Files
podman/hack/man-page-checker
Ed Santiago cfbc4aaeb5 Cleanup: fix problems reported by shell lint
Followup to #15616, which is not usable as it is (way, way, way
too much noise) but actually found a few real nits that should
be fixed.

Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
2022-09-15 20:10:34 -06:00

182 lines
6.8 KiB
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# man-page-checker - validate and cross-reference man page names
#
verbose=
for i; do
case "$i" in
-v|--verbose) verbose=verbose ;;
esac
done
die() {
echo "$(basename $0): $*" >&2
exit 1
}
cd $(dirname $0)/../docs/source/markdown || die "Please run me from top-level libpod dir"
rc=0
for md in *.1.md;do
# Read the first line after '# NAME' (or '## NAME'). (FIXME: # and ##
# are not the same; should we stick to one convention?)
# There may be more than one name, e.g. podman-info.1.md has
# podman-system-info then another line with podman-info. We
# care only about the first.
name=$(egrep -A1 '^#* NAME' $md|tail -1|awk '{print $1}' | tr -d \\\\)
expect=$(basename $md .1.md)
if [ "$name" != "$expect" ]; then
echo
printf "Inconsistent program NAME in %s:\n" $md
printf " NAME= %s (expected: %s)\n" $name $expect
rc=1
fi
done
# Pass 2: compare descriptions.
#
# Make sure the descriptive text in podman-foo.1.md matches the one
# in the table in podman.1.md. podman-remote is not a podman subcommand,
# so it is excluded here.
for md in $(ls -1 *-*.1.md | grep -v remote);do
desc=$(egrep -A1 '^#* NAME' $md|tail -1|sed -e 's/^podman[^ ]\+ - //')
# podman.1.md has a two-column table; podman-*.1.md all have three.
parent=$(echo $md | sed -e 's/^\(.*\)-.*$/\1.1.md/')
if [[ $parent =~ "podman-auto" ]]; then
# podman-auto-update.1.md is special cased as it's structure differs
# from that of other man pages where main and sub-commands split by
# dashes.
parent="podman.1.md"
fi
x=3
if expr -- "$parent" : ".*-" >/dev/null; then
x=4
fi
# Find the descriptive text in the parent man page.
# Strip off the final period; let's not warn about such minutia.
parent_desc=$(grep $md $parent | awk -F'|' "{print \$$x}" | sed -e 's/^ \+//' -e 's/ \+$//' -e 's/\.$//')
if [ "$desc" != "$parent_desc" ]; then
echo
printf "Inconsistent subcommand descriptions:\n"
printf " %-32s = '%s'\n" $md "$desc"
printf " %-32s = '%s'\n" $parent "$parent_desc"
printf "Please ensure that the NAME section of $md\n"
printf "matches the subcommand description in $parent\n"
rc=1
fi
done
# Helper function: compares man page synopsis vs --help usage message
function compare_usage() {
local cmd="$1"
local from_man="$2"
# Sometimes in CI we run before podman gets built.
test -x ../../../bin/podman || return
# Run 'cmd --help', grab the line immediately after 'Usage:'
local help_output=$(../../../bin/$cmd --help)
local from_help=$(echo "$help_output" | grep -A1 '^Usage:' | tail -1)
# strip off command name from both
from_man=$(sed -e "s/\*\*$cmd\*\*[[:space:]]*//" <<<"$from_man")
from_help=$(sed -e "s/^[[:space:]]*${cmd}[[:space:]]*//" <<<"$from_help")
# man page lists 'foo [*options*]', help msg shows 'foo [flags]'.
# Make sure if one has it, the other does too.
if expr "$from_man" : "\[\*options\*\]" >/dev/null; then
if expr "$from_help" : "\[options\]" >/dev/null; then
:
else
echo "WARNING: $cmd: man page shows '[*options*]', help does not show [options]"
rc=1
fi
elif expr "$from_help" : "\[flags\]" >/dev/null; then
echo "WARNING: $cmd: --help shows [flags], man page does not show [*options*]"
rc=1
fi
# Strip off options and flags; start comparing arguments
from_man=$(sed -e 's/^\[\*options\*\][[:space:]]*//' <<<"$from_man")
from_help=$(sed -e 's/^\[flags\][[:space:]]*//' <<<"$from_help")
# Args in man page are '*foo*', in --help are 'FOO'. Convert all to
# UPCASE simply because it stands out better to the eye.
from_man=$(sed -e 's/\*\([a-z-]\+\)\*/\U\1/g' <<<"$from_man")
# FIXME: one of the common patterns is for --help to show 'POD [POD...]'
# but man page show 'pod ...'. This conversion may help one day, but
# not yet: there are too many inconsistencies such as '[pod ...]'
# (brackets) and 'pod...' (no space between).
# from_help=$(sed -e 's/\([A-Z]\+\)[[:space:]]\+\[\1[[:space:]]*\.\.\.\]/\1 .../' <<<"$from_help")
# Compare man-page and --help usage strings. For now, do so only
# when run with --verbose.
if [[ "$from_man" != "$from_help" ]]; then
if [ -n "$verbose" ]; then
printf "%-25s man='%s' help='%s'\n" "$cmd:" "$from_man" "$from_help"
# Yeah, we're not going to enable this as a blocker any time soon.
# rc=1
fi
fi
}
# Pass 3: compare synopses.
#
# Make sure the SYNOPSIS line in podman-foo.1.md reads '**podman foo** ...'
for md in *.1.md;do
# FIXME: several pages have a multi-line form of SYNOPSIS in which
# many or all flags are enumerated. Some of these are trivial
# and really should be made into one line (podman-container-exists,
# container-prune, others); some are more complicated and I
# would still like to see them one-lined (container-runlabel,
# image-trust) but I'm not 100% comfortable doing so myself.
# To view those:
# $ less $(for i in docs/*.1.md;do x=$(grep -A2 '^#* SYNOPSIS' $i|tail -1); if [ -n "$x" ]; then echo $i;fi;done)
#
synopsis=$(egrep -A1 '^#* SYNOPSIS' $md|tail -1)
# Command name must be bracketed by double asterisks; options and
# arguments are bracketed by single ones.
# E.g. '**podman volume inspect** [*options*] *volume*...'
# Get the command name, and confirm that it matches the md file name.
cmd=$(echo "$synopsis" | sed -e 's/\(.*\)\*\*.*/\1/' | tr -d \*)
md_nodash=$(basename "$md" .1.md | tr '-' ' ')
if [[ $md_nodash = 'podman auto update' ]]; then
# special case: the command is "auto-update", with a hyphen
md_nodash='podman auto-update'
fi
if [[ "$cmd" != "$md_nodash" ]] && [[ "$cmd" != "podman-remote" ]]; then
echo
printf "Inconsistent program name in SYNOPSIS in %s:\n" $md
printf " SYNOPSIS = %s (expected: '%s')\n" "$cmd" "$md_nodash"
rc=1
fi
# The convention is to use UPPER CASE in 'podman foo --help',
# but *lower case bracketed by asterisks* in the man page
if expr "$synopsis" : ".*[A-Z]" >/dev/null; then
echo
printf "Inconsistent capitalization in SYNOPSIS in %s\n" $md
printf " '%s' should not contain upper-case characters\n" "$synopsis"
rc=1
fi
# (for debugging, and getting a sense of standard conventions)
#printf " %-32s ------ '%s'\n" $md "$synopsis"
# If bin/podman is available, run "cmd --help" and compare Usage
# messages. This is complicated, so do it in a helper function.
compare_usage "$md_nodash" "$synopsis"
done
exit $rc