Profesjonell internettavhengig • Spillentusiast • Teknologiskaper
Profesjonell internettavhengig • Spillentusiast • Teknologiskaper

Kjøre Checkstyle som en automatisk JUnit-test

Slik kjører du Checkstyle som en automatisk JUnit-test!
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Hjem Blogg Kjøre Checkstyle som en automatisk JUnit-test

Vær oppmerksom på at dette blogginnlegget ble publisert i juni 2010, så avhengig av når du leser det, kan enkelte deler være utdaterte. Dessverre kan jeg ikke alltid holde disse innleggene helt oppdaterte for å sikre at informasjonen forblir nøyaktig.

    If you are looking for a great code analysis tool to help you review your Java code, Checkstyle is a good choice. It basically checks your code towards a set of given checks of your choice, everything from checking that the code is following naming conventions, to spotting duplicated code.
    There are several ways to use Checkstyle, either by using it with a build automation tool such as Apache Maven or as an Ant task, but you can also simply execute it through a command line.
    However if you are interested you can also wrap it into a JUnit test. Even though it is really not a unit test, it could be really convenient as it allows you run it along with the rest of your tests.
    Here is a basic example code:
    public class CheckStyleTest extends TestCase { @Test public void testCheckStyle() throws Exception { /* * Files */ File ROOT = new File("src/"); System.out.println("Root is set to "" + ROOT.getAbsolutePath() + ""."); List files = new ArrayList(); listFiles(files, ROOT, "java"); System.out.println("Found " + files.size() + " Java source files."); /* * Listener */ ByteArrayOutputStream sos = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); AuditListener listener = new DefaultLogger(sos, false); /* * Configuration */ InputSource inputSource = new InputSource(CheckStyleTest.class.getResourceAsStream("configuration.xml")); Configuration configuration = ConfigurationLoader.loadConfiguration(inputSource, new PropertiesExpander(System.getProperties()), false); /* * Create checker */ Checker checker = new Checker(); checker.setModuleClassLoader(Checker.class.getClassLoader()); checker.configure(configuration); checker.addListener(listener); /* * Process */ int errors = checker.process(files); System.out.println("Found " + errors + " check style errors."); System.out.println(sos.toString()); assertTrue(errors + " check style errors found. " + sos.toString(), errors == 0); /* * Clean up */ checker.destroy(); } private static void listFiles(List files, File folder, String extension) { if (folder.canRead()) { if (folder.isDirectory()) { for (File f : folder.listFiles()) { listFiles(files, f, extension); } } else if (folder.toString().endsWith("." + extension)) { files.add(folder); } } } }
    As you can notice the test will try and read from a file called "configuration.xml". File this has to be in the same folder as where you put this test. "configuration.xml" is simply the checks that Checkstyle should perform. How to write this document is described on the their configuration page.
    A sample of the "configuration.xml" file would be:
    <module name="Checker"> <module name="TreeWalker"> <module name="CovariantEquals"/> <module name="EmptyStatement"/> <module name="FallThrough"/> <module name="SuperClone"/> <module name="AvoidStarImport"/> <module name="UnusedImports"/> <module name="AvoidStaticImport"/> <module name="EqualsHashCode"/> </module> </module>

    Skrevet av Special Agent Squeaky. Først publisert 29.06.2010. Sist oppdatert 29.06.2010.

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