Carve out the essentials of your Clojure app.
Carve will search through your code for unused vars and will remove them.
Add to your deps.edn
or bb.edn
:
io.github.borkdude/carve {:git/url "https://github.com/borkdude/carve"
:git/sha "<SHA>"}
where the latest SHA can be found with:
$ git ls-remote https://github.com/borkdude/carve.git refs/heads/master
You can install carve as a babashka script that you can invoke as carve
with:
$ bbin install io.github.borkdude/carve
See bbin for details.
To use as a clojure tool:
$ clj -Ttools install io.github.borkdude/carve '{:git/tag "v0.2.0"}' :as carve
Carve invokes clj-kondo and uses the analysis information to check which vars are unused. To remove the relevant bits of code it uses rewrite-cljc.
The usage for a typical Clojure app looks like:
To see help:
bb -x carve.api/carve! --help
To run with options:
bb -x carve.api/carve! --paths src test
clojure -M:carve --opts --paths src test
on the JVM.
As a clojure tool:
$ clj -Tcarve carve! '{:paths ["src"] :report true :report-format :text}'
Run carve --help
to see options.
You can also store the config for your project in .carve/config.edn
. When
invoking carve with no options, the options in .carve/config.edn
will be used.
When providing options, the CLI options will take precedence over the configuration
in.carve/config.edn
.
Currently carve
only has one command line option, --opts
, which expects an
EDN map or EDN file with the following options of which only :paths
is
required:
:paths
: a list of paths to analyze. Can be a mix of individual files and directories.:ignore-vars
: a list of vars to ignore. Useful for when the analyzer has it wrong or you just want to keep the var for whatever reason.:api-namespaces
: a list of namespaces of which only unused private vars will
be reported.:carve-ignore-file
: a file where ignored vars can be stored, .carve/ignore
by default.:interactive
: ask what to do with an unused var: remove from the file, add
to .carve/ignore
or continue. Set to true
by default.:out-dir
: instead of writing back to the original file, write to this dir.:dry-run
: just print the unused var expression.:aggressive
: runs multiple times until no unused vars are left. Defaults to false
.:report
: when truthy, prints unused vars to stdout. Implies :dry-run true
. The output format may be set using :report {:format ...}
where format
can be :edn
, :text
or :ignore
. The text output can be interpreted by editors like
Emacs. This option can be combined with :aggressive
.:silent
: when truthy, does not write to stdout. Implies :interactive false
.:clj-kondo/config
: a map of clj-kondo config opts that are passed on to
clj-kondo, which is used to analyze usages. e.g.: passing {:skip-comments true}
will ignore function usage in (comment)
forms. Note that the config
in .clj-kondo/config.edn
is used as well - options passed with this key will
override options set in the clj-kondo config file.$ clojure -M:carve --paths "test-resources" --dry-run true
Carving test-resources/app.clj
Found unused var:
(defn unused-function [])
...
Carving test-resources/api.clj
Found unused var:
(defn- private-lib-function [])
...
$ clojure -M:carve --paths "test-resources"
Carving test-resources/app.clj
Found unused var:
(defn unused-function [])
Type Y to remove or i to add app/unused-function to .carve/ignore
n
Found unused var:
(defn another-unused-function [])
Type Y to remove or i to add app/another-unused-function to .carve/ignore
i
...
$ cat .carve/ignore
app/another-unused-function
Keep in mind that if you ran carve
with {:paths ["src" "test"]}
, there might still be potentially lots of unused code, which wasn't detected simply because there are tests for it.
So after a first cycle of carving you might want to do another run with simply {:paths ["src"]}
, which will help deleting the rest of the unused code.
Just beware that this will break all the tests using the code you just deleted, and you'll have to fix/delete them manually.*
Carve also removes any unused refers from namespace :require
forms. This means
any unused refer, not just refers for functions determined to be unused by
carve.
A good use case for Carve is the CI integration, to ensure that no one can introduce dead code into a codebase. This example shows how to add this step into CircleCI, but any other CI configuration will be similar.
First add this configuration into a .circleci/deps.edn
file:
{:aliases
{:carve {:extra-deps {io.github.borkdude/carve {:git/sha "$LATEST_CARVE_SHA"}}
:main-opts ["-m" "carve.main"]}}}
Then configure your build step like this:
find_dead_code:
working_directory: ~/$your-project
docker:
- image: circleci/clojure:openjdk-11-tools-deps
steps:
- checkout
- run: mkdir -p ~/.clojure && cp .circleci/deps.edn ~/.clojure/deps.edn
- run: clojure -M:carve --opts '{:paths ["src" "test"] :report {:format :text}}'
If the report
step finds any dead code it exits with status code 1
, thus failing the build step.
A simple emacs integration is provided by carve.el.
It lets you run carve with a simple key binding and opens a result buffer where you can navigate to the results and add them to your ignore file with a single keystroke.
Running carve with in report mode (for example clojure -M:carve --paths src test --report true --report-format :text}'
) you can make all the links clickable
by switching to compilation-mode.
Using :report-format :ignore
returns the list of unused vars in the same format as .carve/ignore so you can create the initial ignore file or append to an existing one.
For example with:
carve --paths "src" "test" --report true --report-format :ignore' > .carve/ignore
If you want to run tests in Emacs and Cider you need to use the test alias, or
it will fail while trying to load the test.check
library. You can place this in
your .dir-locals.el
file in the root directory to always use the test alias:
((clojure-mode . ((cider-clojure-cli-global-options . "-R:test"))))
or alter the command used by cider-jack-in
by prefixing the invocation with
C-u
.
Copyright © 2019-2023 Michiel Borkent
Distributed under the EPL License. See LICENSE.
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Michiel Borkent, Andrea Crotti, Russell Matney, Lee Read, Oliver Hine, David Harrigan, John Stevenson & Avi FlaxEdit on GitHub
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