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copywrite

This repo provides utilities for managing copyright headers and license files across many repos at scale.

You can use it to add or validate copyright headers on source code files, add a LICENSE file to a repo, report on what licenses repos are using, and more.

Getting Started

The easiest way to get started is to use Homebrew:

brew tap hashicorp/tap
brew install hashicorp/tap/copywrite

Installers for Windows, Linux, and MacOS are also available on the releases page.

CLI Usage

This Go app is consumable as a command-line tool. Currently, the following subcommands are available:

❯ copywrite
Copywrite provides utilities for managing copyright headers and license
files in HashiCorp repos.

You can use it to report on what licenses repos are using, add LICENSE files,
and add or validate the presence of copyright headers on source code files.

Usage:
  copywrite [command]

Common Commands:
  headers     Adds missing copyright headers to all source code files
  init        Generates a .copywrite.hcl config for a new project
  license     Validates that a LICENSE file is present and remediates any issues if found

Additional Commands:
  completion  Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
  debug       Prints env-specific debug information about copywrite
  dispatch    Dispatches audit jobs for a list of repos
  help        Help about any command
  report      Performs a variety of reporting tasks

Flags:
      --config string   config file (default is .copywrite.hcl in current directory)
  -h, --help            help for copywrite
  -v, --version         version for copywrite

Use "copywrite [command] --help" for more information about a command.

To get started with Copywrite on a new project, run copywrite init, which will interactively help generate a .copywrite.hcl config file to add to Git.

The most common command you will use is copywrite headers, which will automatically scan all files in your repo and copyright headers to any that are missing:

copywrite headers --spdx "MPL-2.0"

You may omit the --spdx flag if you add a .copywrite.hcl config, as outlined here.

--plan Flag

Both the headers and license commands allow you to use a --plan flag, which performs a dry-run and will outline what changes would be made. This flag also returns a non-zero exit code if any changes are needed. As such, it can be used to validate if a repo is in compliance or not.

Config Structure

:bulb: You can automatically generate a new .copywrite.hcl config with the copywrite init command.

A .copywrite.hcl file can be referenced to provide configuration information for a given project. This file should be specific to each repo and checked into git. If no configuration file is present, default values will be used throughout the copywrite application. An example config structure is shown below:

# (OPTIONAL) Overrides the copywrite config schema version
# Default: 1
schema_version = 1

project {
  # (OPTIONAL) SPDX-compatible license identifier
  # Leave blank if you don't wish to license the project
  # Default: "MPL-2.0"
  license = "MPL-2.0"

  # (OPTIONAL) Represents the copyright holder used in all statements
  # Default: HashiCorp, Inc.
  # copyright_holder = ""

  # (OPTIONAL) Represents the year that the project initially began
  # Default: <the year the repo was first created>
  # copyright_year = 0

  # (OPTIONAL) A list of globs that should not have copyright or license headers .
  # Supports doublestar glob patterns for more flexibility in defining which
  # files or folders should be ignored
  # Default: []
  header_ignore = [
    # "vendor/**",
    # "**autogen**",
  ]

  # (OPTIONAL) Links to an upstream repo for determining repo relationships
  # This is for special cases and should not normally be set.
  # Default: ""
  # upstream = "hashicorp/<REPONAME>"
}

GitHub Authentication

Some commands interact directly with GitHub's API (especially when a .copywrite.hcl config is not present for the project). In order to use these commands successfully, multiple mechanisms are available to provide GitHub credentials and are prioritized in the following order:

If none of the above methods work, copywrite will default to using an unauthenticated client.

GitHub credentials are purposely excluded from the .copywrite.hcl config, as that file is meant to be specific to each project and checked in to its repo.

GitHub Action

To make it easier to use copywrite in your own CI jobs (e.g., to add a PR check), you can make use of the hashicorp/setup-copywrite GitHub Action. It automatically installs the binary and adds it to your $PATH so you can call it freely in later steps.

  - name: Setup Copywrite
    uses: hashicorp/setup-copywrite@867a1a2a064a0626db322392806428f7dc59cb3e # v1.1.2

  - name: Check Header Compliance
    run: copywrite headers --plan

:bulb: Running the copywrite command with the --plan flag will return a non-zero exit code if the repo is out of compliance.

Pre-Commit Hooks

Copywrite can be used as a Pre-Commit Hook for those looking to add copyright headers during local development. A list of supported hooks can be found in here, but the most common use case for adding missing copyright headers can be done by adding the following snippet to your repo's .pre-commit-config.yaml:

  - repo: https://github.com/hashicorp/copywrite
    rev: v0.15.0 # Use any release tag
    hooks:
      - id: copywrite-headers

Debugging

Copywrite supports several built-in features to aid with debugging. The first and most commonly used one is configurable log levels. Copywrite checks the COPYWRITE_LOG_LEVEL environment variable to determine which verbosity to use. The following log levels are supported:

Copywrite also checks for if the RUNNER_DEBUG=1 environment variable is set, which will cause it to default to debug-level logging. This environment variable is set by Github Actions when in debug mode, and can be a useful default. The COPYWRITE_LOG_LEVEL setting takes precedence, however.

It is often useful to introspect information about the state Copywrite finds itself in. The copywrite debug command can print the running configuration, whether or not a config file was loaded, what GitHub auth type is in use, and more. No sensitive information is printed, however.

Development

To maintain a consistent developer experience, this repo comes bundled with VS Code settings. When opening the repo for the first time, you will be asked if you want to install suggested extensions and your workspace will be pre-configured with consistent format-on-save settings.

Before committing code, this repo has been setup to check Go files using pre-commit git hooks. To leverage pre-commit, developers must install pre-commit and associated tools locally:

brew install pre-commit golangci-lint go-critic

Verify install went successfully with:

pre-commit --version

Once you verify pre-commit is installed locally, you can use pre-commit git hooks by installing them in this repo:

pre-commit install