Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ben Liblit 0bbe9970c6 Enable Eclipse Oxygen's new "unlikely argument types" diagnostics
There are two such diagnostics: one for collection methods and one for
equals().  See
<https://www.eclipse.org/eclipse/news/4.7/jdt.php#unlikely-argument-types>
for more information about these two new diagnostics.

For each of these diagnostics, I've set the severity level to
"warning" in projects that have some instances of the suspicious code,
or to "error" in projects that have no instances of the suspicious
code.
2017-07-08 13:22:00 -07:00
Ben Liblit fb9042d3a6 Activate more Eclipse diagnostics, and treat many warnings as errors
The additional diagnostics are ones that were previously being
ignored, but which we seem to have been ignoring by default rather
than as a conscious choice.

For diagnostics of which we currently have *zero* instances, treat
these as errors rather than merely warnings.  The intent is to
permanently lock out future regressions of things we've completely
fixed.  In the future, whenever we fix the last instance of a given
warning in a given Eclipse project, we should also promote that
diagnostic to an error to keep things clean into the future.
2017-06-26 11:16:09 -07:00
Ben Liblit e1d2fa9850 Suppress Eclipse warnings about potentially-static methods
The "potentially" qualifier is here because these methods are visible
outside the WALA source tree.  These methods may seem OK to be static
based on the code we have here, but we have no way of knowing whether
third-party code expected to be able to subclass and override.  I'm
going to play it safe and assume that we want to allow that.

Note that we are still allowing Eclipse warnings about methods that
can *definitely* be declared static; a different configuration option
controls these.  For private methods, final methods, and methods in
final classes, if the code seems static-safe based on what we have
here, then that's good enough: we don't need to worry about
third-party overrides.
2017-06-07 08:29:23 -07:00
Manu Sridharan b82e808b32 Merge pull request #156 from liblit/warning-fixes-unnecessary-code-uncontroversial
Fix 265 Eclipse warnings about unnecessary code
2017-03-23 17:48:10 -07:00
Ben Liblit 1bb3d827c4 Turn off Eclipse warnings about unused caught-exception parameters
Manu requested that we use this approach instead of adding
`@SuppressWarnings("unused")` at each affected catch block.  That
seems reasonable to me, given the large number of such warnings and
the lack of likely harm from ignoring such caught exceptions.
2017-03-23 16:39:58 -05:00
Ben Liblit ea39ad647e Don't warn about Javadoc tags with missing descriptions
These changes turn off Eclipse warnings for Javadoc tags without
descriptions.  In some subprojects, we turn these off entirely.  In
others, leave on missing-descrption checks for "@return" tags only.

We don't turn this warning off in all projects.  Rather, we turn it
off only in projects that were producing at least one such warning.
In other words, if a project was already completely "clean" with
respect to this warning, then we leave this warning enabled for that
project.

Turning off these warnings is a partial declaration of Javadoc
bankruptcy.  In an ideal world, we would enable and fix all of these
warnings.  However, there are 576 of them.  Apparently the WALA team's
implicit coding style says that omitting descriptions is OK.  If
there's no intent to systematically add descriptions, then we may as
well turn off these warnings so that we can see other warnings that we
may want to fix.
2017-03-22 20:39:36 -05:00
Ben Liblit 522c382a19 Use consistent Java versions, usually 1.7
Previously, the various Eclipse projects' Java configurations used
mixtures of 1.6, 1.7, and 1.8.  Many were internally inconsistent,
such as requiring 1.7 in "MANIFEST.MF" but 1.6 in the Eclipse JDT
build preferences.  The Travis-CI configuration tests against both 1.7
and 1.8, but does not test against 1.6.

Across all projects, the most common version was 1.7.  So I'm going to
assume that 1.7 is the intended build target.  This commit makes 1.7
the selected version nearly everywhere.

"com.ibm.wala.core.testdata" is the one exception.  This specific
project uses a few features only found in 1.8, such as lambda
expressions.  Previously, "com.ibm.wala.core.testdata" used 1.7 in
some aspects of its configuration but 1.8 in others.  Now it
consistently targets 1.8.  I wish this one project didn't need to be
inconsistent with the rest of WALA, but at least now it's consistent
with itself.

(Personally, I'd be happy to target 1.8 only.  But my impression
across all of these configuration files is that the WALA developers
still want to be compatible with 1.7.  If that is no longer a
requirement, let me know and I will adjust these changes accordingly
to target 1.8 only.)

This change eliminates 11 "There is no 'jre.compilation.profile' build
entry and the project has Java compliance preferences set" warnings
and 13 "The JRE container on the classpath is not a perfect match to
the 'JavaSE-1.7' execution environment" warnings.  However, it also
adds 450 "Redundant specification of type arguments <...>" warnings
and 17 "Resource '...' should be managed by try-with-resource"
warnings.  So this seems like a net step backward in my wish to reduce
WALA warnings.  However, those new warnings concern Java 1.7 language
features that we were not previously using to good effect in projects
that targeted 1.6.  If we all agree that we can now target 1.7
instead, then we can use these helpful features as the newly-added
warnings suggest.  So I call that a step in the right direction.
2016-11-29 21:29:30 -06:00
Ben Liblit dace7b709f Ignore missing non-null-by-default annotations in Eclipse
In general, the WALA code base is not really ready for nullness
checking.  It would be nice if we got there some day, but I'm not
planning to take that on now or any time soon.  Until then, it's not
useful to warn about missing @NonNullByDefault declarations on WALA
packages.

See also older commit 7b6811b.
2016-11-26 18:47:35 -06:00
Ben Liblit 7b6811b2dd Ignore potential null accesses in Eclipse
Eclipse Mars Service Release 2 finds 45 potential null pointer accesses
across WALA's various Eclipse projects. Eclipse ignores these by
default, but any individual user may have changed their personal Eclipse
configuration to treat them as warnings or errors. Thus, some people
will find that the code builds while others find that it fails. Better
to explicitly use a known-good configuration.

In the long run someone should inspect these cases one-by-one and fix
them where appropriate. But that is probably better managed as part of a
larger effort to tidy up nulls in WALA. I'm not planning to take that on
now or any time soon, though, so this is a better setup for now.
2016-06-27 13:11:42 -05:00
Manu Sridharan 00eb1d2bd2 Set all projects to build against Java 6; no semantic change. Fixes #20 2013-04-10 16:01:27 -07:00
sjfink 3a49f17ebc update code formatting for Eclipse 3.6
git-svn-id: https://wala.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/wala/trunk@4048 f5eafffb-2e1d-0410-98e4-8ec43c5233c4
2011-02-03 15:14:47 +00:00
sjfink d0431b670a force Eclipse compiler to generate 1.5 bytecode for wala.shrike and wala.ide projects
git-svn-id: https://wala.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/wala/trunk@3738 f5eafffb-2e1d-0410-98e4-8ec43c5233c4
2009-07-24 18:44:57 +00:00
sjfink f0993b07e5 add WALA code format
git-svn-id: https://wala.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/wala/trunk@3699 f5eafffb-2e1d-0410-98e4-8ec43c5233c4
2009-06-22 22:06:44 +00:00