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GritQL is a declarative query language for searching and modifying source code.

Getting started

Read the documentation, interactive tutorial, or run grit --help.

Installation

Install the Grit CLI:

curl -fsSL https://docs.grit.io/install | bash

Usage

Search for all your console.log calls by putting the desired pattern in backticks:

grit apply '`console.log($_)`'

Replace console.log with winston.log, using => to create rewrites:

grit apply '`console.log($msg)` => `winston.log($msg)`'

Save the pattern to a grit.yaml file and exclude test cases in a where clause:

cat << 'EOF' > .grit/grit.yaml
patterns:
  - name: use_winston
    level: error
    body: |
      `console.log($msg)` => `winston.log($msg)` where {
        $msg <: not within or { `it($_, $_)`, `test($_, $_)`, `describe($_, $_)` }
      }
EOF
grit apply use_winston

Run grit check to enforce your patterns as custom lints.

grit check

Examples

Remove all console.log calls, unless they are inside a try-catch block

`console.log($log)` => . where {
  $log <: not within `try { $_ } catch { $_ }`
}

Replace a method call with a new method call

`$instance.oldMethod($args)` => `$instance.newMethod($args)` where {
  $program <: contains `$instance = new TargetClass($_)`
}

More examples

Many more examples can be found in the GritQL standard library.

Patterns can be combined to create complex queries, including large refactors.

Why GritQL?

GritQL comes from our experiences with conducting large scale refactors and migrations.

Usually, migrations start with exploratory work to figure out the scope of the problem—often using simple grep searches. These are easy to start with, but most migrations end up accumulating additional requirements like ensuring the right packages are imported and excluding cases which don’t have a viable migration path.

Eventually, any complex migration ends up being a full codemod program written with a tool like jscodeshift. This comes with its own problems:

GritQL is our attempt to develop a powerful middle ground:

Acknowledgements

GritQL uses tree-sitter for all language parsers and benefits greatly from the Rust ecosystem.

GritQL is released under the MIT license.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome. To get started, check out the contributing guidelines.

You can also join us on Discord.