Helper for starting to type-hint large codebases with mypy.
Project description
typing_copilot
Helper for starting to type-hint large codebases with mypy
. When installed, available as the command typing_copilot
.
Example output generated when generating a mypy.ini
file for the GraphQL compiler project (PR link):
# First, enter the project's virtual environment.
# Make sure the project's dependencies are installed in the environment!
$ poetry shell # or "pipenv shell" or "source venv/bin/activate" or ...
<...>
$ typing_copilot init
typing_copilot v0.4.0
Running mypy once with laxest settings to establish a baseline. Please wait...
Collecting mypy errors from strictest check configuration. Please wait...
Strict run completed and uncovered 2955 mypy errors. Building the strictest mypy config
such that all configured mypy checks still pass...
> Mypy was unable to find type hints for some 3rd party modules, configuring mypy to
ignore them.
More info: https://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/stable/running_mypy.html#missing-imports
Affected modules: ['arrow', 'cached_property', 'funcy', 'neo4j', 'parameterized',
'pyorient', 'pytest', 'redisgraph', 'setuptools', 'snapshottest', 'sqlalchemy']
> Constructed 126 mypy error suppression rules across 65 modules.
Config generated (306 lines). Validating the new setup before updating your mypy.ini
file. Please wait...
Validation complete. Your mypy.ini file has been updated. Happy type-safe coding!
Motivation
Starting to use mypy
in a large codebase can feel like a chicken-and-egg problem:
- You are unable to turn on meaningful
mypy
enforcement since a large portion of the codebase is not compliant. - It is difficult to get the codebase compliant without
mypy
enforcement: since proper typing is not enforced, even brand-new code is frequently not fully compliant, and it feels like you are making one step forward and two steps back.
mypy
allows specifying different levels of rule enforcement on a per-module basis. However, writing a good per-module mypy
configuration is an extremely time-consuming process: mypy
must be executed (in a strict configuration) against that module, the resulting errors must be triaged, and an appropriate set of rules for the modules must be produced. Applying this process on a large codebase can easily take hours or days of work.
typing_copilot
aims to make this process extremely quick and simple. After installing this package in your project's development environment, running typing_copilot init
will autogenerate a mypy.ini
file with the strictest set of mypy
rules that your code currently passes. In future runs, mypy
will automatically use the new mypy.ini
file, thereby ensuring that no future code edits violate any typing rules that the current codebase satisfies.
You can then also use the mypy.ini
file to see which checks had to be disabled for which of your project's modules, and use that information to guide your future typing efforts. You can also periodically re-run typing_copilot tighten
to regenerate a mypy.ini
file, in case your project's typing state has improved and stricter rules may now be adopted.
Ideally, consider using typing_copilot
in a "ratcheting" fashion, where your project is always on the tightest possible mypy.ini
configuration. The easiest way to do so is to run typing_copilot tighten --error-if-can-tighten
in your CI environment, which will exit 1
in case your current mypy.ini
is not the tightest possible one for your project.
In the future, we hope to add additional functionality to typing_copilot
:
- a command that highlights opportunities where a small amount of work can allow a new rule to be enabled for a new module, allowing you to maximize your project's typing enforcement;
- support for additional
mypy
rules.
Usage
- Navigate to the root directory of the project on which you'd like to use
typing_copilot
. - Enter the project's virtualenv, if using one, and ensure the project's dependencies are installed.
- Run
typing_copilot
:
pip install typing_copilot
typing_copilot init
Currently, typing_copilot
is unable to support mypy.ini
files that it did not generate. If you are already using mypy
but you'd like to transition to using typing_copilot
to manage your mypy.ini
file, you can make use of the --overwrite
flag:
typing_copilot init --overwrite
After creating your initial mypy.ini
file with typing_copilot
, you can also use typing_copilot
to attempt to tighten your mypy.ini
configuration. This is useful, for example, if you've recently added type hints to your code and believe that should enable a tighter new mypy.ini
configuration. Simply run the following to update your mypy.ini
to the tightest passing mypy
configuration:
typing_copilot tighten
In a CI environment, typing_copilot
can simultaneously ensure both that your code passes mypy
checks with the current mypy.ini
configuration, and that the current mypy.ini
file is the tightest mypy
config that your code is able to support. Simply use the --error-if-can-tighten
flag in the tighten
command:
typing_copilot tighten --error-if-can-tighten
How typing_copilot
works
typing_copilot init
With this command, typing_copilot
will first run mypy
using a minimal set of mypy
checks which are always enabled and cannot be turned off. You'll need to fix any errors mypy
finds using these checks before the command will be able to proceed.
Once the minimal mypy
checks pass, typing_copilot init
will automatically re-run mypy
with the strictest supported set of checks, and collect the reported errors. After analyzing the errors, it will generate the strictest set of checks that will not cause errors, validate them by running mypy
against your project one more time, and then create a new mypy.ini
file with this new "strictest valid" configuration. We generally refer to this "strictest valid" configuration as the project's "tightest" configuration, hence the tighten
command described below.
typing_copilot tighten
With this command, typing_copilot
will first run mypy
using your current mypy.ini
file, ensuring that the current configuration does not produce any mypy
errors. Assuming no errors are found, typing_copilot
will then follow the same procedure as in the init
command to find the tightest mypy
configuration your project's current state supports. Finally, it will compare this newly-found tightest configuration against your current mypy.ini
configuration, and either update your mypy.ini
file or return an error, depending on whether the --error-if-can-tighten
is set.
Reporting issues
This is a project I built in my spare time, please be gentle :)
GitHub issues are the preferred avenue for reporting issues with typing_copilot
. Please do not email me or any other contributors with questions or issue reports, unless you have our explicit consent to do so.
To ensure the best odds that we can diagnose and fix any problems together, please make sure to include in your issue report the log produced using the --verbose
option, together with links to the source code being analyzed by mypy
and typing_copilot
.
As always, pull requests highly encouraged and gratefully accepted.
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