Rbr
Rbr is a code search tool that parses Ruby code so you can query over certain semantic constructs.
This differs from a file contents search (like grep) in that rbr understands Ruby grammar. This allows you to search your codebase for, say, every place that a method is called without matching the method definition or other occurrences of the method name.
Usage examples
-
Find all assignments to an lvalue named
@author
, but not any other references to that variable.$ rbr assignment :@author test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:5: @author = author
-
Find any int or float with value
5
, but not any strings or comments that contain 5.$ rbr number 5 test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:12: 5
-
Find all strings matching the pattern
/ring/
.$ rbr string ring test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:13: "a string!"
-
Find all literals (int, float, or string) with the value
5
.$ rbr literal 5 test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:12: 5 test/fixtures/book.rb:49: "5"
-
Find all comments matching the pattern
/great/
, but not any uncommented Ruby code.$ rbr comment great test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:1: # This is a great class
-
Find all calls of a method named
great_method
, but not the definition or any other appearances of that identifier.$ rbr method_call :great_method test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:27: book.great_method test/fixtures/book.rb:50: book.send(:great_method)
-
Find statements that update an ActiveRecord model attribute named
title
.$ rbr ar_update :title test/fixtures/book.rb test/fixtures/book.rb:21: book.title = "Great Title" test/fixtures/book.rb:27: book.update!(title: "Great Title") test/fixtures/book.rb:31: book.send(:update_column, :title, "Great Title")
Note that this matcher is necessarily incomplete. For example, a parser alone cannot find situations like the following.
def update_record(attrs) record.update(attrs) end update_record(title: "Great Author")
rbr is the wrong tool for the following situations:
-
Find all appearance of "author" in a codebase.
$ grep "author"
-
Find all occurrences of the symbol
:author
. Symbols are easy to match in Ruby syntax, so you can use grep.$ grep ":author\b"
-
Find the definition of any function named
publish
. Definitions are easy to match in Ruby syntax, so you can use grep.$ grep "def publish\b"
Installation
Rbr is intended to be used as a command-line program. Install the executable rbr
with:
gem install rbr
Development
After checking out the repo, run bundle install
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests or bundle exec rbr
to run the local copy.
License
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.