When the file isn't world-readable, `brew audit` prints a failure
message including a suggestion to `chmod +r` the file. Unfortunately,
this isn't quite right: with both macOS and coreutils, leaving out the
"who" in a chmod only affects bits which would be set in the umask. So,
if the umask doesn't allow world-readable (which might be why the file
wasn't world-readable in the first place), the suggested chmod command
does nothing.
Change to print `chmod a+r` instead; that does have the intended effect.
No other `chmod` suggestions in this file have the same problem.
- We're moving from `depends_on "python-lxml"` to `resource "lxml" ...` as part
of the new Python vendoring plan.
- For `resource "lxml"` to work, `uses_from_macos "libxml2"` and
`uses_from_macos "libxslt"` are needed in the formulae.
- This new RuboCop rule enforces that a formula including the "lxml" resource
also include those dependencies.
- Use `sort_by` to sort the array, rather than comparing each element
to the next.
- This doesn't error with complaints about clobbering at all when run on
`homebrew/cask`, hurray. And it also handles interpolations correctly,
rather than ignoring them.
Co-authored-by: Bevan Kay <email@bevankay.me>
- Interpolating the version into a path is a common pattern, but the interpolations
trip up the alphabetization autocorrect quite spectacularly, so let's
ignore them (for now?).
- Part of issue 16323.
- Previously this was being done manually by Cask maintainers.
- While we're here, enforce that the `zap trash` path is not in `[]` if
it only contains a single element.
- This is buggy on actual Casks, hence the draft PR.
After some discussion, we decided to change the DSL to get rid of
the `plist_name` and `service_name` methods which aren't meaningful
for most users.
The new DSL looks like this:
```rb
service do
name macos: "name", linux: "name"
end
```
I also updated some specs here to reflect these changes.
There was some talk about maybe deprecating `plist_name` and `service_name`
but I think that's outside of the scope of this PR so I'm leaving
them as is for now. One benefit of this is that everything here is backwards
compatible.
It now checks for two new edge cases.
1. Are the required methods defined in the block?
2. Is the `run` command defined if we're using methods other
than `service_name` or `plist_name`?
It has also been updated to only get the list of method call nodes
once instead of doing it repeatedly for each cellar path check.
- Now that we detect correct stanza _grouping_ within `on_*` blocks in
Casks (PR 15211), correct stanza _ordering_ in `on_*` blocks was the
next logical step. For example, `url` has to come after `version` and
`sha256` in an `on_macos` or `on_intel` block for consistency with the
top-level stanza order we enforce elsewhere.
- Still not doing the nested `on_os` inside `on_arch`, that felt
excessive for an edge case that isn't present in any actual real
Casks we have. I removed the test with that specific TODO.