You can configure lintr
to run as part of continuous integration (either for a package or a general project containing R files) in order to automatically check that commits and pull requests do not deteriorate code style.
If your package is on GitHub, the easiest way to do this is with GitHub Actions. The workflow configuration files use YAML syntax. The usethis
package has some great functionality that can help you with workflow files. The most straightforward way to add a lintr
workflow to your package is to use the r-lib/actions’s lint
example. To do this with usethis
, you need to call
::use_github_action("lint") usethis
This will create a workflow file called lint.yaml
and place it in the correct location, namely in the .github/workflows
directory of your repository. This file configures all the steps required to run lintr::lint_package()
on your package.
lintr-bot will then add comments to the commit or pull request with the lints found and they will also be printed as annotations along side the status check on GitHub. If you want to disable the commenting you can set the environment variable LINTR_COMMENT_BOT=false
.
If your project is in a subdirectory and you would like to use GitHub Actions annotations, you can set options(lintr.github_annotation_project_dir = "path/to/project")
which will make sure that the annotations point to the correct paths.
If you want to run lintr
on Travis-CI, you will need to have Travis install the package first. This can be done by adding the following line to your .travis.yml
r_github_packages:
- r-lib/lintr
We recommend running lintr::lint_package()
as an after_success step in your build process]
Just like with GitHub Actions, lintr-bot will then add comments to the commit or pull request with the lints found and they will also be printed on Travis-CI. If you want to disable the commenting you can set the environment variable LINTR_COMMENT_BOT=false
.
after_success:
- R CMD INSTALL $PKG_TARBALL
- Rscript -e 'lintr::lint_package()'
Live example of a package using this setup: hibpwned
, lintr-bot commenting on a PR.
You are not limited you using lintr
for packages – you can use it in combination with continuous integration for any other project.
If your project is on GitHub, you could take advantage of GitHub Actions and the usethis
functionality. r-lib/actions includes a lint-project
example, which you can use by calling:
::use_github_action("lint-project") usethis
lintr
powers R lints for Super-Linter and MegaLinter, which provide a unified linting experience across many languages. Specifically, they execute lintr::lint()
on the R and R Markdown files included in a given project.