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Make inline eval in VS Code aware of project-roots. #1192
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That shouldn't happen, as the full path (package + rule) is used to determine conflicts. So you should definitely be able to have a Anyway, I think the first suggestions would be the most straightforward, as we already have the plumbing in place (project root config options). It won't however solve something like "3 different project roots but one common lib that they all depend on". But since those are not your requirements, we can deal with that later. |
Ah, you are indeed correct, some of our more ancient policies I can see have invalid package namespaces, which then makes sense they cause problems 😁 As the the config/root inheritance part, I will create a separate issue for that, so they can be prioritised and broken down as separate tasks. |
Feel free to create a feature request for that too! The topic of multiple/nested configurations have been discussed before, and while there are some advantages to that, there might also be a risk of things becoming less obvious if configuration is sourced from multiple locations. So at least for the near future, I think we'll want to see how far we can get with project roots as a way of defining multiple projects in a single repo. |
Maybe even support wildcards in project roots config list? That way it could match multiple directories as their own roots without explicitly listing all of them in the config (useful for large codebases) |
Yeah, I guess that makes sense. So something like this: project:
roots:
- projects/* Would mean "every directory in projects is a project root"? Assuming the projects are built as bundles, one option that works today already is putting a bundle |
Currently when using the inline eval in VS code, it includes the whole workspace in its evaluation.
This causes issues for those that have many different project roots that do not import or use each other.
Example workspace:
If any of the policies have rules defined with the same name (yet still different package namespace), eval will fail with the "multiple default rules found" error.
However, in our case, the two services will never use or access eachother, making the error simply prevent us from utilising the VS Code extension to it's full extent.
This also goes for code coverage (failing for same reason).
Suggestions:
config.yaml
to define a "root" config to inherit from..regal
dir with aconfig.yaml
in each of our services in the example above, which then should make them automatically be treated as a project root.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: