Summary
--
Stabilizes LOG015. The tests and docs looked good.
Test Plan
--
1 closed documentation issue from 4 days after the rule was added, but
no other issues or PRs.
Summary
--
Stabilizes RUF048 and moves its test to the right place. The docs look
good.
Test Plan
--
0 closed or open issues. There was 1 [PR] related to an extension to the
rule, but it was closed without comment.
[PR]: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/14701
Summary
--
Stabilizes RUF046 and moves its test to the right place. The docs look
good.
Test Plan
--
2 closed newline/whitespace issues from early January and 1 closed issue
about really being multiple rules, but otherwise no recent issues or
PRs.
# Summary
The goal of this PR is to address various issues around parsing
suppression comments by
1. Unifying the logic used to parse in-line (`# noqa`) and file-level
(`# ruff: noqa`) noqa comments
2. Recovering from certain errors and surfacing warnings in these cases
Closes#15682
Supersedes #12811
Addresses
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/14229#discussion_r1835481018
Related: #14229 , #12809
## Summary
This PR changes the default value of
`lint.flake8-builtins.builtins-strict-checking` added in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15951 from `true` to `false`.
This also allows simplifying the default option logic and removes the
dependence on preview mode.
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15399 was already closed by
#15951, but this change will finalize the behavior mentioned in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15399#issuecomment-2587017147.
As an example, strict checking flags modules based on their last
component, so `utils/logging.py` triggers A005. Non-strict checking
checks the path to the module, so `utils/logging.py` is allowed (this is
the example and desired behavior from #15399 exactly) but a top-level
`logging.py` or `logging/__init__.py` is still disallowed.
## Test Plan
Existing tests from #15951 and #16006, with the snapshot updated in
`a005_module_shadowing_strict_default` to reflect the new default.
Summary
--
Stabilizes UP044, renames the module to match the rule name, and removes
the `PreviewMode` from the test settings.
Test Plan
--
2 closed issues in November, just after the rule was added, otherwise no
issues
Summary
--
Stabilizes SIM905 and adds a small addition to the docs. The test was
already in the right place.
Test Plan
--
No issues except 2 recent, general issues about whitespace
normalization.
## Summary
This PR stabilizes several preview-only behaviours for
`custom-typevar-for-self` (`PYI019`). Namely:
- A new, more accurate technique is now employed for detecting custom
TypeVars that are replaceable with `Self`. See
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15888 for details.
- The range of the diagnostic is now the full function header rather
than just the return annotation. (Previously, the rule only applied to
methods with return annotations, but this is no longer true due to the
changes in the first bullet point.)
- The fix is now available even when preview mode is not enabled.
## Test Plan
- Existing snapshots that do not have preview mode enabled are updated
- Preview-specific snapshots are removed
- I'll check the ecosystem report on this PR to verify everything's as
expected
Summary
--
Stabilizes PLC1802. The tests were already in the right place, and I
just tidied the docs a little bit.
Test Plan
--
1 issue closed 4 days after the rule was added, no other issues
Summary
--
Stabilizes PLW1507. The tests were already in the right place, and I
just tidied the docs a little bit.
Test Plan
--
1 issue from 2 weeks ago but just suggesting to mark the fix unsafe. The
shallow vs deep copy *does* change the program behavior, just usually in
a preferable way.
## Summary
Stabilizes FAST003, completing the group with FAST001 and FAST002.
## Test Plan
Last bug fix (false positive) was fixed on 2025-01-13, almost 2 months
ago.
The test case was already in the right place.
## Summary
Stabilizes C420 for the 0.10 release.
## Test Plan
No open issues or PRs (except a general issue about [string
normalization](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/16579)). The
last (and only) false-negative bug fix was over a month ago.
The tests for this rule were already not on the `preview_rules` test, so
I just changed the `RuleGroup`. The documentation looked okay to me.
## Summary
Resolves#15368.
The following options have been renamed:
* `builtins-allowed-modules` → `allowed-modules`
* `builtins-ignorelist` → `ignorelist`
* `builtins-strict-checking` → `strict-checking`
To preserve compatibility, the old names are kept as Serde aliases.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
`RUF035` has been backported into bandit as `S704` in this
[PR](https://github.com/PyCQA/bandit/pull/1225)
This moves the rule and its corresponding setting to the `flake8-bandit`
category
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run`
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
This came up in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/16477
It's not obvious from the D417 rule's documentation that it only checks
docstrings
with an arguments section. Functions without such a section aren't
checked.
This PR tries to make this clearer in the documentation.
Summary
--
This is a follow up addressing the comments on #16425. As @dhruvmanila
pointed out, the naming is a bit tricky. I went with `has_no_errors` to
try to differentiate it from `is_valid`. It actually ends up negated in
most uses, so it would be more convenient to have `has_any_errors` or
`has_errors`, but I thought it would sound too much like the opposite of
`is_valid` in that case. I'm definitely open to suggestions here.
Test Plan
--
Existing tests.
## Summary
Resolves#16445.
`UP028` is now no longer always fixable: it will not offer a fix when at
least one `ExprName` target is bound to either a `global` or a
`nonlocal` declaration.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
Fixes#9381. This PR fixes errors like
```
Cause: error parsing glob '/Users/me/project/{{cookiecutter.project_dirname}}/__pycache__': nested alternate groups are not allowed
```
caused by glob special characters in filenames like
`{{cookiecutter.project_dirname}}`. When the user is matching that
directory exactly, they can use the workaround given by
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/7959#issuecomment-1764751734,
but that doesn't work for a nested config file with relative paths. For
example, the directory tree in the reproduction repo linked
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9381#issuecomment-2677696408):
```
.
├── README.md
├── hello.py
├── pyproject.toml
├── uv.lock
└── {{cookiecutter.repo_name}}
├── main.py
├── pyproject.toml
└── tests
└── maintest.py
```
where the inner `pyproject.toml` contains a relative glob:
```toml
[tool.ruff.lint.per-file-ignores]
"tests/*" = ["F811"]
```
## Test Plan
A new CLI test in both the linter and formatter. The formatter test may
not be necessary because I didn't have to modify any additional code to
pass it, but the original report mentioned both `check` and `format`, so
I wanted to be sure both were fixed.
The PR addresses issue #16396 .
Specifically:
- If the exit statement contains a code keyword argument, it is
converted into a positional argument.
- If retrieving the code from the exit statement is not possible, a
violation is raised without suggesting a fix.
---------
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <36778786+ntBre@users.noreply.github.com>
Split from F841 following discussion in #8884.
Fixes#8884.
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Add a new rule for unused assignments in tuples. Remove similar behavior
from F841.
## Test Plan
Adapt F841 tests and move them over to the new rule.
<!-- How was it tested? -->
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
Resolves#16374.
`PLW0177` now also reports the pattern of a case branch if it is an
attribute access whose qualified name is that of either `np.nan` or
`math.nan`.
As the rule is in preview, the changes are not preview-gated.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
This PR builds on the changes in #16220 to pass a target Python version
to the parser. It also adds the `Parser::unsupported_syntax_errors` field, which
collects version-related syntax errors while parsing. These syntax
errors are then turned into `Message`s in ruff (in preview mode).
This PR only detects one syntax error (`match` statement before Python
3.10), but it has been pretty quick to extend to several other simple
errors (see #16308 for example).
## Test Plan
The current tests are CLI tests in the linter crate, but these could be
supplemented with inline parser tests after #16357.
I also tested the display of these syntax errors in VS Code:


---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
I am working on a project that uses ruff linters' docs to generate a
fine-tuning dataset for LLMs.
To achieve this, I first ran the command `ruff rule --all
--output-format json` to retrieve all the rules. Then, I parsed the
explanation field to get these 3 consistent sections:
- `Why is this bad?`
- `What it does`
- `Example`
However, during the initial processing, I noticed that the markdown
headings are not that consistent. For instance:
- In most cases, `Use instead` appears as a normal paragraph within the
`Example` section, but in the file
`crates/ruff_linter/src/rules/flake8_bandit/rules/django_extra.rs` it is
a level-2 heading
- The heading "What it does**?**" is used in some places, while others
consistently use "What it does"
- There are 831 `Example` headings and 65 `Examples`. But all of them
only have one example case
This PR normalized these across all rules.
## Test Plan
CI are passed.
## Summary
This PR is another step in preparing to detect syntax errors in the
parser. It introduces the new `per-file-target-version` top-level
configuration option, which holds a mapping of compiled glob patterns to
Python versions. I intend to use the
`LinterSettings::resolve_target_version` method here to pass to the
parser:
f50849aeef/crates/ruff_linter/src/linter.rs (L491-L493)
## Test Plan
I added two new CLI tests to show that the `per-file-target-version` is
respected in both the formatter and the linter.
## Summary
* Existing example did not include RawSQL() call like it should
* Also clarify the example a bit to make it clearer that the code is not
secure
## Test Plan
N/A, only documentation updated
## Summary
Resolves 3/4 requests in #16217:
- ✅ Remove not special methods: `__cmp__`, `__div__`, `__nonzero__`, and
`__unicode__`.
- ✅ Add special methods: `__next__`, `__buffer__`, `__class_getitem__`,
`__mro_entries__`, `__release_buffer__`, and `__subclasshook__`.
- ✅ Support positional-only arguments.
- ❌ Add support for module functions `__dir__` and `__getattr__`. As
mentioned in the issue the check is scoped for methods rather than
module functions. I am hesitant to expand the scope of this check
without a discussion.
## Test Plan
- Manually confirmed each example file from the issue functioned as
expected.
- Ran cargo nextest to ensure `unexpected_special_method_signature` test
still passed.
Fixes#16217.
## Summary
This is part of the preparation for detecting syntax errors in the
parser from https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16090/. As suggested
in [this
comment](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16090/#discussion_r1953084509),
I started working on a `ParseOptions` struct that could be stored in the
parser. For this initial refactor, I only made it hold the existing
`Mode` option, but for syntax errors, we will also need it to have a
`PythonVersion`. For that use case, I'm picturing something like a
`ParseOptions::with_python_version` method, so you can extend the
current calls to something like
```rust
ParseOptions::from(mode).with_python_version(settings.target_version)
```
But I thought it was worth adding `ParseOptions` alone without changing
any other behavior first.
Most of the diff is just updating call sites taking `Mode` to take
`ParseOptions::from(Mode)` or those taking `PySourceType`s to take
`ParseOptions::from(PySourceType)`. The interesting changes are in the
new `parser/options.rs` file and smaller parts of `parser/mod.rs` and
`ruff_python_parser/src/lib.rs`.
## Test Plan
Existing tests, this should not change any behavior.
## Summary
Move class attribute (property, methods, variables) related cases in
AIR302_names to AIR302_class_attribute
## Test Plan
No functionality change. Test fixture is reogranized
Fixes false negative when slice bound uses length of string literal.
We were meant to check the following, for example. Given:
```python
text[:bound] if text.endswith(suffix) else text
```
We want to know whether:
- `suffix` is a string literal and `bound` is a number literal
- `suffix` is an expression and `bound` is
exactly `-len(suffix)` (as AST nodes, prior to evaluation.)
The issue is that negative number literals like `-10` are stored as
unary operators applied to a number literal in the AST. So when `suffix`
was a string literal but `bound` was `-len(suffix)` we were getting
caught in the match arm where `bound` needed to be a number. This is now
fixed with a guard.
Closes#16231
## Summary
This PR updates the formatter and linter to use the `PythonVersion`
struct from the `ruff_python_ast` crate internally. While this doesn't
remove the need for the `linter::PythonVersion` enum, it does remove the
`formatter::PythonVersion` enum and limits the use in the linter to
deserializing from CLI arguments and config files and moves most of the
remaining methods to the `ast::PythonVersion` struct.
## Test Plan
Existing tests, with some inputs and outputs updated to reflect the new
(de)serialization format. I think these are test-specific and shouldn't
affect any external (de)serialization.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
Separate ImportPathMoved and ProviderName to avoid misusing (AIR303)
## Test Plan
only code arrangement is updated. existing test fixture should be not be
changed
## Summary
This PR makes the following changes:
- It adjusts various callsites to use the new
`ast::StringLiteral::contents_range()` method that was introduced in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16183. This is less verbose and
more type-safe than using the `ast::str::raw_contents()` helper
function.
- It adds a new `ast::ExprStringLiteral::as_unconcatenated_literal()`
helper method, and adjusts various callsites to use it. This addresses
@MichaReiser's review comment at
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16183#discussion_r1957334365.
There is no functional change here, but it helps readability to make it
clearer that we're differentiating between implicitly concatenated
strings and unconcatenated strings at various points.
- It renames the `StringLiteralValue::flags()` method to
`StringLiteralFlags::first_literal_flags()`. If you're dealing with an
implicitly concatenated string `string_node`,
`string_node.value.flags().closer_len()` could give an incorrect result;
this renaming makes it clearer that the `StringLiteralFlags` instance
returned by the method is only guaranteed to give accurate information
for the first `StringLiteral` contained in the `ExprStringLiteral` node.
- It deletes the unused `BytesLiteralValue::flags()` method. This seems
prone to misuse in the same way as `StringLiteralValue::flags()`: if
it's an implicitly concatenated bytestring, the `BytesLiteralFlags`
instance returned by the method would only give accurate information for
the first `BytesLiteral` in the bytestring.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
On `main` we warn the user if there is an invalid noqa comment[^1] and
at least one of the following holds:
- There is at least one diagnostic
- A lint rule related to `noqa`s is enabled (e.g. `RUF100`)
This is probably strange behavior from the point of view of the user, so
we now show invalid `noqa`s even when there are no diagnostics.
Closes#12831
[^1]: For the current definition of "invalid noqa comment", which may be
expanded in #12811 . This PR is independent of loc. cit. in the sense
that the CLI warnings should be consistent, regardless of which `noqa`
comments are considered invalid.
## Summary
Fixes#16189.
Only `sys.breakpointhook` is flagged by the upstream linter:
007a745c86/pylint/checkers/stdlib.py (L38)
but I think it makes sense to flag
[`__breakpointhook__`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/sys.html#sys.__breakpointhook__)
too, as suggested in the issue because it
> contain[s] the original value of breakpointhook [...] in case [it
happens] to get replaced with broken or alternative objects.
## Test Plan
New T100 test cases
## Summary
Provides documentation about the FIPS compliant flag for Python hashlib
`usedforsecurity`
Fixes#16188
## Test Plan
* pre-commit hooks
---------
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <36778786+ntBre@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Added checks for subscript expressions on builtin classes as in FURB189.
The object is changed to use the collections objects and the types from
the subscript are kept.
Resolves#16130
> Note: Added some comments in the code explaining why
## Test Plan
- Added a subscript dict and list class to the test file.
- Tested locally to check that the symbols are changed and the types are
kept.
- No modifications changed on optional `str` values.
## Summary
This change begins to resolve#16071 by moving the `OperatorPrecedence`
structs from the `ruff_python_linter` crate into `ruff_python_ast`. This
PR also implements `precedence()` methods on the `Expr` and `ExprRef`
enums.
## Test Plan
Since this change mainly shifts existing logic, I didn't add any
additional tests. Existing tests do pass.
## Summary
Resolves#15859.
The rule now adds parentheses if the original call wraps an unary
expression and is:
* The left-hand side of a binary expression where the operator is `**`.
* The caller of a call expression.
* The subscripted of a subscript expression.
* The object of an attribute access.
The fix will also be marked as unsafe if there are any comments in its
range.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
Resolves#13294, follow-up to #13882.
At #13882, it was concluded that a fix should not be offered for raw
strings. This change implements that. The five rules in question are now
no longer always fixable.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
Follow-up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15951 to update
* the options links in A005 to reference
`lint.flake8-builtins.builtins-strict-checking`
* the description of the rule to explain strict vs non-strict checking
* the option documentation to point back to the rule
The PR addresses the issue #16040 .
---
The logic used into the rule is the following:
Suppose to have an expression of the form
```python
if a cmp b:
c = d
```
where `a`,` b`, `c` and `d` are Python obj and `cmp` one of `<`, `>`,
`<=`, `>=`.
Then:
- `if a=c and b=d`
- if `<=` fix with `a = max(b, a)`
- if `>=` fix with `a = min(b, a)`
- if `>` fix with `a = min(a, b)`
- if `<` fix with `a = max(a, b)`
- `if a=d and b=c`
- if `<=` fix with `b = min(a, b)`
- if `>=` fix with `b = max(a, b)`
- if `>` fix with `b = max(b, a)`
- if `<` fix with `b = min(b, a)`
- do nothing, i.e., we cannot fix this case.
---
In total we have 8 different and possible cases.
```
| Case | Expression | Fix |
|-------|------------------|---------------|
| 1 | if a >= b: a = b | a = min(b, a) |
| 2 | if a <= b: a = b | a = max(b, a) |
| 3 | if a <= b: b = a | b = min(a, b) |
| 4 | if a >= b: b = a | b = max(a, b) |
| 5 | if a > b: a = b | a = min(a, b) |
| 6 | if a < b: a = b | a = max(a, b) |
| 7 | if a < b: b = a | b = min(b, a) |
| 8 | if a > b: b = a | b = max(b, a) |
```
I added them in the tests.
Please double-check that I didn't make any mistakes. It's quite easy to
mix up > and <.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
* fix ImportPathMoved / ProviderName misuse
* oncrete names, such as `["airflow", "config_templates",
"default_celery", "DEFAULT_CELERY_CONFIG"]`, should use `ProviderName`.
In contrast, module paths like `"airflow", "operators", "weekday", ...`
should use `ImportPathMoved`. Misuse may lead to incorrect detection.
## Test Plan
update test fixture
## Summary
Fixes#16007. The logic from the last fix for this (#9427) was
sufficient, it just wasn't being applied because `Attributes` sections
aren't expected to have nested sections. I just deleted the outer
conditional, which should hopefully fix this for all section types.
## Test Plan
New regression test, plus the existing D417 tests.
## Summary
Resolves#16082.
`UP036` will now also take into consideration whether or not a micro
version number is set:
* If a third element doesn't exist, the existing logic is preserved.
* If it exists but is not an integer literal, the check will not be
reported.
* If it is an integer literal but doesn't fit into a `u8`, the check
will be reported as invalid.
* Otherwise, the compared version is determined to always be less than
the target version when:
* The target's minor version is smaller than that of the comparator, or
* The operator is `<`, the micro version is 0, and the two minor
versions compare equal.
As this is considered a bugfix, it is not preview-gated.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
The index in subscript access like `d[*y]` will not be linted or
autofixed with parentheses, even when
`lint.ruff.parenthesize-tuple-in-subscript = true`.
Closes#16077
This PR resolved#15772
Before PR:
```
def _(
this_is_fine: int = f(), # No error
this_is_not: list[int] = f() # B008: Do not perform function call `f` in argument defaults
): ...
@dataclass
class _:
this_is_not_fine: list[int] = f() # RUF009: Do not perform function call `f` in dataclass defaults
this_is_also_not: int = f() # RUF009: Do not perform function call `f` in dataclass defaults
```
After PR:
```
def _(
this_is_fine: int = f(), # No error
this_is_not: list[int] = f() # B008: Do not perform function call `f` in argument defaults
): ...
@dataclass
class _:
this_is_not_fine: list[int] = f() # RUF009: Do not perform function call `f` in dataclass defaults
this_is_fine: int = f()
```
## Summary
Follow-up to #15984.
Previously, `PLE1310` would only report when the object is a literal:
```python
'a'.strip('//') # error
foo = ''
foo.strip('//') # no error
```
After this change, objects whose type can be inferred to be either `str`
or `bytes` will also be reported in preview.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
This PR adds the configuration option
`lint.flake8-builtins.builtins-strict-checking`, which is used in A005
to determine whether the fully-qualified module name (relative to the
project root or source directories) should be checked instead of just
the final component as is currently the case.
As discussed in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15399#issuecomment-2587017147,
the default value of the new option is `false` on preview, so modules
like `utils.logging` from the initial report are no longer flagged by
default. For non-preview the default is still strict checking.
## Test Plan
New A005 test module with the structure reported in #15399.
Fixes#15399
## Summary
Resolves#12321.
The physical-line-based `RUF054` checks for form feed characters that
are preceded by only tabs and spaces, but not any other characters,
including form feeds.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
Fixes#16024
## Summary
This PR adds proper isolation for `UP049` fixes so that two type
parameters are not renamed to the same name, which would introduce
invalid syntax. E.g. for this:
```py
class Foo[_T, __T]: ...
```
we cannot apply two autofixes to the class, as that would produce
invalid syntax -- this:
```py
class Foo[T, T]: ...
```
The "isolation" here means that Ruff won't apply more than one fix to
the same type-parameter list in a single iteration of the loop it does
to apply all autofixes. This means that after the first autofix has been
done, the semantic model will have recalculated which variables are
available in the scope, meaning that the diagnostic for the second
parameter will be deemed unfixable since it collides with an existing
name in the same scope (the name we autofixed the first parameter to in
an earlier iteration of the autofix loop).
Cc. @ntBre, for interest!
## Test Plan
I added an integration test that reproduces the bug on `main`.
When suggesting a return type as a union in Python <=3.9, we now avoid a
`TypeError` by correctly suggesting syntax like `Union[int,str,None]`
instead of `Union[int | str | None]`.
## Summary
Follow-up to #16026.
Previously, the fix for this would be marked as unsafe, even though all
comments are preserved:
```python
# .pyi
T: TypeAlias = ( # Comment
int | str
)
```
Now it is safe: comments within the parenthesized range no longer affect
applicability.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dylan <53534755+dylwil3@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Resolves#15968.
Previously, these would be considered violations:
```python
b''.strip('//')
''.lstrip('//', foo = "bar")
```
...while these are not:
```python
b''.strip(b'//')
''.strip('\\b\\x08')
```
Ruff will now not report when the types of the object and that of the
argument mismatch, or when there are extra arguments.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
See #15951 for the original discussion and reviews. This is just the
first half of that PR (reaching parity with `flake8-builtins` without
adding any new configuration options) split out for nicer changelog
entries.
For posterity, here's a script for generating the module structure that
was useful for interactive testing and creating the table
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15951#issuecomment-2640662041).
The results for this branch are the same as the `Strict` column there,
as expected.
```shell
mkdir abc collections foobar urlparse
for i in */
do
touch $i/__init__.py
done
cp -r abc foobar collections/.
cp -r abc collections foobar/.
touch ruff.toml
touch foobar/logging.py
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
This very large PR changes the field `.diagnostics` in the `Checker`
from a `Vec<Diagnostic>` to a `RefCell<Vec<Diagnostic>>`, adds methods
to push new diagnostics to this cell, and then removes unnecessary
mutability throughout all of our lint rule implementations.
Consequently, the compiler may now enforce what was, till now, the
_convention_ that the only changes to the `Checker` that can happen
during a lint are the addition of diagnostics[^1].
The PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit. I have tried to keep the large
commits limited to "bulk actions that you can easily see are performing
the same find/replace on a large number of files", and separate anything
ad-hoc or with larger diffs. Please let me know if there's anything else
I can do to make this easier to review!
Many thanks to [`ast-grep`](https://github.com/ast-grep/ast-grep),
[`helix`](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix), and good ol'
fashioned`git` magic, without which this PR would have taken the rest of
my natural life.
[^1]: And randomly also the seen variables violating `flake8-bugbear`?
## Summary
Part of #15809 and #15876.
This change brings several bugfixes:
* The nested `map()` call in `list(map(lambda x: x, []))` where `list`
is overshadowed is now correctly reported.
* The call will no longer reported if:
* Any arguments given to `map()` are variadic.
* Any of the iterables contain a named expression.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
This change resolves#15814 to ensure that `SIM401` is only triggered on
known dictionary types. Before, the rule was getting triggered even on
types that _resemble_ a dictionary but are not actually a dictionary.
I did this using the `is_known_to_be_of_type_dict(...)` functionality.
The logic for this function was duplicated in a few spots, so I moved
the code to a central location, removed redundant definitions, and
updated existing calls to use the single definition of the function!
## Test Plan
Since this PR only modifies an existing rule, I made changes to the
existing test instead of adding new ones. I made sure that `SIM401` is
triggered on types that are clearly dictionaries and that it's not
triggered on a simple custom dictionary-like type (using a modified
version of [the code in the issue](#15814))
The additional changes to de-duplicate `is_known_to_be_of_type_dict`
don't break any existing tests -- I think this should be fine since the
logic remains the same (please let me know if you think otherwise, I'm
excited to get feedback and work towards a good fix 🙂).
---------
Co-authored-by: Junhson Jean-Baptiste <junhsonjb@naan.mynetworksettings.com>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
Resolves#15997.
Ruff used to introduce syntax errors while fixing these cases, but no
longer will:
```python
{"a": [], **{},}
# ^^^^ Removed, leaving two contiguous commas
{"a": [], **({})}
# ^^^^^ Removed, leaving a stray closing parentheses
```
Previously, the function would take a shortcut if the unpacked
dictionary is empty; now, both cases are handled using the same logic
introduced in #15394. This change slightly modifies that logic to also
remove the first comma following the dictionary, if and only if it is
empty.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
Closes#15681
## Summary
This changes `analyze::typing::is_type_checking_block` to recognize all
symbols named "TYPE_CHECKING".
This matches the current behavior of mypy and pyright as well as
`flake8-type-checking`.
It also drops support for detecting `if False:` and `if 0:` as type
checking blocks. This used to be an option for
providing backwards compatibility with Python versions that did not have
a `typing` module, but has since
been removed from the typing spec and is no longer supported by any of
the mainstream type checkers.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run`
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
Minor docs follow-up to #15862 to mention UP049 in the UP046 and UP047
`See also` sections. I wanted to mention it in UP040 too but realized it
didn't have a `See also` section, so I also added that, adapted from the
other two rules.
## Test Plan
cargo test
## Summary
The PR addresses the issue #15887
For two objects `a` and `b`, we ensure that the auto-fix and the
suggestion is of the form `a = min(a, b)` (or `a = max(a, b)`). This is
because we want to be consistent with the python implementation of the
methods: `min` and `max`. See the above issue for more details.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
Resolves#15936.
The fixes will now attempt to preserve the original iterable's format
and quote it if necessary. For `FURB142`, comments within the fix range
will make it unsafe as well.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
Resolves#15863.
In preview, diagnostic ranges will now be limited to that of the
argument. Rule documentation, variable names, error messages and fix
titles have all been modified to use "argument" consistently.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
Resolves#15925.
`N803` now checks for functions instead of parameters. In preview mode,
if a method is decorated with `@override` and the current scope is that
of a class, it will be ignored.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
## Summary
Follow-up to #15779.
Prior to this change, non-name expressions are not reported at all:
```python
type(a.b) is type(None) # no error
```
This change enhances the rule so that such cases are also reported in
preview. Additionally:
* The fix will now be marked as unsafe if there are any comments within
its range.
* Error messages are slightly modified.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
This is a new rule to implement the renaming of PEP 695 type parameters
with leading underscores after they have (presumably) been converted
from standalone type variables by either UP046 or UP047. Part of #15642.
I'm not 100% sure the fix is always safe, but I haven't come up with any
counterexamples yet. `Renamer` seems pretty precise, so I don't think
the usual issues with comments apply.
I initially tried writing this as a rule that receives a `Stmt` rather
than a `Binding`, but in that case the
`checker.semantic().current_scope()` was the global scope, rather than
the scope of the type parameters as I needed. Most of the other rules
using `Renamer` also used `Binding`s, but it does have the downside of
offering separate diagnostics for each parameter to rename.
## Test Plan
New snapshot tests for UP049 alone and the combination of UP046, UP049,
and PYI018.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
This is a follow-up to #15726, #15778, and #15794 to preserve the triple
quote and prefix flags in plain strings, bytestrings, and f-strings.
I also added a `StringLiteralFlags::without_triple_quotes` method to
avoid passing along triple quotes in rules like SIM905 where it might
not make sense, as discussed
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15726#discussion_r1930532426).
## Test Plan
Existing tests, plus many new cases in the `generator::tests::quote`
test that should cover all combinations of quotes and prefixes, at least
for simple string bodies.
Closes#7799 when combined with #15694, #15726, #15778, and #15794.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
Extend AIR302 with
* `airflow.operators.bash.BashOperator →
airflow.providers.standard.operators.bash.BashOperator`
* change existing rules `airflow.operators.bash_operator.BashOperator →
airflow.operators.bash.BashOperator` to
`airflow.operators.bash_operator.BashOperator →
airflow.providers.standard.operators.bash.BashOperator`
## Test Plan
a test fixture has been updated
## Summary
Given the following code:
```python
set(([x for x in range(5)]))
```
the current implementation of C403 results in
```python
{(x for x in range(5))}
```
which is a set containing a generator rather than the result of the
generator.
This change removes the extraneous parentheses so that the resulting
code is:
```python
{x for x in range(5)}
```
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`
## Summary
This is a follow-up to #15565, tracked in #15642, to reuse the string
replacement logic from the other PEP 695 rules instead of the
`Generator`, which has the benefit of preserving more comments. However,
comments in some places are still dropped, so I added a check for this
and update the fix safety accordingly. I also added a `## Fix safety`
section to the docs to reflect this and the existing `isinstance`
caveat.
## Test Plan
Existing UP040 tests, plus some new cases.
## Summary
Resolves#10063 and follow-up to #15521.
The fix is now marked as unsafe if there are any comments within its
range. Tests are adapted from that of #15521.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
Both `list` and `dict` expect only a single positional argument. Giving
more positional arguments, or a keyword argument, is a `TypeError` and
neither the lint rule nor its fix make sense in that context.
Closes#15810
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15812 by visiting the
second argument as a type definition.
## Test Plan
New F401 tests based on the report.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Builtin bindings are given a range of `0..0`, which causes strange
behavior when range checks are made at the top of the file. In this
case, the logic of the rule demands that the value of the dict
comprehension is not self-referential (i.e. it does not contain
definitions for any of the variables used within it). This logic was
confused by builtins which looked like they were defined "in the
comprehension", if the comprehension appeared at the top of the file.
Closes#15830
If there is any `ParenthesizedWhitespace` (in the sense of LibCST) after
the function name `sorted` and before the arguments, then we must wrap
`sorted` with parentheses after removing the surrounding function.
Closes#15789
This PR uses the tokens of the parsed annotation available in the
`Checker`, instead of re-lexing (using `SimpleTokenizer`) the
annotation. This avoids some limitations of the `SimpleTokenizer`, such
as not being able to handle number and string literals.
Closes#15816 .
## Summary
Permits suspicious imports (the `S4` namespaced diagnostics) from stub
files.
Closes#15207.
## Test Plan
Added tests and ran `cargo nextest run`. The test files are copied from
the `.py` variants.
## Summary
This is another follow-up to #15726 and #15778, extending the
quote-preserving behavior to f-strings and deleting the now-unused
`Generator::quote` field.
## Details
I also made one unrelated change to `rules/flynt/helpers.rs` to remove a
`to_string` call for making a `Box<str>` and tweaked some arguments to
some of the `Generator::unparse_f_string` methods to make the code
easier to follow, in my opinion. Happy to revert especially the latter
of these if needed.
Unfortunately this still does not fix the issue in #9660, which appears
to be more of an escaping issue than a quote-preservation issue. After
#15726, the result is now `a = f'# {"".join([])}' if 1 else ""` instead
of `a = f"# {''.join([])}" if 1 else ""` (single quotes on the outside
now), but we still don't have the desired behavior of double quotes
everywhere on Python 3.12+. I added a test for this but split it off
into another branch since it ended up being unaddressed here, but my
`dbg!` statements showed the correct preferred quotes going into
[`UnicodeEscape::with_preferred_quote`](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/blob/main/crates/ruff_python_literal/src/escape.rs#L54).
## Test Plan
Existing rule and `Generator` tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
Implements some of #14738, by adding support for 6 new patterns:
```py
re.search("abc", s) is None # ⇒ "abc" not in s
re.search("abc", s) is not None # ⇒ "abc" in s
re.match("abc", s) is None # ⇒ not s.startswith("abc")
re.match("abc", s) is not None # ⇒ s.startswith("abc")
re.fullmatch("abc", s) is None # ⇒ s != "abc"
re.fullmatch("abc", s) is not None # ⇒ s == "abc"
```
## Test Plan
```shell
cargo nextest run
cargo insta review
```
And ran the fix on my startup's repo.
## Note
One minor limitation here:
```py
if not re.match('abc', s) is None:
pass
```
will get fixed to this (technically correct, just not nice):
```py
if not not s.startswith('abc'):
pass
```
This seems fine given that Ruff has this covered: the initial code
should be caught by
[E714](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/not-is-test/) and the fixed
code should be caught by
[SIM208](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/double-negation/).
## Summary
Resolves#12717.
This change incorporates the logic added in #15588.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run` and `cargo insta test`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
## Summary
This is a very closely related follow-up to #15726, adding the same
quote-preserving behavior to bytestrings. Only one rule (UP018) was
affected this time, and it was easy to mirror the plain string changes.
## Test Plan
Existing tests
## Summary
This is a first step toward fixing #7799 by using the quoting style
stored in the `flags` field on `ast::StringLiteral`s to select a quoting
style. This PR does not include support for f-strings or byte strings.
Several rules also needed small updates to pass along existing quoting
styles instead of using `StringLiteralFlags::default()`. The remaining
snapshot changes are intentional and should preserve the quotes from the
input strings.
## Test Plan
Existing tests with some accepted updates, plus a few new RUF055 tests
for raw strings.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
* feat
* add is_execute_method_inherits_from_airflow_operator for checking the
removed context key in the execute method
* refactor: rename
* is_airflow_task as is_airflow_task_function_def
* in_airflow_task as in_airflow_task_function_def
* removed_in_3 as airflow_3_removal_expr
* removed_in_3_function_def as airflow_3_removal_function_def
* test:
* reorganize test cases
## Test Plan
a test fixture has been updated
---------
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
**Summary**
Airflow 3.0 removes a set of deprecated context variables that were
phased out in 2.x. This PR introduces lint rules to detect usage of
these removed variables in various patterns, helping identify
incompatibilities. The removed context variables include:
```
conf
execution_date
next_ds
next_ds_nodash
next_execution_date
prev_ds
prev_ds_nodash
prev_execution_date
prev_execution_date_success
tomorrow_ds
yesterday_ds
yesterday_ds_nodash
```
**Detected Patterns and Examples**
The linter now flags the use of removed context variables in the
following scenarios:
1. **Direct Subscript Access**
```python
execution_date = context["execution_date"] # Flagged
```
2. **`.get("key")` Method Calls**
```python
print(context.get("execution_date")) # Flagged
```
3. **Variables Assigned from `get_current_context()`**
If a variable is assigned from `get_current_context()` and then used to
access a removed key:
```python
c = get_current_context()
print(c.get("execution_date")) # Flagged
```
4. **Function Parameters in `@task`-Decorated Functions**
Parameters named after removed context variables in functions decorated
with `@task` are flagged:
```python
from airflow.decorators import task
@task
def my_task(execution_date, **kwargs): # Parameter 'execution_date'
flagged
pass
```
5. **Removed Keys in Task Decorator `kwargs` and Other Scenarios**
Other similar patterns where removed context variables appear (e.g., as
part of `kwargs` in a `@task` function) are also detected.
```
from airflow.decorators import task
@task
def process_with_execution_date(**context):
execution_date = lambda: context["execution_date"] # flagged
print(execution_date)
@task(kwargs={"execution_date": "2021-01-01"}) # flagged
def task_with_kwargs(**context):
pass
```
**Test Plan**
Test fixtures covering various patterns of deprecated context usage are
included in this PR. For example:
```python
from airflow.decorators import task, dag, get_current_context
from airflow.models import DAG
from airflow.operators.dummy import DummyOperator
import pendulum
from datetime import datetime
@task
def access_invalid_key_task(**context):
print(context.get("conf")) # 'conf' flagged
@task
def print_config(**context):
execution_date = context["execution_date"] # Flagged
prev_ds = context["prev_ds"] # Flagged
@task
def from_current_context():
context = get_current_context()
print(context["execution_date"]) # Flagged
# Usage outside of a task decorated function
c = get_current_context()
print(c.get("execution_date")) # Flagged
@task
def some_task(execution_date, **kwargs):
print("execution date", execution_date) # Parameter flagged
@dag(
start_date=pendulum.datetime(2021, 1, 1, tz="UTC")
)
def my_dag():
task1 = DummyOperator(
task_id="task1",
params={
"execution_date": "{{ execution_date }}", # Flagged in template context
},
)
access_invalid_key_task()
print_config()
from_current_context()
dag = my_dag()
class CustomOperator(BaseOperator):
def execute(self, context):
execution_date = context.get("execution_date") # Flagged
next_ds = context.get("next_ds") # Flagged
next_execution_date = context["next_execution_date"] # Flagged
```
Ruff will emit `AIR302` diagnostics for each deprecated usage, with
suggestions when applicable, aiding in code migration to Airflow 3.0.
related: https://github.com/apache/airflow/issues/44409,
https://github.com/apache/airflow/issues/41641
---------
Co-authored-by: Wei Lee <weilee.rx@gmail.com>
## Summary
Fixes#9663 and also improves the fixes for
[RUF055](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/unnecessary-regular-expression/)
since regular expressions are often written as raw strings.
This doesn't include raw f-strings.
## Test Plan
Existing snapshots for RUF055 and PT009, plus a new `Generator` test and
a regression test for the reported `PIE810` issue.
## Summary
Addresses the second follow up to #15565 in #15642. This was easier than
expected by using this cool destructuring syntax I hadn't used before,
and by assuming
[PYI059](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/generic-not-last-base-class/)
(`generic-not-last-base-class`).
## Test Plan
Using an existing test, plus two new tests combining multiple base
classes and multiple generics. It looks like I deleted a relevant test,
which I did, but I meant to rename this in #15565. It looks like instead
I copied it and renamed the copy.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR extends our [PEP 695](https://peps.python.org/pep-0695) handling
from the type aliases handled by `UP040` to generic function and class
parameters, as suggested in the latter two examples from #4617:
```python
# Input
T = TypeVar("T", bound=float)
class A(Generic[T]):
...
def f(t: T):
...
# Output
class A[T: float]:
...
def f[T: float](t: T):
...
```
I first implemented this as part of `UP040`, but based on a brief
discussion during a very helpful pairing session with @AlexWaygood, I
opted to split them into rules separate from `UP040` and then also
separate from each other. From a quick look, and based on [this
issue](https://github.com/asottile/pyupgrade/issues/836), I'm pretty
sure neither of these rules is currently in pyupgrade, so I just took
the next available codes, `UP046` and `UP047`.
The last main TODO, noted in the rule file and in the fixture, is to
handle generic method parameters not included in the class itself, `S`
in this case:
```python
T = TypeVar("T")
S = TypeVar("S")
class Foo(Generic[T]):
def bar(self, x: T, y: S) -> S: ...
```
but Alex mentioned that that might be okay to leave for a follow-up PR.
I also left a TODO about handling multiple subclasses instead of bailing
out when more than one is present. I'm not sure how common that would
be, but I can still handle it here, or follow up on that too.
I think this is unrelated to the PR, but when I ran `cargo dev
generate-all`, it removed the rule code `PLW0101` from
`ruff.schema.json`. It seemed unrelated, so I left that out, but I
wanted to mention it just in case.
## Test Plan
New test fixture, `cargo nextest run`
Closes#4617, closes#12542
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
The AST generator creates a reference enum for each syntax group — an
enum where each variant contains a reference to the relevant syntax
node. Previously you could customize the name of the reference enum for
a group — primarily because there was an existing `ExpressionRef` type
that wouldn't have lined up with the auto-derived name `ExprRef`. This
follow-up PR is a simple search/replace to switch over to the
auto-derived name, so that we can remove this customization point.
## Summary
We were mistakenly using `CommentRanges::has_comments` to determine
whether our edits
were safe, which sometimes expands the checked range to the end of a
line. But in order to
determine safety we need to check exactly the range we're replacing.
This bug affected the rules `runtime-cast-value` (`TC006`) and
`quoted-type-alias` (`TC008`)
although it was very unlikely to be hit for `TC006` and for `TC008` we
never hit it because we
were checking the wrong expression.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run`
This commit fixes RUF055 rule to format `re.fullmatch(pattern, var)` to
`var == pattern` instead of the current `pattern == var` behaviour. This
is more idiomatic and easy to understand.
## Summary
This changes the current formatting behaviour of `re.fullmatch(pattern,
var)` to format it to `var == pattern` instead of `pattern == var`.
## Test Plan
I used a code file locally to see the updated formatting behaviour.
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14733
## Summary
I noticed this while reviewing
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15541 that the code inside the
large closure cannot be formatted by the Rust formatter. This PR
extracts the qualified name and inlines the match expression.
## Test Plan
`cargo clippy` and `cargo insta`
## Summary
Right now, these are being applied in random order, since if we have two
`RedefinitionWhileUnused`, it just takes the first-generated (whereas
the next comparator in the sort here orders by location)... Which means
we frequently have to re-run!
## Summary
The fix range for sorting imports accounts for trailing whitespace, but
we should only show the trimmed range to the user when displaying the
diagnostic. So this PR changes the diagnostic range.
Closes#15504
## Test Plan
Reviewed snapshot changes
## Summary
Added some extra notes on why you should have focused try...except
blocks to
[TRY300](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/try-consider-else/).
When fixing a violation of this rule, a co-worker of mine (very
understandably) asked why this was better. The current docs just say
putting the return in the else is "more explicit", but if you look at
the [linked reference in the python
documentation](https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/errors.html) they are
more clear on why violations like this is bad:
> The use of the else clause is better than adding additional code to
the [try](https://docs.python.org/3/reference/compound_stmts.html#try)
clause because it avoids accidentally catching an exception that wasn’t
raised by the code being protected by the try … except statement.
This is my attempt at adding more context to the docs on this. Open to
suggestions for wording!
---------
Co-authored-by: dylwil3 <dylwil3@gmail.com>
In the following situation:
```python
class Grandparent:
__slots__ = "a"
class Parent(Grandparent): ...
class Child(Parent):
__slots__ = "a"
```
the message for `W0244` now specifies that `a` is overwriting a slot
from `Grandparent`.
To implement this, we introduce a helper function `iter_super_classes`
which does a breadth-first traversal of the superclasses of a given
class (as long as they are defined in the same file, due to the usual
limitations of the semantic model).
Note: Python does not allow conflicting slots definitions under multiple
inheritance. Unless I'm misunderstanding something, I believe It follows
that the subposet of superclasses of a given class that redefine a given
slot is in fact totally ordered. There is therefore a unique _nearest_
superclass whose slot is being overwritten. So, you know, in case anyone
was super worried about that... you can just chill.
This is a followup to #9640 .