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README.md

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allfields

allfields is a Go linter. It checks that all fields in the struct literal are set.

allfields checks only the struct literals with the //allfields comments just inside them. In the following example the linter will throw error because the Age field is not set while creating userAlice, but userBob will successfully pass the checks. To run the allfields linter use the command like go run github.com/subtle-byte/allfields/cmd/go-allfields path/to/packages (path/to/packages can be ./... for example).

type User struct {
    Name string
    Age int
}

func main() {
    userAlice := User{
        Name: "Alice",
        //allfields
    }
    userBob := User{
        Name: "Bob",
        Age:  20,
        //allfields
    }
}

Also, you can use the //allfields:lint comment instead of //allfields if you think it looks better or your IDE handles it better.

Use cases

Developing backend services in Go we frequently meet the situation when we need to copy the data between structs. Let's imagine we write grpc server:

func (s *grpcServer) GetUser(ctx context.Context, req *api.GetUserRequest) (*api.GetUserResponse, error) {
	user := s.Service.GetUser(ctx, req.Id)
	return &api.GetUserResponse{
		Id: user.ID,		
		Name: user.Name,
		Age: user.Age,
		//allfields
	}, nil
}

In this example //allfields guarantees that if you extend API by adding fields to User (for example adding field CreatedAt) you will not forget to set this new field in GetUserResponse.

Run from tests

You can run allfields from tests. To do this you need to add the following code:

import (
	"testing"
	"github.com/subtle-byte/allfields"
)

func TestAllFields(t *testing.T) {
	allfields.Analyze(allfields.AnalyzeConfig{
		PackagesPattern: "./...",
		ReportErr: func(message string) {
			t.Error(message)
		},
	})
}