On Wed, Oct 01, 2025 at 12:48:36PM +0200, Stefano Brivio wrote: > On Wed, 1 Oct 2025 12:40:09 +0200 > Paul Holzinger wrote: > > > On 01/10/2025 12:23, Stefano Brivio wrote: > > > On Wed, 1 Oct 2025 19:51:58 +1000 > > > David Gibson wrote: > > > > > >> We currently have one test moved to the new exeter based framwork written > > >> in Python. We plan to add many more, so add linting (flake8) and type > > >> checking (mypy) of those scripts. This can be invoked manually with > > >> "make flake8" or "make mypy" in test/, and is also added to the static > > >> checkers test set. > > > I never used a Python linter, so I'm not sure if it's as bad as Go or > > > Rust linters taking the whole poetry away, as it happened for instance > > > in my most recent experience with 'cargo fmt': > > > > > > https://github.com/AsahiLinux/muvm/compare/68094c02c19b6f5d5e3def6d29379c1244c9a5e4..9af11c334a1ce37f533c056d982f8608c8d80d27#diff-e1a95ce380b9a8a317f97cccce1cbfd3dccd343dc62169ed1340208ab304fab9L106 > > > > > > https://github.com/AsahiLinux/muvm/pull/111#discussion_r1863551727 > > > (you need to click around before you get to it, no idea how to share > > > a proper link that opens that comment right away) > > > > Not really on topic for this series but since you brought up rust there > > is actually a "#[rustfmt::skip]" attribute that can be used to skip the > > formatting selectively in case you need it in the future. > > Ah, thanks, I didn't know about it. Now that you mention that, I just > found out that, with flake8, it looks like one can ignore the entire > file with "# flake8: noqa" on a line of its own: Right. More selective suppressions are also possible. I have exactly one in exeter, for a case where I really am doing something odd for testing reasons. Fwiw, I gave up on using pylint, a different linting tool, because it whinged too much. flake8 I've been fairly happy with. -- David Gibson (he or they) | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you, not the other way | around. http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson