Swallow.Refactor.Execution
4.0.0
dotnet add package Swallow.Refactor.Execution --version 4.0.0
NuGet\Install-Package Swallow.Refactor.Execution -Version 4.0.0
<PackageReference Include="Swallow.Refactor.Execution" Version="4.0.0" />
paket add Swallow.Refactor.Execution --version 4.0.0
#r "nuget: Swallow.Refactor.Execution, 4.0.0"
// Install Swallow.Refactor.Execution as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Swallow.Refactor.Execution&version=4.0.0 // Install Swallow.Refactor.Execution as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Swallow.Refactor.Execution&version=4.0.0
Swallow.Refactor
Refactor goes BRRR!
A tool that was originally designed as a way to enable reliably refactor a big code-base automatically, it has since turned into a generic interface to the Roslyn API to interact with any C# code, be it just reading and analyzing or even modifying.
What's BRRR short for, you ask? Boundless Roslyn Refactoring Runner.
BRRRusage
brrr refactor -s|--solution <solution> code [--filter-name <name>] [--filter-content <content>] <rewriters>
When calling refactor
, instead of passing all rewriters via CLI you can instead pass the path to a JSON file.
This file must match the following scheme:
{
"filter": {
"name": "<some regex>", // A regex that filenames should match, optional
"content": "<some text>" // A text that files should contain, optional
},
"rewriters": [
{ "name": "<some rewriter>" }, // A rewriter without any parameters
{ "name": "<some rewriter>", "parameters": [ "parameter", "parameter" ] } // A rewriter with parameters
]
}
To find out what rewriters are available, you can use brrr rewriter list
and brrr rewriter describe <rewriter>
.
But it doesn't stop there - there's a lot of things you can do. Using brrr asyncify
, for example, allows you to
turn a chain of calls into async calls automatically, fixing any GetAwaiter().GetResult()
-calls along the way.
To see all commands that you can use, run
brrr --help
BRRRinstallation
Building and installing yourself
To install the tool (and thus make it available globally), you can use the following command:
dotnet pack -c Release -o packages/
dotnet tool install --global --no-cache --add-source packages/ Swallow.Refactor
This will make brrr
be a globally executable tool. To uninstall it again, you can execute:
dotnet tool uninstall --global Swallow.Refactor
Installing via NuGet
The tool is published on NuGet as well. To install it from there, you can use the following command:
dotnet tool install --global Swallow.Refactor
BRRRlugins
If you want to use your own rewriters, commands, symbol filters, you name it - you can pass your own assemblies to the execution. They will get picked up and the relevant classes are available in all the use-cases as if they were embedded in the program!
Invoking the tool using the -p
or --plugin
option passing a list of semicolon-separated filepaths will load each assembly.
brrr -p|--plugin SomeAssembly.dll;SomeOtherAssembly.dll list
Using this, you can extend the basic behaviour in many ways, like defining additional commands to be executed or registering
additional IDocumentRewriter
s or ITargetedRewriter
s.
BRRRackages
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net9.0 is compatible. |
-
net9.0
- Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.Abstractions (>= 9.0.0)
- Spectre.Console (>= 0.49.1)
- Spectre.Console.Cli (>= 0.49.1)
- Swallow.Refactor.Abstractions (>= 4.0.0)
NuGet packages (1)
Showing the top 1 NuGet packages that depend on Swallow.Refactor.Execution:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
Swallow.Refactor.Testing
A tool to automatically refactor large swaths of code - the natural continuation of "doing it all by hand" and "tinkering with regexes". You can define a rewriting process and have it executed on many files in a solution - repeatable, testable, predictable. |
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.