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whitesmith/rubycritic: A Ruby code quality reporter

RubyCritic is a gem that wraps around static analysis gems such as Reek, Flay and Flog to provide a quality report of your Ruby code.

This gem provides features such as:

  1. An overview of your project:

  2. An index of the project files with their respective number of smells:

  3. An index of the smells detected:

  4. When analysing code like the following:

class Dirty
  def awful(x, y)
    if y
      @screen = widgets.map {|w| w.each {|key| key += 3}}
    end
  end
end

It basically turns something like this:

Into something like this:

  1. It uses your source control system (only Git, Mercurial and Perforce are currently supported) to compare your currently uncommitted changes with your last commit.

    Warning: If your code is not as you expect it to be after running RubyCritic, please check your source control system stash.

Checkout the /docs if you want to read more about our core metrics.

RubyCritic can be installed with the following command:

If you'd rather install RubyCritic using Bundler, add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem "rubycritic", require: false

And then execute:

Running rubycritic with no arguments will analyse all the Ruby files in the current directory:

Alternatively you can pass rubycritic a list of files and directories. The analysis will be scoped to the provided files and directories:

$ rubycritic app lib/foo.rb

For a full list of the command-line options run:

Command flag Description -v / --version Displays the current version and exits -p / --path Set path where report will be saved (tmp/rubycritic by default) --coverage-path Set path where SimpleCov will be saved (./coverage by default) -f / --format Report smells in the given format(s)1 --custom-format path:classname Load and instantiate custom formatter(s)2 -s / --minimum-score Set a minimum score (FLOAT: ex: 96.28), default: 0 -m / --mode-ci Use CI mode3 -b / --branch Set branch to compare -t / --maximum-decrease Threshold for score difference between two branches4 --deduplicate-symlinks De-duplicate symlinks based on their final target --suppress-ratings Suppress letter ratings --no-browser Do not open html report with browser
  1. Available output formats:
  1. See custom formatters docs
  2. Faster, analyses diffs w.r.t base_branch (default: main), see -b
  3. Works only with -b, default: 0

You also can use a config file. Just create a .rubycritic.yml on your project root path.

Here are one example:

mode_ci:
  enabled: true # default is false
  branch: 'production' # default is main
branch: 'production' # default is main
path: '/tmp/mycustompath' # Set path where report will be saved (tmp/rubycritic by default)
coverage_path: '/tmp/coverage' # Set path where SimpleCov coverage will be saved (./coverage by default)
threshold_score: 10 # default is 0
deduplicate_symlinks: true # default is false
suppress_ratings: true # default is false
no_browser: true # default is false
formats: # Available values are: html, json, console, lint. Default value is html.
  - console
minimum_score: 95 # default is 0
paths: # Files to analyse. Churn calculation is scoped to these files when using Git SCM.
  - 'app/controllers/'
  - 'app/models/'
Alternative Usage Methods

If you're fond of Guard you might like guard-rubycritic. It automatically analyses your Ruby files as they are modified.

For continuous integration, you can give Jenkins CI a spin. With it, you can easily build your own (poor-man's) Code Climate!

You can use RubyCritic as Rake command in its most simple form like this:

require "rubycritic/rake_task"

RubyCritic::RakeTask.new

A more sophisticated Rake task that would make use of all available configuration options could look like this:

RubyCritic::RakeTask.new do |task|
  # Name of RubyCritic task. Defaults to :rubycritic.
  task.name    = 'something_special'

  # Glob pattern to match source files. Defaults to FileList['.'].
  task.paths   = FileList['vendor/**/*.rb']

  # You can pass all the options here in that are shown by "rubycritic -h" except for
  # "-p / --path" since that is set separately. Defaults to ''.
  task.options = '--mode-ci --format json'

  # Defaults to false
  task.verbose = true

  # Fail the Rake task if RubyCritic doesn't pass. Defaults to true
  task.fail_on_error = true
end

RubyCritic will try to open the generated report with a browser by default. If you don't want this you can prevent this behaviour by setting the options correspondingly:

RubyCritic::RakeTask.new do |task|
  task.options = '--no-browser'
end

If you wish to create multiple Rake tasks (e.g., for local & for ci-specific configuration), you can do so! If you decide to do this, you should provide a clearer description for each task:

# for local
RubyCritic::RakeTask.new("local", "Run RubyCritic (local configuration)" do |task|
  # ...
end

# for CI
RubyCritic::RakeTask.new("ci", "Run RubyCritic (CI configuration)" do |task|
  task.options = "--mode-ci"
  # ...
end

See formatters

RubyCritic is supporting Ruby versions:

Ruby version Latest RubyCritic version 2.4 v4.7.0 2.5 v4.7.0 2.6 v4.7.0 2.7 v4.9.x 3.0 latest 3.1 latest 3.2 latest 3.3 latest

RubyCritic doesn't have to remain a second choice to other code quality analysis services. Together, we can improve it and continue to build on the great code metric tools that are available in the Ruby ecosystem.

Arguably, the better_errors gem only got popular after receiving a (pretty awesome) Pull Request that changed its page design.

Similarly, Pull Requests that improve the look and feel of the gem, that tweak the calculation of ratings or that fix existing issues will be most welcome. Just commenting on an issue and giving some insight into how something should work will be appreciated. No contribution is too small.

See RubyCritic's contributing guidelines about how to proceed.

RubyCritics initial author was Guilherme Simões.

The current core team consists of:

RubyCritic is maintained and funded by Whitesmith. Tweet your questions or suggestions to @Whitesmithco.


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