Hi,
I haven’t had time to read this thread yet. Very generally:
- checkstyle is a dead tool
- the sonar guys have been reimplementing the rules in a better way
- sonar offers more rules (pmd, findbugs, etc)
- I’ve started defining rules we may want to use in this email thread:
to see the remaining violations and
decide which one we want to remove
- Another step will be to decide to use the sonar maven plugin to act as a replacement
for the checkstyle maven plugin and fail the build in case of errors
- The list of currently enabled rules are available here:
Thanks
-Vincent
On 12 Sep 2014 at 18:27:50, Sergiu Dumitriu (sergiu@xwiki.org(mailto:sergiu@xwiki.org))
wrote:
I've been working on and off on updating our
usage of Checkstyle, since
we haven't really updated our checkstyle configuration since we first
started using it, other than minor tweaks. In the latest version of the
Checkstyle tool several useful checks have been added, which I'd like to
enable.
On 09/12/2014 04:15 AM, Caleb James DeLisle wrote:
Hi all,
This is partially an extension of the previous mail thread
``Checkstyle audit audit'' where in the discussion, I formed a few thoughts
about checkstyle rules which should be added and removed. Since that thread
is very cluttered now, I wanted to begin a new one specifically explaining
the changes which I think we should make. Comments are requested.
All but the most trivial Codestyle rules all create friction which slows down
work. They are however valuable because they identify likely mistakes and make
it easier for others to read one's code. Still we must periodically review our
rules and identify both new rules which can help us and existing rules which
are more bother than they are help, either in general or in specific to the
experience level of our team.
Changes I would like to make:
#1: Remove "duplicate strings" checkstyle rule. This rule is supposed to trap
people who are hardcoding constants throughout their code instead of defining
them in one place. However when writing this email, I tried to find a coherent
example which is much improved by hoisting the string value up into a constant
and I cannot think of a single example. False positive examples spring to mind
immediately, usually log/error messages or on strings which are sure never to
change (at least not before the next major refactoring). "fixing" these errors
makes the code worse because one can no-longer read top to bottom, one must
scroll up and down between constants and code. I think this rule is more harm
than good, especially for our team's experience level.
+0 on this one, it's an extra safety net, but one that I agree is a bit
too cumbersome, and I'm not a big fan of defining private constants just
to work around this rule.
#2: Set class/method/field javadoc requirement to
exempt private and package
private entities. When I write code, I want to do everything the easiest way
that could work. When I read code, I want every comment to be giving me
important and up-to-date information. If checkstyle makes me write comments
which teach programming, I'm going to be mad at checkstyle, if I try to debug
your code and the important details/warnings are mixed in with a rash of CS-101
babble, I'm going to be mad at you. In either case it takes me longer to do
what I set out to do.
The solution of requiring javadoc only on public classes/interfaces also helps
me when developing because I need to think more deeply about the interfaces
which I am exposing to the world. "write javadoc here" or
"this needs an @param tag" implies
"hey, did you really intend to make that public API?".
I think the change not only lifts the burden on the programmer but also
actually helps checkstyle achieve it's goals more efficiently.
+1. All public code should be thoroughly documented, and private code
should only document what's not obvious.
#3: Add rule requiring use of 'this.'
when accessing class fields and remove
rule preventing variable names which shadow fields. This change makes checkstyle
*more* strict but I believe the cost is reasonable and the benefit is high.
Reading your code I immediately know whether you're accessing a field or a
variable which tells me whether there is reason why your function might behave
differently depending on the state of the object. In light of this change,
there is nolonger any reason to concern ourselves with shadowing of field
names since we cannot access them this way so I think the new rule should
be accompanied by the removal of the shadowing rule.
+1, but there's currently a bug in that rule:
https://github.com/checkstyle/checkstyle/pull/274
More rules to enable in
https://github.com/xwiki/xwiki-commons/pull/9
--
Sergiu Dumitriu
http://purl.org/net/sergiu
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