Luacheck is a static analyzer and a linter for Lua. Luacheck detects various issues such as usage of undefined global variables, unused variables and values, accessing uninitialized variables, unreachable code and more. Most aspects of checking are configurable: there are options for defining custom project-related globals, for selecting set of standard globals (version of Lua standard library), for filtering warnings by type and name of related variable, etc. The options can be used on the command line, put into a config or directly into checked files as Lua comments.
You can see the cli reference here.
You can run awscli to manage your AWS services.
aws iam list-users
aws s3 cp /tmp/foo/ s3://bucket/ --recursive --exclude "*" --include "*.jpg"
aws sts assume-role --role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/xaccounts3access --role-session-name s3-access-example
docker pull cardboardci/luacheck
docker run -it cardboardci/luacheck /bin/bash
docker run -it -v "$(pwd)":/workspace cardboardci/luacheck aws s3 cp file.txt s3://bucket/file.txt
docker run -it -v "$(pwd)":/workspace -v "~/.aws/":/cardboardci/.aws/ cardboardci/luacheck aws s3 cp file.txt s3://bucket/file.txt
For each of the following services, you can see an example of this image in that environment:
Every new release of the image includes three tags: version, date and latest
. These tags can be described as such:
latest
: The most-recently released version of an image. (cardboardci/luacheck:latest
)<version>
: The most-recently released version of an image for that version of the tool. (cardboardci/luacheck:1.0.0
)<version-date>
: The version of the tool released on a specific date (cardboarci/awscli:1.0.0-20190101
)
We recommend using the digest for the docker image, or pinning to the version-date tag. If you are unsure how to get the digest, you can retrieve it for any image with the following command:
docker pull cardboardci/luacheck:latest
docker inspect --format='{{index .RepoDigests 0}}' cardboardci/luacheck:latest
All images in the CardboardCI namespace are built from cardboardci/ci-core. This image ensures that the base environment for every image is always up to date. The common base image provides dependencies that are often used building and deploying software.
By having a common base, it means that each image is able to focus on providing the optimal tooling for each development workflow.