4.4 KiB
Dealing with code issues
Psalm has a large number of code issues. Each project can specify its own reporting level for a given issue.
Code issue levels in Psalm fall into three categories:
-
error
This will cause Psalm to print a message, and to ultimately terminate with a non-zero exit status -
info
This will cause Psalm to print a message -
suppress
This will cause Psalm to ignore the code issue entirely
The third category, suppress
, is the one you will probably be most interested in, especially when introducing Psalm to a large codebase.
Suppressing issues
There are two ways to suppress an issue – via the Psalm config or via a function docblock.
Config suppression
You can use the <issueHandlers>
tag in the config file to influence how issues are treated.
Some issue types allow the use of referencedMethod
, referencedClass
or referencedVariable
to isolate known trouble spots.
<issueHandlers>
<MissingPropertyType errorLevel="suppress" />
<InvalidReturnType>
<errorLevel type="suppress">
<directory name="some_bad_directory" /> <!-- all InvalidReturnType issues in this directory are suppressed -->
<file name="some_bad_file.php" /> <!-- all InvalidReturnType issues in this file are suppressed -->
</errorLevel>
</InvalidReturnType>
<UndefinedMethod>
<errorLevel type="suppress">
<referencedMethod name="Bar\Bat::bar" />
<file name="some_bad_file.php" />
</errorLevel>
</UndefinedMethod>
<UndefinedClass>
<errorLevel type="suppress">
<referencedClass name="Bar\Bat\Baz" />
</errorLevel>
</UndefinedClass>
<PropertyNotSetInConstructor>
<errorLevel type="suppress">
<referencedProperty name="Symfony\Component\Validator\ConstraintValidator::$context" />
</errorLevel>
</PropertyNotSetInConstructor>
<UndefinedGlobalVariable>
<errorLevel type="suppress">
<referencedVariable name="$fooBar" /> <!-- if your variable is "$fooBar" -->
</errorLevel>
</UndefinedGlobalVariable>
</issueHandlers>
Docblock suppression
You can also use @psalm-suppress IssueName
on a function's docblock to suppress Psalm issues e.g.
<?php
/**
* @psalm-suppress InvalidReturnType
*/
function (int $a) : string {
return $a;
}
You can also suppress issues at the line level e.g.
<?php
/**
* @psalm-suppress InvalidReturnType
*/
function (int $a) : string {
/**
* @psalm-suppress InvalidReturnStatement
*/
return $a;
}
If you wish to suppress all issues, you can use @psalm-suppress all
instead of multiple annotations.
Using a baseline file
If you have a bunch of errors and you don't want to fix them all at once, Psalm can grandfather-in errors in existing code, while ensuring that new code doesn't have those same sorts of errors.
vendor/bin/psalm --set-baseline=your-baseline.xml
will generate a file containing the current errors. You can commit that generated file so that Psalm running in other places (e.g. CI) won't complain about those errors either, and you can update that baseline file (to remove references to things that have been fixed) with
vendor/bin/psalm --update-baseline
Baseline files are a great way to gradually improve a codebase.
Using a plugin
If you want something more custom, like suppressing a certain type of error on classes that implement a particular interface, you can use a plugin that implements AfterClassLikeVisitInterface
<?php
namespace Foo\Bar;
use PhpParser\Node;
use Psalm\Codebase;
use Psalm\FileSource;
use Psalm\Plugin\Hook\AfterClassLikeVisitInterface;
use Psalm\Storage\ClassLikeStorage;
use ReflectionClass;
/**
* Suppress issues dynamically based on interface implementation
*/
class DynamicallySuppressClassIssueBasedOnInterface implements AfterClassLikeVisitInterface
{
public static function afterClassLikeVisit(
Node\Stmt\ClassLike $stmt,
ClassLikeStorage $storage,
FileSource $statements_source,
Codebase $codebase,
array &$file_replacements = []
)
{
if ($storage->user_defined
&& !$storage->is_interface
&& \class_exists($storage->name)
&& (new ReflectionClass($storage->name))->implementsInterface(\Your\Interface::class)
) {
$storage->suppressed_issues[-1] = 'PropertyNotSetInConstructor';
}
}
}