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MoDisco/CodingConventions
Contents
Eclipse JDT Warnings Level
For code style verification, it is recommended to configure Eclipse jdt settings for errors/warning levels : all rules levels set as "ignored" should be set as "warning".
Some rules might create too many constraints in some java circumstances. The developer is allowed to disactivate the rules in specific areas :
- with projects specific errors/warning levels.
- with @SuppressWarnings, in adding some explanation to the deviation.
Checkstyle Usage
For MoDisco internal developments, the org.eclipse.gmt.modisco.dev.core project defines a MoDisco.checkstyle file. This file defines coding rules. It was initiated from the "sun conventions for Eclipse" checkstyle file. Some constraining rules have been disabled.
This project is available in SVN: https://dev.eclipse.org/svnroot/modeling/org.eclipse.gmt.modisco/plugins/trunk/org.eclipse.gmt.modisco.dev.core/checkstyle/MoDisco.checkstyle
For configuring a new IDE :
- Install the Checkstyle plug-in (http://eclipse-cs.sf.net/update/)
- version 5.1.0
- Go in Window > Preferences > Checkstyle, and define a new global configuration of type 'Project Relative Configuration', pointing to the MoDisco.checkstyle file
Then each new MoDisco source project should have this checkstyle file applied (popup menu, Checkstyle > Activate Checkstyle). Additional warnings are then computed on source code. A new builder is associated to the project.
.checkstyle files are not required (except for local configuration explained below). Beware of not committing a useless .checkstyle because it references a specific checkstyle configuration name.
Some generated files (such as EMF generated files) do not comply with these rules. For such files, the warnings should be ignored, or the checkstyle may be deactivated for the whole EMF generated project.
Local configuration
It is also possible to configure checkstyle on a project, thus removing the need to configure it at the workspace level.
Here is an example checkstyle configuration file (.checkstyle). It references the checkstyle configuration file in the "modisco.dev.core" project and ignores warnings on "Messages.java":
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <fileset-config file-format-version="1.2.0" simple-config="true"> <local-check-config name="MoDisco" location="../org.eclipse.gmt.modisco.dev.core/checkstyle/MoDisco.checkstyle" type="project" description=""/> <fileset name="all" enabled="true" check-config-name="MoDisco" local="true"> <file-match-pattern match-pattern="." include-pattern="true"/> <file-match-pattern match-pattern="Messages.java" include-pattern="false"/> </fileset> </fileset-config>
Reference: http://robertmarkbramprogrammer.blogspot.com/2007/07/eclipse-checkstyle-for-new-project.html
Checkstyle is not an Eclipse.org tool
Note that Checkstyle is not an Eclipse.org tool. However, its source code is under the EPL, and its current use has been formally IP-validated for the MoDisco project:
- https://dev.eclipse.org/ipzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=3615 (initial CQ for EMO validation)
- http://dev.eclipse.org/mhonarc/lists/modeling-pmc/msg01391.html (email thread for Modeling PMC validation)
Also note that Checkstyle is not intended to be distributed with MoDisco.