Project

debride

0.24
Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
Analyze code for potentially uncalled / dead methods, now with auto-removal.
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 Dependencies

Development

~> 4.0
>= 4.0, < 7
~> 0.21

Runtime

 Project Readme

debride¶ ↑

home

github.com/seattlerb/debride

rdoc

docs.seattlerb.org/debride

DESCRIPTION:¶ ↑

Analyze code for potentially uncalled / dead methods, now with auto-removal.

FEATURES/PROBLEMS:¶ ↑

  • Static analysis of code. Can be easily hooked up to a CI.

  • As with all static analysis tools of dynamic languages, can’t be 100%.

  • Whitelisting known good methods by name or regexp.

  • Use –rails for Rails-specific domain knowledge.

  • Use debride_rm to brazenly remove all unused methods. BE CAREFUL.

  • Use ‘debride_rails_whitelist` to generate an emperical whitelist from logs.

  • Uses path_expander, so you can use:

    • dir_arg – expand a directory automatically

    • @file_of_args – persist arguments in a file

    • -path_to_subtract – ignore intersecting subsets of files/directories

SYNOPSIS:¶ ↑

% debride lib

These methods MIGHT not be called:

MyClass
  good_method                         lib/some/file.rb:16
  bad_method                          lib/some/file.rb:20
...

But you know that good_method is called (perhaps because it is public API), then you can whitelist it:

% echo good_method > whitelist.txt
% debride --whitelist whitelist.txt lib

These methods MIGHT not be called:

MyClass
  bad_method                          lib/some/file.rb:20
...

Usage example for a typical rails application:

# dump rake routes into a file
% rake routes > routes.txt
# generate whitelist based on routes and usages from production log
% debride_rails_whitelist routes.txt log/production.log | sort -u > whitelist.txt
# add migration methods
% echo up >> whitelist.txt
% echo down >> whitelist.txt
% echo change >> whitelist.txt
# output debride report co standard output with the following options:
# ignore typical rails methods,
# specify generated whitelist,
# run in current directory (".")
% debride --rails --whitelist whitelist.txt .

You can also use regexps in your whitelist by delimiting them with //‘s.

To generate a whitelist for the last 28 days worth of logs on papertrail:

% seq 2 29 | xargs -I {} date -u -v-{}d +%Y-%m-%d | \
  xargs -I {} curl --progress-bar -f --no-include -L -H "X-Papertrail-Token: $PAPERTRAIL_APIKEY" https://papertrailapp.com/api/v1/archives/{}/download | \
  gzip -dc | grep production.log | cut -f 10- | \
  debride_rails_whitelist routes.txt - | sort -u > whitelist.txt

debride_rm¶ ↑

debride_rm will automatically remove dead code and optionally run a command in between each removal. The command will automatically substitute “NAME” and “PATH” with the name and path of the thing being removed. Eg:

% debride_rm -C="git commit -m 'debride NAME in PATH' ." \
    --rails \
    --whitelist whitelist.txt \
    --exclude test \
    --exclude script \
    --exclude bin \
    --minimum 30

This command will:

  1. run with rails extensions on

  2. treat anything named in whitelist.txt as “called”

  3. exclude directories that shouldn’t be scanned or mutated

  4. exclude anything under 30 lines long

One thing to note, debride_rm doesn’t do terribly well with things like attr_accessor lists, so running debride_rm with –minimum 2 (or more) is wise.

Strategy: start large (40+) and work your way down.

PLUGINS:¶ ↑

debride-erb

Extends debride to analyze erb files (via erubis ala rails).

debride-haml

Plugin to allow debride to parse Haml files.

debride-curly

A plugin for the Curly templating language

debride-slim

Extends debride to analyze Slim files

EDITOR INTEGRATION:¶ ↑

TextMate 2

REQUIREMENTS:¶ ↑

  • sexp_processor

  • ruby_parser

  • path_expander

INSTALL:¶ ↑

  • sudo gem install debride

CONTRIBUTING:¶ ↑

  • sudo gem install minitest

  • ruby -Ilib:test test/test_debride.rb

LICENSE:¶ ↑

(The MIT License)

Copyright © Ryan Davis, seattle.rb

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the ‘Software’), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.