Commit Graph

241 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Manu Sridharan d901b13425 version 1.4.3 2017-08-05 20:52:32 -07:00
Ben Liblit 678e3e64a6 Fix all Eclipse warnings about unused local variables
Also report unused variables as errors in the future, not just
warnings.  We've fixed all of these as of right now, so let's keep it
clean in the future too.
2017-08-05 13:29:50 -07:00
Ben Liblit 321b28f149 Remove some unnecessary warning suppressions
One such annotation was unnecessary because the thing it was
suppressing no longer happens.  Any future unnecessary warning
suppressions of this kind will now be treated as errors.

The other annotations were unnecessary because the corresponding
warnings have been disabled entirely in the Eclipse projects'
configurations.  There seems to be no way to tell Eclipse to treat
these as anything other than "info" diagnostics in the future, so
that's how they will remain.
2017-08-05 13:29:50 -07:00
Ben Liblit f7dc0a06de Treat unused parameters as errors, not merely warnings
We've fixed or suppressed all such warnings, except in projects
containing test inputs.  Let's make sure no more appear in the future.
2017-07-31 15:29:00 -07:00
Ben Liblit 6087b73cee Fix or suppress all 242 Eclipse warnings about unused parameters
In general, my approach was to try to eliminate each unused parameter
using Eclipse's "Change Method Signature" refactoring.  That did not
always succeed: a parameter may be unused in some base class method,
but then be used in subclass's override of that method.  In cases
where refactoring to eliminate a parameter failed, I instead annotated
the parameter with '@SuppressWarnings("unused")' to silence the
warning.

Note: this group of changes creates a significant risk of
incompatibility for third-party WALA code.  Some removed parameters
change externally-visible APIs.  Furthermore, these changes do not
necessarily lead to Java compilation errors.  For example, suppose
third-party code subclasses a WALA class or interface, overrides a
method, but does not annotate that method as @Override.  Removing a
parameter means that the third-party method no longer overrides.  This
can quietly change code behavior without compile-time errors or
warnings.  This is exactly why one should use @Override wherever
possible, but we cannot guarantee that third-party WALA users have
done that.
2017-07-31 15:29:00 -07:00
Ben Liblit 191904d607 Remove "throws XYZ" declarations where XYZ cannot be thrown
Unnecessary "throws" declarations tend to cascade.  If foo() calls
bar() and bar() falsely declares that it might throw IOException, that
often leads a programmer to declare that foo() might throw IOException
as well.  Fixing the bar() throws declaration then reveals that we can
fix the foo() throws declaration too.  By the time we reach a fixed
point with cleaning these up, we have removed roughly 320 unnecessary
throws declarations.

In a few cases, this cleanup even lets us remove entire "try
... catch" statements where the only thing being caught was an
exception that we now statically know cannot be thrown.  Nice!

In Eclipse project configurations, upgrade any future such shenanigans
from warnings to errors.  Now that we've fixed this, we don't want it
coming back again.

There is a potential drawback to this change.  Conceivably some public
WALA API entry point might have declared that it could throw some
exception merely to reserve the *option* of throwing that exception in
third-party code that subclasses and overrides the API entry point in
question.  I have no idea whether this is a significant concern in
practice, though.
2017-07-28 10:20:28 -07:00
Ben Liblit 10dff7fb1c Disable Eclipse warnings about assignments to parameters
Previously we had 227 such warnings.  That large number suggests that
the WALA developers consider this to be an acceptable coding style.
If that's so, then it's better to hide these warnings rather than keep
them around as a perpetual distraction.
2017-07-18 20:43:36 -07:00
Ben Liblit d3c4200bc3 Disable Eclipse warnings about name shadowing
Previously we had 242 such warnings.  That large number suggests that
the WALA developers consider this to be an acceptable coding style.
If that's so, then it's better to hide these warnings rather than keep
them around as a perpetual distraction.
2017-07-18 20:43:36 -07:00
Ben Liblit a888a49fdd Fix all Eclipse warnings about unnecessary semicolons
I have *not* upgraded this problem to be treated as an error in the
future.  Unfortunately Eclipse uses a single configuration setting for
both unnecessary semicolons and also for empty control-flow statements
like `while (p) ;`.  I'm not convinced that it's worth rewriting all
instances of the latter into `while (p) { }`.  So this is just going
to stay as a warning for now.
2017-07-14 22:39:01 -07:00
Ben Liblit 1d27ca974b Upgrade raw-types-usage warnings to errors where possible
In general, these diagnostics are now errors in projects for which all
such warnings have been fixed.  There are three unfixed warnings in
two projects, so this diagnostic remains a warning (not an error) in
those projects.

There are also many places where rwa-types-usage warnings have been
locally suppressed using @SuppressWarnings annotations.  I haven't
systematically revisited those to see if any can be fixed properly.
So for those projects this diagnostic must also remain a warning (not
an error), since @SuppressWarnings does not work on things Eclipse is
configured to treat as errors.
2017-07-12 10:39:06 -07:00
Ben Liblit e316471d88 Fix nearly all Eclipse warnings about using raw types
Along the way, I also converted many "for (;;)" loops into modern
"for (:)" loops.  I didn't systematically look for all opportunities
to do this, though.  I merely made this change where I was already
converting raw Iterator uses into modern Iterator<...> uses.

Better use of generics also allowed many casts to become statically
redundant.  I have removed all such redundant casts.

Only three raw-types warnings remain after this batch of fixes.  All
three involve raw uses of CallGraphBuilder.  I've tried to fix these
too, but it quickly snowballs into a cascade of changes that may or
may not eventually reach a statically-type-save fixed point.  I may
give these last few problem areas another go in the future.  For now,
though, the hundreds of other fixes seem worth keeping even if there
are a few stragglers.

This commit may change some public APIs, but only by making weaker
type signatures stronger by replacing raw types with generic types.
For example, we may change something like "Set" into "Set<String>",
but we're not adding new arguments, changing any
underlying (post-generics-erasure) types, etc.
2017-07-12 10:39:06 -07:00
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 3187d09c1f Roll some diagnostics back to ignore instead of warning or error
These should mostly be things that we've already decided earlier that
we explicitly don't want to "fix" because they simply disagree with
the WALA project's coding style.
2017-06-26 11:16:09 -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 a940935056 Export all packages
This fixes eleven Eclipse "This plug-in does not export all of its
packages" warnings in the "Plug-in Development" category.
2017-06-07 17:42:11 +02:00
Ben Liblit 8cc4daf6a0 Access static fields directly via the classes that declare them
Previously some of these were accessing such fields through a subclass
of the declaring class.  That creates an unnecessary extra inter-class
dependency lower in the type hierarchy than necessary.

Also, suppress this warning in an automated test input where the
indirect static accesses are explicitly intentional.
2017-06-07 08:29:23 -07:00
Ben Liblit 72c754e874 Declare private methods static wherever possible
If a method is private, there's no risk that a subclass elsewhere
might be overriding it and depending on dynamic dispatch to choose the
right implementation.  So all of these private methods can safely be
declared static without risk of regression in either WALA code or
unseen third-party code.
2017-06-07 08:29:23 -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
Ben Liblit 214e0caa86 Suppress Eclipse warnings about unused allocations
In each of these cases, the constructor directly or indirectly has
side effects that we want to keep, even if the object itself is not
retained and used by eht code that invokes `new`.
2017-05-26 14:25:03 -07:00
Ben Liblit 4cef26162c Add @Override annotations wherever possible (#178)
* Fix warnings about unset javacProjectSettings build entries

Specifically, these are all warnings of the form "The
'javacProjectSettings' build entry should be set when there are project
specific compiler settings".

* Add @Override annotations to all methods that do override

This fixes 287 Eclipse code style warnings.

* Cannot add @Override annotations here, so suppress warnings instead

We should be able to add these @Override annotations in the future,
one Eclipse Mars and earlier are no longer supported.  For now,
though, they have to go away in order to be compatible with older
Eclipse releases.
2017-05-08 07:39:49 -07:00
Ben Liblit e753aba3cc Fix warnings about unset javacProjectSettings build entries (#176)
Specifically, these are all warnings of the form "The
'javacProjectSettings' build entry should be set when there are project
specific compiler settings".
2017-05-04 11:44:32 -07:00
Manu Sridharan c9022b0743 update version to 1.4.3-SNAPSHOT 2017-04-19 09:19:09 -07:00
Manu Sridharan 44e433085e tag 1.4.2 release 2017-04-19 09:17:13 -07:00
Manu Sridharan 0c424e12b3 Fix #164 2017-04-16 18:23:56 -07:00
Ben Liblit d35e8d0fa2 Disable Eclipse warnings about missing version constraints
Specifically, we're turning off Eclipse warnings about missing version
constraints on required bundles ("Require-Bundle"), exported
packages ("Export-Package"), and imported packages ("Import-Package").
We're not turning these off absolutely everywhere, though: only in
packages where one or more such warnings were actually being reported.
So if a given package was already providing all version constraints
for, say, package imports, then we've kept that warning on in that
package.

Honestly I don't entirely understand the practical implications of
these warnings.  However, there were 355 of them across many WALA
subprojects.  I take this as evidence that the WALA developers do not
consider these version constraints to be important.  Therefore, we may
as well stop warning about something we have no intention of fixing.

That being said, if we *do* want to fix some or all of these, I
welcome any advice on what those fixes should look like.  I am rather
ignorant about all things OSGi.
2017-03-28 20:37:41 -05:00
Ben Liblit 65be11f222 Merge branch 'master' into warning-fixes-unnecessary-code-controversial 2017-03-25 22:12:03 -05:00
Ben Liblit 42c7866dfd Prune constructor and method signatures after removing unused fields
Removing an unused field sometimes means removing constructor code
that used to initialize that field.  Removing that initialization code
sometimes leaves whole constructor arguments unused.  Removing those
unused arguments can leave us with unused code to compute those
arguments in constructors' callers, and so on.  This commit tries to
clean all of this up, working backward from the unused fields that an
earlier commit already removed.  Hopefully I have avoided removing
upstream code that had other important side effects, but it wouldn't
hurt for a WALA expert to review this change carefully.
2017-03-25 17:40:22 -05:00
Manu Sridharan ab7e638c29 version 1.4.2-SNAPSHOT 2017-03-25 13:54:21 -07:00
Manu Sridharan 2d0518963d Tag release 1.4.1 2017-03-25 13:24:39 -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 16492c7b78 Revert "Suppress 157 Eclipse warnings about unused exception parameters"
This reverts commit fe9f7a793a.
2017-03-23 16:32:00 -05:00
Manu Sridharan 9dafd5050f Merge pull request #155 from liblit/warning-fixes-javadoc-true-fixes
Fix 161 Eclipse Javadoc warnings
2017-03-23 13:30:51 -07:00
Ben Liblit e52d872e3e Fix 19 Eclipse warnings about unnecessary casts 2017-03-23 12:28:14 -05:00
Ben Liblit b8264b884d Remove "@param" tags for which there is no corresponding parameter 2017-03-22 20:40:52 -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
Manu Sridharan 9b692e714f switch version to 1.4.1-SNAPSHOT 2017-03-21 09:38:36 -07:00
Manu Sridharan bfe378e7f2 1.4.0 release 2017-03-21 08:59:08 -07:00
Ben Liblit 934f8f524f Fix 11 Eclipse warnings about fields whose values are never used 2017-03-20 00:44:40 -05:00
Ben Liblit aaf66705e1 Fix 65 Eclipse warnings about unused exception parameters
In the cases addressed here, the caught exception was being "handled"
by throwing some new exception.  Instead of discarding the old
exception, pass it to the new exception's constructor to indicate the
original cause of the newly-created exception.  This practice, called
"exception chaining", can often be useful in debugging.
2017-03-20 00:44:39 -05:00
Ben Liblit fe9f7a793a Suppress 157 Eclipse warnings about unused exception parameters
In the cases addressed here, the caught exception is truly not needed
by the handling code.
2017-03-20 00:44:06 -05:00
Julian Dolby bb0f38338e Merge branch 'warning-fixes-resource-management' of https://github.com/liblit/WALA 2017-03-13 10:44:38 -04:00
Ben Liblit 0165605c19 Simplify resource management using try-with-resource
This fixes the remaining 34 Eclipse "Resource '...' should be managed
by try-with-resource" warnings that were still left after the previous
commit.

Unlike the fixes in that previous commit, the changes here are *not*
plugging potential resource leaks.  However, in many cases that is
simply because the code before the close() call cannot currently throw
exceptions.  If exceptions became possible in the future, leaks could
result.  Using try-with-resource preemptively avoids that.
Furthermore, in code that was already dealing with exceptions, the
try-with-resource style is usually considerably simpler.
2017-03-12 21:38:43 -05:00
Ben Liblit b1678882b3 Plug numerous potential resource leaks
This fixes 33 out of 37 Eclipse "Potential resource leak: '...' may
not be closed" warnings.  It also fixes 3 out of 37 Eclipse "Resource
'...' should be managed by try-with-resource" warnings, although that
was not the main focus of this effort.

The remaining 4 warnings about potential resource leaks all involve a
leaked JarFile instance that is passed to a JarFileModule constructor
call.  JarFileModile never attempts to close its underlying JarFile;
this code is written as though JarFile cleanup were the caller's
responsibility.  However, the JarFile often cannot be closed by the
code that creates the JarFileModule either, since the JarFile needs to
remain open while the JarFileModule is in use, and some of these
JarFileModules stay around beyond the lifetime of the code that
created them.  Truly fixing this would essentially require making
JarFileModule implement Closeable, which in turn would probably
require that Module implement Closeable, which in turn would require
changes to lots of code that deals with Module instances to arrange
for them to be properly closed.  That's more invasive than I'm
prepared to take on right now.
2017-03-12 21:38:43 -05:00
Ben Liblit 994a70500f Remove redundant generic type parameters where possible
Instead, rely on Java's ability to infer type parameters in many
contexts.  This removes 665 Eclipse warnings.

Note: a few of these changes are to files under "test" subdirectories.
Presumably those are files that serve as test inputs rather than being
part of WALA code proper.  As far as I can tell, these changes do not
break any WALA tests.  But if any of those tests were specifically
intended to exercise WALA on code with non-inferred generic type
parameters, then I really should be leaving those alone.
2017-03-11 21:20:51 -06:00
Julian Dolby db65c16863 Merge branch 'pull-request__typeannotations' of https://github.com/joana-team/WALA 2017-03-11 16:19:50 -05:00
Julian Dolby d24519e974 cross-cutting changes to make more of WALA runnable with TeaVM. The biggest change is refactoring to AnalysisCache and friends; since TeaVM does not support SoftReference, I needed to add a layer of interfaces so that I can use a more simpleminded caching implementation for TeaVM. There are other changes to Module and friends to break connections with File and URL, which also cause TeaVM grief. I also organized imports in many places to remove unused types that caused trouble. 2017-02-02 20:33:27 -05:00
Julian Dolby 2396d0fad3 Revert "Revert "fixes to getting source positions from JVML""
This reverts commit 619df0a83d.
2017-01-19 19:12:22 -05:00
Julian Dolby 619df0a83d Revert "fixes to getting source positions from JVML"
This reverts commit 9e35099326.
2017-01-19 18:49:02 -05:00
Julian Dolby 9e35099326 fixes to getting source positions from JVML
CAst rewriter abstraction
2017-01-19 17:52:42 -05:00