Skip to content

LMVTFY: Let Me Validate That For You

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

cvrebert/lmvtfy

Repository files navigation

LMVTFY: Let Me Validate That For You

Build Status Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable MIT License

LMVTFY is a service that watches for new issues and new issue comments on a given GitHub repository. If the comments contain (links to) Web examples (e.g. a JSFiddle), the example's HTML is extracted and run thru the HTML5 validator. If there are any validation errors, LMVTFY then posts a comment (such as this one) on the issue pointing out these errors, so that the poster may correct them and/or realize the error of their ways.

Also, you can optionally enable Bootlint integration, which will make LMVTFY run valid HTML documents through Bootlint (via its HTTP API) to check for Bootstrap usage errors.

Affectionately named after LMGTFY.

Supported example types

Live

Non-live

  • GitHub Gist
  • An HTML code block in the Markdown source of the issue comment [Planned]

Motivation

You're a member of a popular open source project that involves front-end Web technologies. Cool.

But due to the project's popularity, you will get some issues reported by newbies who think that they're encountering some bug in your code, when in fact the problem is due to their invalid HTML. And sometimes the validity error is not obvious, so it won't occur to you to try checking their HTML's validity in the first place.

By automating the process of checking the validity of HTML examples, such issues can be resolved more quickly and with less work on the part of issue triagers.

Used by

Usage

Java 8+ is required to run LMVTFY. For instructions on building LMVTFY yourself, see the Contributing docs.

LMVTFY accepts exactly one optional command-line argument, which is the port number to run its HTTP server on, e.g. 8080. If you don't provide this argument, the default port specified in application.conf will be used. Once you've built the JAR, run e.g. java -jar lmvtfy-assembly-1.0.jar 8080 (replace 8080 with whatever port number you want). Note that running on ports <= 1024 requires root privileges (not recommended) or using port mapping.

Other settings live in application.conf. In addition to the normal Akka and Spray settings, LMVTFY offers the following settings:

lmvtfy {
    // Port to run on, if not specified via the command line
    default-port = 8080
    // Log the HTML being validated, for debugging purposes?
    debug-html = false
    // Suppress Spray's logging of malformed HTTP requests/headers?
    // (Enable this to avoid floods in your log output when your LMVTFY instance gets weird requests from crackers.)
    squelch-invalid-http-logging = true
    // If there are fewer than this many requests left before the GitHub API rate limit is hit,
    // then sleep until the rate limit gets replenished.
    github-rate-limit-threshold = 10
    // List of full names of GitHub repos to watch for new issues and new issue comments
    github-repos-to-watch = ["twbs/bootstrap"]
    // Username of the account that reply comments will be posted from
    username = "twbs-lmvtfy"
    // Password for the account that reply comments will be posted from
    password = "not-actually-the-password"
    // This goes in the "Secret" field when setting up the Webhook
    // in the "Webhooks & Services" part of your repo's Settings.
    // This string will be converted to UTF-8 for the HMAC-SHA1 computation.
    // The HMAC is used to verify that LMVTFY is really being contacted by GitHub,
    // and not by some random hacker.
    web-hook-secret-key = "some-random-gibberish-here"
    // Bootlint integration settings
    bootlint {
        // Enable Bootlint integration?
        enabled = true
        // Local port that Bootlint is running on
        port = 7070
    }
}

GitHub webhook configuration

  • Payload URL: http://your-domain.example/lmvtfy
  • Content type: application/json
  • Secret: Same as your web-hook-secret-key config value
  • Which events would you like to trigger this webhook?: "Issues" and "Issue comment"

Deliberately ignored errors

The following validation errors are deliberately ignored by LMVTFY for pragmatic reasons:

  • "An img element must have an alt attribute, except under certain conditions. [...]"
    • This is an accessibility problem, but typically doesn't cause any other problems.
    • Most folks don't include alts for <img>s in live examples since it's almost never relevant to their problem and thus not worth the extra work to add them.
  • "Element head is missing a required instance of child element title."
    • Again, folks often don't include a <title> in live examples since its presence or absence is almost never relevant to their problem and its absence almost never causes any other problems.
  • "Attribute autocomplete not allowed on element [input or button] at this point."
    • This nonstandard usage of the autocomplete attribute is currently the only good workaround for a bizarre Firefox bug.
  • Errors due to the nonstandard <meta> that JSFiddle uses on its pages.
    • "Bad value edit-Type for attribute http-equiv on element meta."
    • "Attribute edit not allowed on element meta at this point."
    • These aren't errors in the JSFiddle user's code, so nothing can be done about them and it's pointless to complain about them.
    • In practice, this nonstandard <meta> causes no problems.

License

LMVTFY is released under the MIT License.

Acknowledgments

We all stand on the shoulders of giants and get by with a little help from our friends. LMVTFY is written in Scala and built on top of:

See also

  • Rorschach, LMVTFY's sister bot who sanity-checks Bootstrap pull requests
  • Savage, LMVTFY's sister bot who runs cross-browser JS tests on Sauce Labs
  • NO CARRIER, LMVTFY's sister bot who closes old abandoned issues

About

LMVTFY: Let Me Validate That For You

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 4

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •