Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
94 lines (56 loc) · 2.51 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

94 lines (56 loc) · 2.51 KB

English | 中文

coderfly

Find function-level association impacts of code changes.

Background

When you modify the code of a large project, it may not be very clear whether it will have an impact on the functionality.Our self-test may not be enough, and we need to search a lot of related code to determine the impact of the change. Wouldn't it save a lot of time and improve the quality of self-testing if there was a tool that could identify your changes and automatically find out what you affected by the change?

That's the problem this project is trying to solve.

It can analyze the changes of the function by the changes of the file.

function change

Then we analyze the impact of this function from the whole project. From the picture blow(a part of the result), we can see that this function is called by jumpToAppStore and affects the click event bound to a dom node of header.vue.

result

You can check how it works from here.

Install

This project is still under development and has not been published to the npm yet. So you can use the built files for now.

  • clone this project
  • yarn install
  • yarn build

Usage

Using the command line

coderfly check <folder path>

Options:

  • alias: Set path alias, alias and path should be linked with a colon. eg: coderfly check ./src -alias src:./src static:./public

  • t or tree: Export the file tree to a file, the file defaults to file_tree.json. eg: coderfly check ./src -t

Configuration file:

You can also write configuration file named .coderflyrc.js, mainly to simplify alias.

// .coderflyrc.js
const path = require('path');
module.exports = {
    'src': path.resolve(__dirname, 'test'),
    // ...
}

The results are written to the impact_report.json file in the directory where the command was executed

command line

Using the API

see the API or Example.

API

coderfly

The API for the complete process is included, use this for a one-step process.

Params

  • srcPath: string. It's source code folder path

Example

Easy to use

const { coderfly } = require('coderfly');

coderfly('./src');

Support

  • JavaScript
  • Vue2
  • TypeScript
  • Vue3

how it works

how it works

License

MIT License