# enry [![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/gopkg.in/src-d/enry.v1?status.svg)](https://godoc.org/gopkg.in/src-d/enry.v1) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/src-d/enry.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/src-d/enry) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/src-d/enry/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/src-d/enry) File programming language detector and toolbox to ignore binary or vendored files. *enry*, started as a port to _Go_ of the original [linguist](https://github.com/github/linguist) _Ruby_ library, that has an improved *2x performance*. Installation ------------ The recommended way to install enry is ``` go get gopkg.in/src-d/enry.v1/... ``` To build enry's CLI you must run make build-cli this will generate a binary in the project's root directory called `enry`. You can then move this binary to anywhere in your `PATH`. ### Faster regexp engine (optional) [Oniguruma](https://github.com/kkos/oniguruma) is CRuby's regular expression engine. It is very fast and performs better than the one built into Go runtime. *enry* supports swapping between those two engines thanks to [rubex](https://github.com/moovweb/rubex) project. The typical overall speedup from using Oniguruma is 1.5-2x. However, it requires CGo and the external shared library. On macOS with brew, it is ``` brew install oniguruma ``` On Ubuntu, it is ``` sudo apt install libonig-dev ``` To build enry with Oniguruma regexps use the `oniguruma` build tag ``` go get -v -t --tags oniguruma ./... ``` and then rebuild the project. Examples ------------ ```go lang, safe := enry.GetLanguageByExtension("foo.go") fmt.Println(lang, safe) // result: Go true lang, safe := enry.GetLanguageByContent("foo.m", []byte("")) fmt.Println(lang, safe) // result: Matlab true lang, safe := enry.GetLanguageByContent("bar.m", []byte("")) fmt.Println(lang, safe) // result: Objective-C true // all strategies together lang := enry.GetLanguage("foo.cpp", []byte("")) // result: C++ true ``` Note that the returned boolean value `safe` is set either to `true`, if there is only one possible language detected, or to `false` otherwise. To get a list of possible languages for a given file, you can use the plural version of the detecting functions. ```go langs := enry.GetLanguages("foo.h", []byte("")) // result: []string{"C", "C++", "Objective-C} langs := enry.GetLanguagesByExtension("foo.asc", []byte(""), nil) // result: []string{"AGS Script", "AsciiDoc", "Public Key"} langs := enry.GetLanguagesByFilename("Gemfile", []byte(""), []string{}) // result: []string{"Ruby"} ``` CLI ------------ You can use enry as a command, ```bash $ enry --help enry v1.5.0 build: 10-02-2017_14_01_07 commit: 95ef0a6cf3, based on linguist commit: 37979b2 enry, A simple (and faster) implementation of github/linguist usage: enry enry [-json] [-breakdown] enry [-json] [-breakdown] enry [-version] ``` and it'll return an output similar to *linguist*'s output, ```bash $ enry 55.56% Shell 22.22% Ruby 11.11% Gnuplot 11.11% Go ``` but not only the output; its flags are also the same as *linguist*'s ones, ```bash $ enry --breakdown 55.56% Shell 22.22% Ruby 11.11% Gnuplot 11.11% Go Gnuplot plot-histogram.gp Ruby linguist-samples.rb linguist-total.rb Shell parse.sh plot-histogram.sh run-benchmark.sh run-slow-benchmark.sh run.sh Go parser/main.go ``` even the JSON flag, ```bash $ enry --json {"Gnuplot":["plot-histogram.gp"],"Go":["parser/main.go"],"Ruby":["linguist-samples.rb","linguist-total.rb"],"Shell":["parse.sh","plot-histogram.sh","run-benchmark.sh","run-slow-benchmark.sh","run.sh"]} ``` Note that even if enry's CLI is compatible with linguist's, its main point is that **_enry doesn't need a git repository to work!_** Java bindings ------------ Generated Java bindings using a C-shared library and JNI are located under [`java`](https://github.com/src-d/enry/blob/master/java) Development ------------ *enry* re-uses parts of original [linguist](https://github.com/github/linguist) to generate internal data structures. In order to update to the latest upstream and generate the necessary code you must run: go generate We update enry when changes are done in linguist's master branch on the following files: * [languages.yml](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/languages.yml) * [heuristics.rb](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/heuristics.rb) * [vendor.yml](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/vendor.yml) * [documentation.yml](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/documentation.yml) Currently we don't have any procedure established to automatically detect changes in the linguist project and regenerate the code. So we update the generated code as needed, without any specific criteria. If you want to update *enry* because of changes in linguist, you can run the *go generate* command and do a pull request that only contains the changes in generated files (those files in the subdirectory [data](https://github.com/src-d/enry/blob/master/data)). To run the tests, make test Divergences from linguist ------------ Using [linguist/samples](https://github.com/github/linguist/tree/master/samples) as a set for the tests, the following issues were found: * With [hello.ms](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/samples/Unix%20Assembly/hello.ms) we can't detect the language (Unix Assembly) because we don't have a matcher in contentMatchers (content.go) for Unix Assembly. Linguist uses this [regexp](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/heuristics.rb#L300) in its code, `elsif /(?