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add-dart-lint-validation-rule

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by flutter · part of flutter/skills

Instructions for adding a new validation rule and CLI flag to dart_skills_lint.

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🔒 Repo-maintenance skill. It exists to help maintain flutter/skills itself — it's only useful if you contribute code to that project.

Instructions for adding a new validation rule and CLI flag to dart_skills_lint.

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This is the exact playbook injected into your agent when the skill activates — shown here so you can audit it before installing. You don't need to read it to use the skill.


name: add-dart-lint-validation-rule description: > Instructions for adding a new validation rule and CLI flag to dart_skills_lint. Use this skill when asked to create a new rule that validates aspects of skills (like frontmatter metadata). metadata: internal: true

Add a New Validation Rule and Flag

Use this skill when you need to add a new validation rule to the dart_skills_lint package, expose it as a toggleable CLI flag, and verify its behavior.


🛠️ Step-by-Step Implementation

1. Create the Rule Class

Create a new file in lib/src/rules/ extending SkillRule.

[!TIP] If your rule expects a specific structure in the skill's YAML frontmatter (e.g., inside metadata), document this structure clearly in the class Dart docstring.

Copy & paste — that's it
// lib/src/rules/my_new_rule.dart

import '../models/analysis_severity.dart';
import '../models/skill_context.dart';
import '../models/skill_rule.dart';
import '../models/validation_error.dart';

class MyNewRule extends SkillRule {
  MyNewRule({super.severity});

  @override
  Future<List<ValidationError>> validate(SkillContext context) async {
    final errors = <ValidationError>[];
    // Add validation logic here using context.rawContent or context.directory
    return errors;
  }
}

Accessing YAML Frontmatter

If your rule needs configuration from the skill's YAML frontmatter, you can access it via context.parsedYaml.

Copy & paste — that's it
  @override
  Future<List<ValidationError>> validate(SkillContext context) async {
    final errors = <ValidationError>[];
    final yaml = context.parsedYaml;
    if (yaml != null) {
      final metadata = yaml['metadata'];
      if (metadata is Map) {
        // Read your custom config here
      }
    }
    return errors;
  }

2. Register the Rule in lib/src/rule_registry.dart

Add a new CheckType instance to RuleRegistry.allChecks list. This automatically exposes it as a CLI flag.

Copy & paste — that's it
// lib/src/rule_registry.dart in allChecks list

  const CheckType(
    name: MyNewRule.ruleName,
    defaultSeverity: MyNewRule.defaultSeverity,
    help: 'Description of what the rule does for CLI help.',
  ),

Then, add a case to RuleRegistry.createRule to instantiate your rule:

Copy & paste — that's it
// lib/src/rule_registry.dart in createRule method

  static SkillRule? createRule(String name, AnalysisSeverity severity) {
    switch (name) {
      // ... other rules
      case MyNewRule.ruleName:
        return MyNewRule(severity: severity);
      default:
        return null;
    }
  }

3. Handle Disabled by Default Rules (If applicable)

If the rule is disabled by default (defaultSeverity: AnalysisSeverity.disabled), passing the flag --check-my-new-rule will automatically enable it with AnalysisSeverity.error severity (handled in entry_point.dart).


🧪 Testing the New Rule

You must write automated tests verifying your rule triggers when it should and skips when it shouldn't.

Preferred Approach: In-Memory Unit Tests

Instead of writing files to disk, test the rule directly using a mock SkillContext. This is faster and avoids I/O dependencies.

Copy & paste — that's it
// test/my_new_rule_test.dart

import 'dart:io';
import 'package:dart_skills_lint/src/models/analysis_severity.dart';
import 'package:dart_skills_lint/src/models/skill_context.dart';
import 'package:dart_skills_lint/src/models/validation_error.dart';
import 'package:dart_skills_lint/src/rules/my_new_rule.dart';
import 'package:test/test.dart';

void main() {
  group('MyNewRule', () {
    test('flags invalid content', () async {
      final rule = MyNewRule(severity: AnalysisSeverity.warning);
      final context = SkillContext(
        directory: Directory('dummy'),
        rawContent: 'Invalid content',
      );

      final List<ValidationError> errors = await rule.validate(context);

      expect(errors, isNotEmpty);
      expect(errors.first.message, contains('Expected error message'));
    });

    test('passes valid content', () async {
      final rule = MyNewRule(severity: AnalysisSeverity.warning);
      final context = SkillContext(
        directory: Directory('dummy'),
        rawContent: 'Valid content',
      );

      final List<ValidationError> errors = await rule.validate(context);

      expect(errors, isEmpty);
    });
  });
}

Alternative Approach: File System Interaction

If the rule interacts with the file system or wraps an external CLI tool (like popmark), you should use a temporary directory for testing instead of in-memory mocks.

Copy & paste — that's it
    late Directory tempDir;

    setUp(() async {
      tempDir = await Directory.systemTemp.createTemp('my_rule_test.');
    });

    tearDown(() async {
      if (tempDir.existsSync()) {
        await tempDir.delete(recursive: true);
      }
    });

    test('flags invalid file content', () async {
      final Directory skillDir = await Directory('${tempDir.path}/test-skill').create();
      await File('${skillDir.path}/SKILL.md').writeAsString('Invalid content');

      final rule = MyNewRule(severity: AnalysisSeverity.warning);
      final context = SkillContext(directory: skillDir, rawContent: 'Invalid content');

      final List<ValidationError> errors = await rule.validate(context);

      expect(errors, isNotEmpty);
    });

Integration Tests

If the rule interacts with CLI flags or configuration files, add a test in test/cli_integration_test.dart using TestProcess.

[!IMPORTANT] When writing integration tests that use config files and TestProcess, ensure that paths in the config file and paths passed to the CLI match in style (both relative or both absolute) to avoid issues with path matching in entry_point.dart.


📚 Documentation Updates

When a new rule is introduced, verify that you synchronize sibling markdown files!

  1. README.md:
    • Add your flag under the Usage and Flags sections so users know it exists.
  2. RULES.md:
    • Add a new entry for your rule documenting its default severity, fixability, what it checks, diagnostic shape, auto-fix behavior, and how to disable it. This is strictly required by the rules_md_consistency_test.dart test.
  3. documentation/knowledge/SPECIFICATION.md:
    • Document the formal constraint in the specification if it defines a standard for skill files.

🚦 Checklist Before Submitting PR

  • Rule class created in lib/src/rules/.
  • Rule registered in lib/src/rule_registry.dart.
  • Unit tests added in test/ using in-memory SkillContext.
  • Usage listed in README.md.
  • Rule documented in RULES.md.
  • Schema documented in documentation/knowledge/SPECIFICATION.md (if applicable).
  • Run dart format . to format code.
  • Run dart analyze --fatal-infos to ensure no issues.
  • Run dart test to ensure tests passing.