-line. Or if you are using the Perl::Critic
# library, your API arguments will override these settings as well.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# exclude: Directs Perl::Critic to never apply Policies with names that
# match one of the patterns. To specify multiple patterns, separate them
# with whitespace. Do not put quotes around anything.
exclude = Documentation Naming
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# include: Directs Perl::Critic to always apply Policies with names that
# match one of the patterns. To specify multiple patterns, separate them
# with whitespace. Do not put quotes around anything.
include = CodeLayout Modules
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# force: Directs Perl::Critic to ignore the special "##no critic"
# comments embedded in the source code. The default is 0. If
# defined, this should be either 1 or 0.
force = 1
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# only: Directs Perl::Critic to only choose from Policies that are
# explicitly mentioned in this file. Otherwise, Perl::Critic chooses
# from all the Perl::Critic::Policy classes that are found on the
# local machine. The default is 0. If defined, this should be either
# 1 or 0.
only = 1
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# severity: Sets the default minimum severity level for Policies. The
# default is 5. If defined, this should be an integer from 1 to 5,
# where 5 is the highest severity.
severity = 3
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# theme: Sets the default theme. Only Policies that fit into this
# them shall be applied. If defined, this should be a valid theme
# expression. See the Perl::Critic POD for more details about this.
theme = danger + risky - pbp
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# top: Directs Perl::Critic to only report the top N Policy violations,
# as ranked by their individual severity. If defined, this should be
# a positive integer.
top = 50
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# verbose: Sets the format for printing Policy violations. If
# defined, this should be either a format spcecification, or a numeric
# verbosity level. See the Perl::Critic POD for more details.
verbose = 5
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# color-severity-highest: sets the color used for displaying highest
# severity violations when coloring is in effect. This should be a color
# specification acceptable to Term::ANSIColor. See the Perl::Critic POD
# for details. Do not put quotes around the values. The default is 'bold
# red'.
color-severity-highest = bold red underline
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# color-severity-high: sets the color used for displaying high severity
# violations when coloring is in effect. This should be a color
# specification acceptable to Term::ANSIColor. See the Perl::Critic POD
# for details. Do not put quotes around the values. The default is
# 'magenta'.
color-severity-high = bold magenta
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# color-severity-medium: sets the color used for displaying medium
# severity violations when coloring is in effect. This should be a color
# specification acceptable to Term::ANSIColor. See the Perl::Critic POD
# for details. Do not put quotes around the values. The default is ''.
color-severity-medium = blue
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# color-severity-low: sets the color used for displaying low severity
# violations when coloring is in effect. This should be a color
# specification acceptable to Term::ANSIColor. See the Perl::Critic POD
# for details. Do not put quotes around the values. The default is ''.
color-severity-low =
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# color-severity-lowest: sets the color used for displaying lowest
# severity violations when coloring is in effect. This should be a color
# specification acceptable to Term::ANSIColor. See the Perl::Critic POD
# for details. Do not put quotes around the values. The default is ''.
color-severity-lowest =
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# program-extensions: specifies the file name endings for files that should
# be interpreted as programs rather than modules. This should be a space-
# delimited list of the name endings, with leading '.' if that is desired.
# These are case-sensitive. See the Perl::Critic POD for details, but in
# general any file beginning with a shebang line, any file whose name ends
# '.PL', and any file whose name ends in one of the values specified here
# will be considered a program; any other file will be considered a module.
# Do not put quotes around the values. The default is ''.
program-extensions =
##############################################################################
# The rest of the file consists of several named blocks that contain
# configuration parameters for each of the Policies. The names of
# each blocks correspond to the names of the Policy modules. For
# brevity, the "Perl::Critic::Policy" portion of the name can be
# omitted. See the POD for the appropriate Policy for a complete
# description of the configuration parameters that it supports.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# If you vehmently disagree with a particular Policy, putting a "-" in
# front of the Policy name will effectively disables that Policy. It
# will never be applied unless you use the "-include" option to apply
# it explicitly.
[-NamingConventions::Capitalization]
[-TestingAndDebugging::RequireUseWarnings]
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# If you agree with a Policy, but feel that it's severity level is not
# appropriate, then you can change the severity for any Policy. If
# defined this should be an integer from 1 to 5, where 5 is the
# highest severity.
[BuiltinFunctions::RequireBlockGrep]
severity = 2
[CodeLayout::ProhibitHardTabs]
severity = 1
[ClassHierarchies::ProhibitAutoloading]
severity = 5
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Policies are also organized into themes. Themes are just names for
# arbitrary groups of Policies. You can define new themes and add
# them to any Policy. If defined, this should be a string of
# whitespace-delimited words.
[RegularExpressions::RequireExtendedFormatting]
add_themes = client_foo
severity = 3
[RegularExpressions::RequireExtendedFormatting]
add_themes = client_foo client_bar
severity = 3
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Some Policies also have specialized configuration parameters. In
# all cases, these are repsented as simple name=value pairs. See the
# POD for the appropriate Policy for a complete discussion of its
# configuration parameters.
[ControlStructures::ProhibitPostfixControls]
allow = for if
severity = 4
[Documentation::RequirePodSections]
lib_sections = NAME | SYNOPSIS | METHODS | AUTHOR
add_themes = my_favorites
severity = 4
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# If you set the "only" flag, then Perl::Critic only chooses from
# Policies that are mentioned in your configuration file. This is
# helpful when you want to use only a very small subset of the
# Policies. So just create blocks for any other Policies that you
# want to use.
[ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitInterpolationOfLiterals]
[ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitLeadingZeros]
[InputOutput::ProhibitBarewordFileHandles]
[InputOutput::ProhibitBarewordDirHandles]
[Miscellanea::ProhibitTies]