- Previously I thought that comments were fine to discourage people from
wasting their time trying to bump things that used `undef` that Sorbet
didn't support. But RuboCop is better at this since it'll complain if
the comments are unnecessary.
- Suggested in https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/pull/18018#issuecomment-2283369501.
- I've gone for a mixture of `rubocop:disable` for the files that can't
be `typed: strict` (use of undef, required before everything else, etc)
and `rubocop:todo` for everything else that should be tried to make
strictly typed. There's no functional difference between the two as
`rubocop:todo` is `rubocop:disable` with a different name.
- And I entirely disabled the cop for the docs/ directory since
`typed: strict` isn't going to gain us anything for some Markdown
linting config files.
- This means that now it's easier to track what needs to be done rather
than relying on checklists of files in our big Sorbet issue:
```shell
$ git grep 'typed: true # rubocop:todo Sorbet/StrictSigil' | wc -l
268
```
- And this is confirmed working for new files:
```shell
$ git status
On branch use-rubocop-for-sorbet-strict-sigils
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
Library/Homebrew/bad.rb
Library/Homebrew/good.rb
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
$ brew style
Offenses:
bad.rb:1:1: C: Sorbet/StrictSigil: Sorbet sigil should be at least strict got true.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1340 files inspected, 1 offense detected
```
These were changed to extend to make it easier to determine
where the classes come to in the extended callback but that
means that the file is somewhat inconsistent. On the one
hand we're using class methods and on the other we're extend
self. This cleans that up but now the diff is atrocious and
the blame is even worse. Oh well...
This adds a registry for all modules and classes that
cachable is included in. The registry allows us to
programmatically clear all caches in between tests
so that we don't forget to do that when adding a new
class or refactoring code. The goal here is to reduce
the number of flaky tests in the future.
Download the previously stored tap migrations files for homebrew/core
and homebrew/cask from the formulae.brew.sh API.
This adds a much longer stale time (24 hours) to decide whether or not
the migrations files need downloaded from the API in Ruby land.
`brew update` will still update them every time.
Requires https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/pull/15628
Fixes https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/issues/14897