We are currently in the process of discussing Clippy 1.0 via the RFC process in rust-lang/rfcs#2476 . The RFC's goal is to clarify policies around lint categorizations and the policy around which lints should be in the compiler and which lints should be in Clippy. Please leave your thoughts on the RFC PR.
A collection of lints to catch common mistakes and improve your Rust code.
There are 273 lints included in this crate!
We have a bunch of lint categories to allow you to choose how much Clippy is supposed to annoy help you:
clippy
(everything that has no false positives)clippy_pedantic
(everything)clippy_nursery
(new lints that aren't quite ready yet)clippy_style
(code that should be written in a more idiomatic way)clippy_complexity
(code that does something simple but in a complex way)clippy_perf
(code that can be written in a faster way)clippy_cargo
(checks against the cargo manifest)clippy_correctness
(code that is just outright wrong or very very useless)
More to come, please file an issue if you have ideas!
Table of contents:
Since this is a tool for helping the developer of a library or application write better code, it is recommended not to include Clippy as a hard dependency. Options include using it as an optional dependency, as a cargo subcommand, or as an included feature during build. These options are detailed below.
One way to use Clippy is by installing Clippy through rustup as a cargo subcommand.
You can install rustup on supported platforms. This will help us install clippy and its dependencies.
If you already have rustup installed, update to ensure you have the latest rustup and compiler:
rustup update
Rustup integration is still new, you will need a relatively new nightly (2018-07-15 or later).
To install Rust nightly with rustup:
rustup install nightly
Once you have rustup and the nightly toolchain installed, run the following command:
rustup component add clippy-preview --toolchain=nightly
Now you can run Clippy by invoking cargo +nightly clippy
. If nightly is your
default toolchain in rustup, cargo clippy
will work fine.
To have cargo compile your crate with Clippy without Clippy installation in your code, you can use:
cargo run --bin cargo-clippy --manifest-path=path_to_clippys_Cargo.toml
Note: Be sure that Clippy was compiled with the same version of rustc that cargo invokes here!
Some lints can be configured in a TOML file named with clippy.toml
or .clippy.toml
. It contains basic variable = value
mapping eg.
blacklisted-names = ["toto", "tata", "titi"]
cyclomatic-complexity-threshold = 30
See the list of lints for more information about which lints can be configured and the meaning of the variables.
To deactivate the “for further information visit lint-link” message you can
define the CLIPPY_DISABLE_DOCS_LINKS
environment variable.
You can add options to allow
/warn
/deny
:
-
the whole set of
Warn
lints using theclippy
lint group (#![deny(clippy)]
) -
all lints using both the
clippy
andclippy_pedantic
lint groups (#![deny(clippy)]
,#![deny(clippy_pedantic)]
). Note thatclippy_pedantic
contains some very aggressive lints prone to false positives. -
only some lints (
#![deny(single_match, box_vec)]
, etc) -
allow
/warn
/deny
can be limited to a single function or module using#[allow(...)]
, etc
Note: deny
produces errors instead of warnings.
For convenience, cargo clippy
automatically defines a cargo-clippy
feature. This lets you set lint levels and compile with or without Clippy
transparently:
#[cfg_attr(feature = "cargo-clippy", allow(needless_lifetimes))]
Sometimes, rustc moves forward without Clippy catching up. Therefore updating rustc may leave Clippy a non-functional state until we fix the resulting breakage.
You can use the rust-update script to update rustc only if Clippy would also update correctly.
Licensed under MPL. If you're having issues with the license, let me know and I'll try to change it to something more permissive.