I have had no success in locating a good precommit hook I can use to validate that a Jinja2 formatted file is well-formed without attempting to substitute variables. The goal is something that will return a shell code of zero if the file is well-formed without regard to whether variable are available, 1 otherwise.
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You can do this within Jinja itself, you'd just need to write a script to read and parse the template.
Since you only care about well-formed templates, and not whether or not the variables are available, it should be fairly easy to do:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# filename: check_my_jinja.py
import sys
from jinja2 import Environment
env = Environment()
with open(sys.argv[1]) as template:
env.parse(template.read())
or something that iterates over all templates
#!/usr/bin/env python
# filename: check_my_jinja_recursive.py
import sys
import os
from jinja2 import Environment, FileSystemLoader
env = Environment(loader=FileSystemLoader('./mytemplates'))
templates = [x for x in env.list_templates() if x.endswith('.jinja2')]
for template in templates:
t = env.get_template(template)
env.parse(t)
If you have incorrect syntax, you will get a TemplateSyntaxError
So your precommit hook might look like
python check_my_jinja.py template.jinja2
python check_my_jinja_recursive.py /dir/templates_folder

Ben
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Vasili Syrakis
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The recursive version doesn't quite work because `f` is a list of filenames. Here's one way to run the regular version recursively: `find . -name '*.j2' | xargs -I @ python check_my_jinja.py ` – Leo Feb 12 '19 at 23:12