Clippy
upload-artifact | Clippy | |
---|---|---|
24 | 120 | |
2,899 | 10,769 | |
2.5% | 0.9% | |
8.2 | 10.0 | |
5 days ago | 4 days ago | |
TypeScript | Rust | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
upload-artifact
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Learning GitHub Actions in a Simple Way
upload-artifact
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GitHub Actions for Jar file deployment
Here, the concept of "upload" is a little confusing. What the GitHub action upload-artifact does is to "copy" the jar file to a publicly accessible folder.
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CI/CI deploy a static website to AWS S3 bucket through Github Actions
The content of the build destination folder folder needs is saved and transferred to the following jobs in the workflow. We do this with the Github actions actions/upload-artifact
- You've used 100% of included services for GitHub Storage
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Building project docs for GitHub Pages
The action for uploading the artifact doesn't do too much, but it takes care of all the nuance around GitHub Pages artifacts specifically. You can view the action's source here. It will tar the path (provided by the with option) and then call the upload artifact action. The artifact's name is github-pages and has a 1 day expiration. This artifact has the name and format required for the deploy action. It all just works (so far).
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A guide to using act with GitHub Actions
β getting-started-with-act git:(master) act -j build WARN β You are using Apple M1 chip and you have not specified container architecture, you might encounter issues while running act. If so, try running it with '--container-architecture linux/amd64'. β [Node.js CI/build] π Start image=node:16-buster-slim [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker pull image=node:16-buster-slim platform= username= forcePull=false [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker create image=node:16-buster-slim platform= entrypoint=["tail" "-f" "/dev/null"] cmd=[] [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker run image=node:16-buster-slim platform= entrypoint=["tail" "-f" "/dev/null"] cmd=[] [Node.js CI/build] β git clone 'https://github.com/actions/setup-node' # ref=v3 [Node.js CI/build] β git clone 'https://github.com/actions/cache' # ref=v3 [Node.js CI/build] β git clone 'https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact' # ref=v3 [Node.js CI/build] β Run Main actions/checkout@v3 [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker cp src=/Users/andrewevans/Documents/projects/getting-started-with-act/. dst=/Users/andrewevans/Documents/projects/getting-started-with-act [Node.js CI/build] β Success - Main actions/checkout@v3 [Node.js CI/build] β Run Main Use Node.js 16.x [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker cp src=/Users/andrewevans/.cache/act/actions-setup-node@v3/ dst=/var/run/act/actions/actions-setup-node@v3/ [Node.js CI/build] π³ docker exec cmd=[node /var/run/act/actions/actions-setup-node@v3/dist/setup/index.js] user= workdir= [Node.js CI/build] π¬ ::debug::isExplicit: [Node.js CI/build] π¬ ::debug::explicit? false
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Using Github Actions to publish your Flutter APP to Firebase App Distribution
Notice that already known commands like flutter pub get and flutter build apk (apk in case of Android; aab in case of iOS) now it shows up on our workflow. But, to upload the generated app file (artifact), we'll need to use the action upload-artifact@v1 and parse the build path which it will be storing the app file.
- github action para deploy de app vuejs 3
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How do I write the GitHub release workflow for multiple OSs?
So the uploading will likely be done by upload artifact. Then you'll likely want to use a matrix build/package your tool across different OS's.
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Automate Android Build Using GitHub Actions
Artifacts are files like APKs, screenshots, test reports, logs, which the workflow generates. You can upload and download artifacts to the current workflow using actions/upload-artifact@v2 and actions/download-artifact@v2 respectively.
Clippy
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More than you've ever wanted to know about errors in Rust
I couldn't find it in the API guidelines either. From what I understand, the idea is that any trait bounds, which includes generic type parameter bounds and lifetime bound on a type (struct or enum) would be repeated back in the impl block
there is a nice discussion on this issue here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/1689
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New clippy lint: detecting `&mut` which could be `&` in function arguments
You should not blindly follow clippy lints. They are sometimes wrong. Another example https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9782 .
- Let else will finally be formatted by rustfmt soon
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My deduplication solution written in Rust beats everything else: casync, borg...
I often write () = f() to assert that f() is unit. Unfortunately clippy warns on such code ( https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9048 ). There are very recent pull requests for this bug, so hopefully this bug will be fixed very soon. But meanwhile I invented this workaround: [()] = [f()] :)
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Any open source projects willing to take in juniors?
Apart from running clippy on many projects being essential, clippy is also an exceptionally welcoming project, no matter your prior knowledge.
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Any new Opensource projects in (rust) looking for contributors. I want to start my journey as an OSS contributor.
clippy is a great place to get started :) though it isn't exactly new.
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I want to contribute in a big project
clippy is also pretty compiler-adjacent and unlike rust-analyzer uses rustc's internal APIs. Don't let the size of the code base scare you off! It's actually feasible for a newcomer to contribute even such a substantial change as a new lint, and we have issues labeled as "good first issue" that come with mentorship, so you don't need to go it alone.
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rustc-plugin: A framework for writing plugins that integrate with the Rust compiler
Yes, you could use it to write a lint. Although you might find it easier to just fork Clippy and add your own lints to their existing framework.
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Reading Rust
Check out the readme for more information.
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Rust Tips and Tricks #PartOne
They are two of my favorite Rust tools. If you havenβt tried them yet, I highly recommend giving them a try. Clippy can detect various lints in your code and guide you towards writing more idiomatic code. To install Clippy, simply run rustup component add clippy, and to run it within your workspace, execute cargo clippy. For more details, visit Clippyβs GitHub repository.
What are some alternatives?
cache - Cache dependencies and build outputs in GitHub Actions
rustfmt - Format Rust code
jacoco-badge-generator - Coverage badges, and pull request coverage checks, from JaCoCo reports in GitHub Actions
vscode-rust
publish-unit-test-result-action - GitHub Action to publish unit test results on GitHub
rust.vim - Vim configuration for Rust.
flutter-action - Flutter environment for use in GitHub Actions. It works on Linux, Windows, and macOS.
rust-analyzer - A Rust compiler front-end for IDEs [Moved to: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer]
github-action-sanity
Rust for Visual Studio Code
metadata-action - GitHub Action to extract metadata (tags, labels) from Git reference and GitHub events for Docker
intellij-rust - Rust plugin for the IntelliJ Platform