Provided by: yamllint_1.10.0-1_all
NAME
yamllint - A linter for YAML files. yamllint does not only check for syntax validity, but for weirdnesses like key repetition and cosmetic problems such as lines length, trailing spaces, indentation, etc.
SCREENSHOT
[image: yamllint screenshot] [image] NOTE: The default output format is inspired by eslint, a great linting tool for Javascript.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Quickstart Installing yamllint On Fedora / CentOS: sudo dnf install yamllint On Debian 8+ / Ubuntu 16.04+: sudo apt-get install yamllint On older Debian / Ubuntu versions: sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:adrienverge/ppa && sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install yamllint Alternatively using pip, the Python package manager: sudo pip install yamllint If you prefer installing from source, you can run, from the source directory: python setup.py sdist sudo pip install dist/yamllint-*.tar.gz Running yamllint Basic usage: yamllint file.yml other-file.yaml You can also lint all YAML files in a whole directory: yamllint . The output will look like (colors are not displayed here): file.yml 1:4 error trailing spaces (trailing-spaces) 4:4 error wrong indentation: expected 4 but found 3 (indentation) 5:4 error duplication of key "id-00042" in mapping (key-duplicates) 6:6 warning comment not indented like content (comments-indentation) 12:6 error too many spaces after hyphen (hyphens) 15:12 error too many spaces before comma (commas) other-file.yaml 1:1 warning missing document start "---" (document-start) 6:81 error line too long (87 > 80 characters) (line-length) 10:1 error too many blank lines (4 > 2) (empty-lines) 11:4 error too many spaces inside braces (braces) Add the -f parsable arguments if you need an output format parsable by a machine (for instance for syntax highlighting in text editors). The output will then look like: file.yml:6:2: [warning] missing starting space in comment (comments) file.yml:57:1: [error] trailing spaces (trailing-spaces) file.yml:60:3: [error] wrong indentation: expected 4 but found 2 (indentation) If you have a custom linting configuration file (see how to configure yamllint), it can be passed to yamllint using the -c option: yamllint -c ~/myconfig file.yaml NOTE: If you have a .yamllint file in your working directory, it will be automatically loaded as configuration by yamllint. Configuration yamllint uses a set of rules to check source files for problems. Each rule is independent from the others, and can be enabled, disabled or tweaked. All these settings can be gathered in a configuration file. To use a custom configuration file, use the -c option: yamllint -c /path/to/myconfig file-to-lint.yaml If -c is not provided, yamllint will look for a configuration file in the following locations (by order of preference): • .yamllint in the current working directory • $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/yamllint/config • ~/.config/yamllint/config Finally if no config file is found, the default configuration is applied. Default configuration Unless told otherwise, yamllint uses its default configuration: --- rules: braces: min-spaces-inside: 0 max-spaces-inside: 0 min-spaces-inside-empty: -1 max-spaces-inside-empty: -1 brackets: min-spaces-inside: 0 max-spaces-inside: 0 min-spaces-inside-empty: -1 max-spaces-inside-empty: -1 colons: max-spaces-before: 0 max-spaces-after: 1 commas: max-spaces-before: 0 min-spaces-after: 1 max-spaces-after: 1 comments: level: warning require-starting-space: true min-spaces-from-content: 2 comments-indentation: level: warning document-end: disable document-start: level: warning present: true empty-lines: max: 2 max-start: 0 max-end: 0 empty-values: forbid-in-block-mappings: false forbid-in-flow-mappings: false hyphens: max-spaces-after: 1 indentation: spaces: consistent indent-sequences: true check-multi-line-strings: false key-duplicates: enable key-ordering: disable line-length: max: 80 allow-non-breakable-words: true allow-non-breakable-inline-mappings: false new-line-at-end-of-file: enable new-lines: type: unix trailing-spaces: enable truthy: level: warning Details on rules can be found on the rules page. There is another pre-defined configuration named relaxed. As its name suggests, it is more tolerant: --- extends: default rules: braces: level: warning max-spaces-inside: 1 brackets: level: warning max-spaces-inside: 1 colons: level: warning commas: level: warning comments: disable comments-indentation: disable document-start: disable empty-lines: level: warning hyphens: level: warning indentation: level: warning indent-sequences: consistent line-length: level: warning allow-non-breakable-inline-mappings: true truthy: disable It can be chosen using: yamllint -d relaxed file.yml Extending the default configuration When writing a custom configuration file, you don’t need to redefine every rule. Just extend the default configuration (or any already-existing configuration file). For instance, if you just want to disable the comments-indentation rule, your file could look like this: # This is my first, very own configuration file for yamllint! # It extends the default conf by adjusting some options. extends: default rules: comments-indentation: disable # don't bother me with this rule Similarly, if you want to set the line-length rule as a warning and be less strict on block sequences indentation: extends: default rules: # 80 chars should be enough, but don't fail if a line is longer line-length: max: 80 level: warning # accept both key: # - item # # and key: # - item indentation: indent-sequences: whatever Custom configuration without a config file It is possible – although not recommended – to pass custom configuration options to yamllint with the -d (short for --config-data) option. Its content can either be the name of a pre-defined conf (example: default or relaxed) or a serialized YAML object describing the configuration. For instance: yamllint -d "{extends: relaxed, rules: {line-length: {max: 120}}}" file.yaml Errors and warnings Problems detected by yamllint can be raised either as errors or as warnings. The CLI will output them (with different colors when using the standard output format). By default the script will exit with a return code 1 only when there is one or more error(s). However if strict mode is enabled with the -s (or --strict) option, the return code will be: • 0 if no errors or warnings occur • 1 if one or more errors occur • 2 if no errors occur, but one or more warnings occur Ignoring paths It is possible to exclude specific files or directories, so that the linter doesn’t process them. You can either totally ignore files (they won’t be looked at): extends: default ignore: | /this/specific/file.yaml /all/this/directory/ *.template.yaml or ignore paths only for specific rules: extends: default rules: trailing-spaces: ignore: | /this-file-has-trailing-spaces-but-it-is-OK.yaml /generated/*.yaml Note that this .gitignore-style path pattern allows complex path exclusion/inclusion, see the pathspec README file for more details. Here is a more complex example: # For all rules ignore: | *.dont-lint-me.yaml /bin/ !/bin/*.lint-me-anyway.yaml extends: default rules: key-duplicates: ignore: | generated *.template.yaml trailing-spaces: ignore: | *.ignore-trailing-spaces.yaml /ascii-art/* Rules When linting a document with yamllint, a series of rules (such as line-length, trailing-spaces, etc.) are checked against. A configuration file can be used to enable or disable these rules, to set their level (error or warning), but also to tweak their options. This page describes the rules and their options. List of rules • braces • brackets • colons • commas • comments • comments-indentation • document-end • document-start • empty-lines • empty-values • hyphens • indentation • key-duplicates • key-ordering • line-length • new-line-at-end-of-file • new-lines • trailing-spaces • truthy braces Use this rule to control the number of spaces inside braces ({ and }). Options.INDENT 0.0 • min-spaces-inside defines the minimal number of spaces required inside braces. • max-spaces-inside defines the maximal number of spaces allowed inside braces. • min-spaces-inside-empty defines the minimal number of spaces required inside empty braces. • max-spaces-inside-empty defines the maximal number of spaces allowed inside empty braces. 1. With braces: {min-spaces-inside: 0, max-spaces-inside: 0} the following code snippet would PASS: object: {key1: 4, key2: 8} the following code snippet would FAIL: object: { key1: 4, key2: 8 } 2. With braces: {min-spaces-inside: 1, max-spaces-inside: 3} the following code snippet would PASS: object: { key1: 4, key2: 8 } the following code snippet would PASS: object: { key1: 4, key2: 8 } the following code snippet would FAIL: object: { key1: 4, key2: 8 } the following code snippet would FAIL: object: {key1: 4, key2: 8 } 3. With braces: {min-spaces-inside-empty: 0, max-spaces-inside-empty: 0} the following code snippet would PASS: object: {} the following code snippet would FAIL: object: { } 4. With braces: {min-spaces-inside-empty: 1, max-spaces-inside-empty: -1} the following code snippet would PASS: object: { } the following code snippet would FAIL: object: {} brackets Use this rule to control the number of spaces inside brackets ([ and ]). Options.INDENT 0.0 • min-spaces-inside defines the minimal number of spaces required inside brackets. • max-spaces-inside defines the maximal number of spaces allowed inside brackets. • min-spaces-inside-empty defines the minimal number of spaces required inside empty brackets. • max-spaces-inside-empty defines the maximal number of spaces allowed inside empty brackets. 1. With brackets: {min-spaces-inside: 0, max-spaces-inside: 0} the following code snippet would PASS: object: [1, 2, abc] the following code snippet would FAIL: object: [ 1, 2, abc ] 2. With brackets: {min-spaces-inside: 1, max-spaces-inside: 3} the following code snippet would PASS: object: [ 1, 2, abc ] the following code snippet would PASS: object: [ 1, 2, abc ] the following code snippet would FAIL: object: [ 1, 2, abc ] the following code snippet would FAIL: object: [1, 2, abc ] 3. With brackets: {min-spaces-inside-empty: 0, max-spaces-inside-empty: 0} the following code snippet would PASS: object: [] the following code snippet would FAIL: object: [ ] 4. With brackets: {min-spaces-inside-empty: 1, max-spaces-inside-empty: -1} the following code snippet would PASS: object: [ ] the following code snippet would FAIL: object: [] colons Use this rule to control the number of spaces before and after colons (:). Options.INDENT 0.0 • max-spaces-before defines the maximal number of spaces allowed before colons (use -1 to disable). • max-spaces-after defines the maximal number of spaces allowed after colons (use -1 to disable). 1. With colons: {max-spaces-before: 0, max-spaces-after: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: object: - a - b key: value 2. With colons: {max-spaces-before: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: object : - a - b the following code snippet would FAIL: object : - a - b 3. With colons: {max-spaces-after: 2} the following code snippet would PASS: first: 1 second: 2 third: 3 the following code snippet would FAIL: first: 1 2nd: 2 third: 3 commas Use this rule to control the number of spaces before and after commas (,). Options.INDENT 0.0 • max-spaces-before defines the maximal number of spaces allowed before commas (use -1 to disable). • min-spaces-after defines the minimal number of spaces required after commas. • max-spaces-after defines the maximal number of spaces allowed after commas (use -1 to disable). 1. With commas: {max-spaces-before: 0} the following code snippet would PASS: strange var: [10, 20, 30, {x: 1, y: 2}] the following code snippet would FAIL: strange var: [10, 20 , 30, {x: 1, y: 2}] 2. With commas: {max-spaces-before: 2} the following code snippet would PASS: strange var: [10 , 20 , 30, {x: 1 , y: 2}] 3. With commas: {max-spaces-before: -1} the following code snippet would PASS: strange var: [10, 20 , 30 , {x: 1, y: 2}] 4. With commas: {min-spaces-after: 1, max-spaces-after: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: strange var: [10, 20,30, {x: 1, y: 2}] the following code snippet would FAIL: strange var: [10, 20,30, {x: 1, y: 2}] 5. With commas: {min-spaces-after: 1, max-spaces-after: 3} the following code snippet would PASS: strange var: [10, 20, 30, {x: 1, y: 2}] 6. With commas: {min-spaces-after: 0, max-spaces-after: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: strange var: [10, 20,30, {x: 1, y: 2}] comments Use this rule to control the position and formatting of comments. Options.INDENT 0.0 • Use require-starting-space to require a space character right after the #. Set to true to enable, false to disable. • min-spaces-from-content is used to visually separate inline comments from content. It defines the minimal required number of spaces between a comment and its preceding content. 1. With comments: {require-starting-space: true} the following code snippet would PASS: # This sentence # is a block comment the following code snippet would PASS: ############################## ## This is some documentation the following code snippet would FAIL: #This sentence #is a block comment 2. With comments: {min-spaces-from-content: 2} the following code snippet would PASS: x = 2 ^ 127 - 1 # Mersenne prime number the following code snippet would FAIL: x = 2 ^ 127 - 1 # Mersenne prime number comments-indentation Use this rule to force comments to be indented like content. Examples.INDENT 0.0 1. With comments-indentation: {} the following code snippet would PASS: # Fibonacci [0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5] the following code snippet would FAIL: # Fibonacci [0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5] the following code snippet would PASS: list: - 2 - 3 # - 4 - 5 the following code snippet would FAIL: list: - 2 - 3 # - 4 - 5 the following code snippet would PASS: # This is the first object obj1: - item A # - item B # This is the second object obj2: [] the following code snippet would PASS: # This sentence # is a block comment the following code snippet would FAIL: # This sentence # is a block comment document-end Use this rule to require or forbid the use of document end marker (...). Options.INDENT 0.0 • Set present to true when the document end marker is required, or to false when it is forbidden. 1. With document-end: {present: true} the following code snippet would PASS: --- this: is: [a, document] ... --- - this - is: another one ... the following code snippet would FAIL: --- this: is: [a, document] --- - this - is: another one ... 2. With document-end: {present: false} the following code snippet would PASS: --- this: is: [a, document] --- - this - is: another one the following code snippet would FAIL: --- this: is: [a, document] ... --- - this - is: another one document-start Use this rule to require or forbid the use of document start marker (---). Options.INDENT 0.0 • Set present to true when the document start marker is required, or to false when it is forbidden. 1. With document-start: {present: true} the following code snippet would PASS: --- this: is: [a, document] --- - this - is: another one the following code snippet would FAIL: this: is: [a, document] --- - this - is: another one 2. With document-start: {present: false} the following code snippet would PASS: this: is: [a, document] ... the following code snippet would FAIL: --- this: is: [a, document] ... empty-lines Use this rule to set a maximal number of allowed consecutive blank lines. Options.INDENT 0.0 • max defines the maximal number of empty lines allowed in the document. • max-start defines the maximal number of empty lines allowed at the beginning of the file. This option takes precedence over max. • max-end defines the maximal number of empty lines allowed at the end of the file. This option takes precedence over max. 1. With empty-lines: {max: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: - foo: - 1 - 2 - bar: [3, 4] the following code snippet would FAIL: - foo: - 1 - 2 - bar: [3, 4] empty-values Use this rule to prevent nodes with empty content, that implicitly result in null values. Options.INDENT 0.0 • Use forbid-in-block-mappings to prevent empty values in block mappings. • Use forbid-in-flow-mappings to prevent empty values in flow mappings. 1. With empty-values: {forbid-in-block-mappings: true} the following code snippets would PASS: some-mapping: sub-element: correctly indented explicitly-null: null the following code snippets would FAIL: some-mapping: sub-element: incorrectly indented implicitly-null: 2. With empty-values: {forbid-in-flow-mappings: true} the following code snippet would PASS: {prop: null} {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3} the following code snippets would FAIL: {prop: } {a: 1, b:, c: 3} hyphens Use this rule to control the number of spaces after hyphens (-). Options.INDENT 0.0 • max-spaces-after defines the maximal number of spaces allowed after hyphens. 1. With hyphens: {max-spaces-after: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: - first list: - a - b - - 1 - 2 - 3 the following code snippet would FAIL: - first list: - a - b the following code snippet would FAIL: - - 1 - 2 - 3 2. With hyphens: {max-spaces-after: 3} the following code snippet would PASS: - key - key2 - key42 the following code snippet would FAIL: - key - key2 - key42 indentation Use this rule to control the indentation. Options.INDENT 0.0 • spaces defines the indentation width, in spaces. Set either to an integer (e.g. 2 or 4, representing the number of spaces in an indentation level) or to consistent to allow any number, as long as it remains the same within the file. • indent-sequences defines whether block sequences should be indented or not (when in a mapping, this indentation is not mandatory – some people perceive the - as part of the indentation). Possible values: true, false, whatever and consistent. consistent requires either all block sequences to be indented, or none to be. whatever means either indenting or not indenting individual block sequences is OK. • check-multi-line-strings defines whether to lint indentation in multi-line strings. Set to true to enable, false to disable. 1. With indentation: {spaces: 1} the following code snippet would PASS: history: - name: Unix date: 1969 - name: Linux date: 1991 nest: recurse: - haystack: needle 2. With indentation: {spaces: 4} the following code snippet would PASS: history: - name: Unix date: 1969 - name: Linux date: 1991 nest: recurse: - haystack: needle the following code snippet would FAIL: history: - name: Unix date: 1969 - name: Linux date: 1991 nest: recurse: - haystack: needle 3. With indentation: {spaces: consistent} the following code snippet would PASS: history: - name: Unix date: 1969 - name: Linux date: 1991 nest: recurse: - haystack: needle the following code snippet would FAIL: some: Russian: dolls 4. With indentation: {spaces: 2, indent-sequences: false} the following code snippet would PASS: list: - flying - spaghetti - monster the following code snippet would FAIL: list: - flying - spaghetti - monster 5. With indentation: {spaces: 2, indent-sequences: whatever} the following code snippet would PASS: list: - flying: - spaghetti - monster - not flying: - spaghetti - sauce 6. With indentation: {spaces: 2, indent-sequences: consistent} the following code snippet would PASS: - flying: - spaghetti - monster - not flying: - spaghetti - sauce the following code snippet would FAIL: - flying: - spaghetti - monster - not flying: - spaghetti - sauce 7. With indentation: {spaces: 4, check-multi-line-strings: true} the following code snippet would PASS: Blaise Pascal: Je vous écris une longue lettre parce que je n'ai pas le temps d'en écrire une courte. the following code snippet would PASS: Blaise Pascal: Je vous écris une longue lettre parce que je n'ai pas le temps d'en écrire une courte. the following code snippet would FAIL: Blaise Pascal: Je vous écris une longue lettre parce que je n'ai pas le temps d'en écrire une courte. the following code snippet would FAIL: C code: void main() { printf("foo"); } the following code snippet would PASS: C code: void main() { printf("bar"); } key-duplicates Use this rule to prevent multiple entries with the same key in mappings. Examples.INDENT 0.0 1. With key-duplicates: {} the following code snippet would PASS: - key 1: v key 2: val key 3: value - {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3} the following code snippet would FAIL: - key 1: v key 2: val key 1: value the following code snippet would FAIL: - {a: 1, b: 2, b: 3} the following code snippet would FAIL: duplicated key: 1 "duplicated key": 2 other duplication: 1 ? >- other duplication : 2 key-ordering Use this rule to enforce alphabetical ordering of keys in mappings. The sorting order uses the Unicode code point number. As a result, the ordering is case-sensitive and not accent-friendly (see examples below). Examples.INDENT 0.0 1. With key-ordering: {} the following code snippet would PASS: - key 1: v key 2: val key 3: value - {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3} - T-shirt: 1 T-shirts: 2 t-shirt: 3 t-shirts: 4 - hair: true hais: true haïr: true haïssable: true the following code snippet would FAIL: - key 2: v key 1: val the following code snippet would FAIL: - {b: 1, a: 2} the following code snippet would FAIL: - T-shirt: 1 t-shirt: 2 T-shirts: 3 t-shirts: 4 the following code snippet would FAIL: - haïr: true hais: true line-length Use this rule to set a limit to lines length. Options.INDENT 0.0 • max defines the maximal (inclusive) length of lines. • allow-non-breakable-words is used to allow non breakable words (without spaces inside) to overflow the limit. This is useful for long URLs, for instance. Use true to allow, false to forbid. • allow-non-breakable-inline-mappings implies allow-non-breakable-words and extends it to also allow non-breakable words in inline mappings. 1. With line-length: {max: 70} the following code snippet would PASS: long sentence: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. the following code snippet would FAIL: long sentence: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. 2. With line-length: {max: 60, allow-non-breakable-words: true} the following code snippet would PASS: this: is: - a: http://localhost/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/long/url # this comment is too long, # but hard to split: # http://localhost/another/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/long/url the following code snippet would FAIL: - this line is waaaaaaaaaaaaaay too long but could be easily split... and the following code snippet would also FAIL: - foobar: http://localhost/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/long/url 3. With line-length: {max: 60, allow-non-breakable-words: true, allow-non-breakable-inline-mappings: true} the following code snippet would PASS: - foobar: http://localhost/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/long/url 4. With line-length: {max: 60, allow-non-breakable-words: false} the following code snippet would FAIL: this: is: - a: http://localhost/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/very/long/url new-line-at-end-of-file Use this rule to require a new line character (\n) at the end of files. The POSIX standard requires the last line to end with a new line character. All UNIX tools expect a new line at the end of files. Most text editors use this convention too. new-lines Use this rule to force the type of new line characters. Options.INDENT 0.0 • Set type to unix to use UNIX-typed new line characters (\n), or dos to use DOS-typed new line characters (\r\n). trailing-spaces Use this rule to forbid trailing spaces at the end of lines. Examples.INDENT 0.0 1. With trailing-spaces: {} the following code snippet would PASS: this document doesn't contain any trailing spaces the following code snippet would FAIL: this document contains trailing spaces on lines 1 and 3 truthy Use this rule to forbid truthy values that are not quoted nor explicitly typed. This would prevent YAML parsers from transforming [yes, FALSE, Off] into [true, false, false] or {y: 1, yes: 2, on: 3, true: 4, True: 5} into {y: 1, true: 5}. Examples.INDENT 0.0 1. With truthy: {} the following code snippet would PASS: boolean: true object: {"True": 1, 1: "True"} "yes": 1 "on": 2 "true": 3 "True": 4 explicit: string1: !!str True string2: !!str yes string3: !!str off encoded: !!binary | True OFF pad== # this decodes as 'N»8Qii' boolean1: !!bool true boolean2: !!bool "false" boolean3: !!bool FALSE boolean4: !!bool True boolean5: !!bool off boolean6: !!bool NO the following code snippet would FAIL: object: {True: 1, 1: True} the following code snippet would FAIL: yes: 1 on: 2 true: 3 True: 4 Disable with comments Disabling checks for a specific line To prevent yamllint from reporting problems for a specific line, add a directive comment (# yamllint disable-line ...) on that line, or on the line above. For instance: # The following mapping contains the same key twice, # but I know what I'm doing: key: value 1 key: value 2 # yamllint disable-line rule:key-duplicates - This line is waaaaaaaaaay too long but yamllint will not report anything about it. # yamllint disable-line rule:line-length This line will be checked by yamllint. or: # The following mapping contains the same key twice, # but I know what I'm doing: key: value 1 # yamllint disable-line rule:key-duplicates key: value 2 # yamllint disable-line rule:line-length - This line is waaaaaaaaaay too long but yamllint will not report anything about it. This line will be checked by yamllint. It is possible, although not recommend, to disabled all rules for a specific line: # yamllint disable-line - { all : rules ,are disabled for this line} If you need to disable multiple rules, it is allowed to chain rules like this: # yamllint disable-line rule:hyphens rule:commas rule:indentation. Disabling checks for all (or part of) the file To prevent yamllint from reporting problems for the whole file, or for a block of lines within the file, use # yamllint disable ... and # yamllint enable # yamllint disable rule:colons - Lorem : ipsum dolor : sit amet, consectetur : adipiscing elit # yamllint enable rule:colons - rest of the document... It is possible, although not recommend, to disabled all rules: # yamllint disable - Lorem : ipsum: dolor : [ sit,amet] - consectetur : adipiscing elit # yamllint enable If you need to disable multiple rules, it is allowed to chain rules like this: # yamllint disable rule:hyphens rule:commas rule:indentation. Development yamllint provides both a script and a Python module. The latter can be used to write your own linting tools: class yamllint.linter.LintProblem(line, column, desc='<no description>', rule=None) Represents a linting problem found by yamllint. column = None Column on which the problem was found (starting at 1) desc = None Human-readable description of the problem line = None Line on which the problem was found (starting at 1) rule = None Identifier of the rule that detected the problem yamllint.linter.run(input, conf, filepath=None) Lints a YAML source. Returns a generator of LintProblem objects. Parameters • input – buffer, string or stream to read from • conf – yamllint configuration object Integration with text editors Most text editors support syntax checking and highlighting, to visually report syntax errors and warnings to the user. yamllint can be used to syntax-check YAML source, but a bit of configuration is required depending on your favorite text editor. Vim Assuming that the ALE plugin is installed, yamllint is supported by default. It is automatically enabled when editing YAML files. If you instead use the syntastic plugin, add this to your .vimrc: let g:syntastic_yaml_checkers = ['yamllint'] Neovim Assuming that the neomake plugin is installed, yamllint is supported by default. It is automatically enabled when editing YAML files. Emacs If you are flycheck user, you can use flycheck-yamllint integration. Other text editors Help wanted! Your favorite text editor is not listed here? Help us improve by adding a section (by opening a pull-request or issue on GitHub). Integration with other software Integration with pre-commit You can integrate yamllint in pre-commit tool. Here is an example, to add in your .pre-commit-config.yaml --- # Update the sha variable with the release version that you want, from the yamllint repo - repo: https://github.com/adrienverge/yamllint.git sha: v1.8.1 hooks: - id: yamllint
AUTHOR
Adrien Vergé
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2016, Adrien Vergé