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Ignoring parts of a file

Sometimes we want to deliberately tell a linter that, yes, I know what I’m doing, and yes, in any other situation I should not do this, but in this specific case it’s fine. Maybe there’s a dummy private key you’re using for a test stack, or fixing the lint issue will actually make your code less readable: whatever it is, you now need to figure out how to suppress a given lint issue. Trunk provides a simple, standardized mechanism to do this, saving you from having to look up the linter-specific syntax for doing so:
This tells Trunk that the clang-tidy linter found a modernize-use-nullptr issue on the highlighted line and that Trunk should suppress this linter issue. Comments may be omitted:
You can also omit the name of the check to simply tell Trunk that all issues from a given linter on a specific line should be suppressed:
trunk-ignore directives can also be placed at the end of the line on which they’re suppressing lint issues:
If you need to suppress issues from multiple linters, trunk-ignore supports that too:
trunk-ignore directives can also apply to other trunk-ignores if need be:

Ignoring all issues/formatting in a file

You can also ignore all issues or formatting in a file:
trunk-ignore-all is not required to be the first line of a file, because we recognize that other constructs (shebangs, front matter, docstrings) may need to take precedence.

Ignoring all issues in a code block

Alternatively, you can ignore all matching issues in a code block:

Tracking unused ignores

Trunk will alert you if your trunk-ignore directives are unused. This can happen due to user error or even innocuously over time, for example, if your internal APIs change or if a linter’s output changes.
Hold the Line will continue to only surface ignore issues that you have introduced, and these issues will have a note severity, indicating they are non-blocking by default. If you need to, you can ignore issues from unused trunk-ignore directives, using trunk-ignore(trunk):

Specification

The syntax of a trunk-ignore directive is as follows:

Ignoring multiple files

Some files are never meant to be checked, such as generated code. To ignore them, use the ignore key to your .trunk/trunk.yaml file:
Every entry in ignore defines both a set of linters and a set of paths to ignore.
Trunk is git-aware, which means it ignores gitignore'd files by default.

Known issues

trunk-ignore does not currently support:
  • suppressing findings on lines 0 or 1 using inline/block directives
If you need any of these to be supported, or you have another edge case, please contact us at support@trunk.io.