implementing quality on a java project

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27 au 29 mars 2013 Implementing Quality on Java projects Vincent Massol Committer XWiki XWiki SAS @vmassol

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Gives 5 hands on tips on how to improve a specific aspect of Quality on Java projects. Presented at Codeurs en Seine 2013

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Page 1: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Implementing Quality on Java projects

Vincent Massol Committer XWiki

XWiki SAS !

@vmassol

Page 2: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Vincent Massol

• Speaker Bio

• CTO XWiki SAS

• Your Projects

• XWiki (community-driven open source project)

• Past: Maven, Apache Cargo, Apache Cactus, Pattern Testing

• Other Credentials:

• LesCastCodeurs podcast

• Creator of OSSGTP open source group in Paris

• 3 books: JUnit in Action, Maven: A Developer’s Notebook, BBWM

Page 3: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

What is Quality?

Page 4: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

The XWiki project in summary

• 9 years old

• 28 active committers

• 7 committers do 80% of work

• 700K NCLOC

• 11 commits/day

• 16 mails/day

• 65% TPC

Page 5: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Examples of Quality actions

• Coding rules (Checkstyle, ...)

• Test coverage

• Track bugs

• Don’t use Commons Lang 2.x

• Use SLF4J and don’t draw Log4J/JCL in dependencies

• Automated build

• Automated unit tests

• Stable automated functional tests

• Ensure API stability

• Code reviews

• License header checks

• Release with Java 6

• Ensure javadoc exist

• Prevent JAR hell

• Release often (every 2 weeks)

• Collaborative design

• Test on supported environments (DB & Browsers)

Page 6: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Quality Tip #1 !

API Stability

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The Problem

Class Not Found or Method Not Found

Page 8: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

API Stability - Deprecations

/**! * ...! * @deprecated since 2.4M1 use {@link #transform(! * Block, TransformationContext)}! */!@Deprecated!void transform(XDOM dom, Syntax syntax)! throws TransformationException;!!!

Page 9: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

API Stability - CLIRR (1/2)<plugin>! <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>! <artifactId>clirr-maven-plugin</artifactId>! <configuration>! <ignored>! <difference>! <differenceType>7006</differenceType>! <className>org/xwiki/.../MetaDataBlock</className>! <method>org.xwiki....block.Block clone()</method>! <to>org.xwiki.rendering.block.MetaDataBlock</to>! <justification>XDOM#clone() doesn't clone the meta! data</justification>! </difference>!...

Page 10: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

API Stability - CLIRR (2/2)

Example from XWiki 5.0M1 Release notes

Page 11: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

<plugin>! <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>! <artifactId>maven-javadoc-plugin! <configuration>! <excludePackageNames>*.internal.*! </excludePackageNames>

API Stability - Internal PackageJavadoc

CLIRR<plugin>! <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>! <artifactId>clirr-maven-plugin</artifactId>! <excludes>! <exclude>**/internal/**</exclude>! <exclude>**/test/**</exclude>

Page 12: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

<plugin>! <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>! <artifactId>aspectj-maven-plugin</...>!...! <configuration>! <weaveDependencies>! <weaveDependency>! <groupId>org.xwiki.rendering</...>! <artifactId>xwiki-rendering-api</...>!...

API Stability - Legacy Module

Aspect Weaving

+ “Legacy” Profile

Page 13: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

API Stability - Young APIs

/**! * ...! * @since 5.0M1! */!@Unstable(<optional explanation>)!public EntityReference createEntityReference(String name,...)!{!...!}

+ max duration for keeping the annotation!

Page 14: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

API Stability - Next steps

• Annotation or package for SPI?

• Better define when to use the @Unstable annotation

• Not possible to add a new method to an existing Interface

• Java 8 and Virtual Extension/Defender methods

interface TestInterface {!  public void testMe();!  public void newMethod() default {!    System.out.println("Default from interface");!  }!}

Page 15: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Quality Tip #2 !

JAR Hell

Page 16: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

The Problem

Class Not Found or Method Not Found or not working feature

Page 17: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

No duplicate classes @ runtime<plugin>! <groupId>com.ning.maven.plugins</groupId>! <artifactId>maven-duplicate-finder-plugin</artifactId>! <executions>! <execution>! <phase>verify</phase>! <goals>! <goal>check</goal>! </goals>! <configuration>! <failBuildInCaseOfConflict>true</...>! <exceptions>! ...

Page 18: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Surprising results...

• Commons Beanutils bundles some classes from Commons Collections, apparently to avoid drawing a dependency to it...

• Xalan bundles a lot of other projects (org/apache/xml/**, org/apache/bcel/**, JLex/**, java_cup/**, org/apache/regexp/**). In addition, it even has these jars in its source tree without any indication about their versions...

• stax-api, geronimo-stax-api_1.0_spec and xml-apis all draw javax.xml.stream.* classes

• xmlbeans and xml-apis draw incompatible versions of org.w3c.dom.* classes

14 exceptions in total!

Page 19: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Maven: dependency version issue<dependencies>! <dependency>! <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId>! <artifactId>slf4j-api</artifactId>! <version>1.4.0</version>! </dependency>! <dependency>! <groupId>ch.qos.logback</groupId>! <artifactId>logback-classic</artifactId>! <version>0.9.9</version>! <!-- Depends on org.slf4j:slf4j-api:1.5.0 -->! </dependency>!</dependencies>

Will run logback 0.9.9 with slf4J-api 1.4.0 instead of 1.5.0!

Page 20: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Maven: ensure correct version<plugin>! <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>! <artifactId>maven-enforcer-plugin</artifactId>! <executions>! <execution>! <id>enforce-version-compatibility</id>! <phase>verify</phase>! <goals>! <goal>enforce</goal>! </goals>! <configuration>! <rules>! <requireUpperBoundDeps/>! </rules>

Page 21: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Quality Tip #3 !

Test Coverage

Page 22: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

The Problem

More bugs reported, overall quality goes down and harder to debug

software

Page 23: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Use Jacoco to fail the build<plugin>! <groupId>org.jacoco</groupId>! <artifactId>jacoco-maven-plugin</artifactId>! <executions>! <execution><id>jacoco-prepare</id>! <goals><goal>prepare-agent</goal></goals>! </execution>! <execution><id>jacoco-check</id>! <goals><goal>check</goal></goals>! </execution>! </executions>! <configuration>! <check>! <instructionRatio>${xwiki.jacoco.instructionRatio}</...>! </check>}

Page 24: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Strategy

• When devs add code (and thus tests), increase the TPC percentage

• Put the Jacoco check in “Quality” Maven Profile

• Have a CI job to execute that profile regularly

• About 15% overhead compared to build without checks

• “Cheat mode”: Add easier-to-write test

Page 25: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Quizz Time!

[INFO] --- jacoco-maven-plugin:0.6.2.201302030002:check (jacoco-check)[INFO] All coverage checks have been met.

[INFO] --- jacoco-maven-plugin:0.6.2.201302030002:check (jacoco-check) ![WARNING] Insufficient code coverage for INSTRUCTION: 75.52% < 75.53%

Step 1: Building on my local machine gives the following:

Step 2: Building on the CI machine gave:

Non determinism! Why?

Page 26: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Quizz Answer

private Map componentEntries = new ConcurrentHashMap();!...!for (Map.Entry entry : componentEntries.entrySet())!{! if (entry.getValue().instance == component) {!  key = entry.getKey();!    oldDescriptor = entry.getValue().descriptor;!    break;!  }!}

... because the JVM is non deterministic!

Page 27: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Quality Tip #4 !

Functional Testing Stability (with Jenkins)

Page 28: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

The Problem

Too many false positives leading to developers not paying attention to CI

emails anymore... leading to failing software

Page 29: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

False positives examples

• The JVM has crashed

• VNC is down (we run Selenium tests)

• Browser crash (we run Selenium tests)

• Git connection issue

• Machine slowness (if XWiki cannot start under 2 minutes then it means the machine has some problems)

• Nexus is down (we deploy our artifacts to a Nexus repository)

• Connection issue (Read time out)

Page 30: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Step 1: Groovy PostBuild Plugin (1/2)def messages = [! [".*A fatal error has been detected by the Java Runtime Environment.*",! "JVM Crash", "A JVM crash happened!"],! [".*Error: cannot open display: :1.0.*",! "VNC not running", "VNC connection issue!"],! ...!] def shouldSendEmail = true!messages.each { message ->! if (manager.logContains(message.get(0))) {! manager.addWarningBadge(message.get(1))! manager.createSummary("warning.gif").appendText(...)! manager.buildUnstable()! shouldSendEmail = false! }!}

Page 31: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Step 1: Groovy PostBuild Plugin (2/2)

... continued from previous slide...!!if (!shouldSendEmail) {! def pa = new ParametersAction([! new BooleanParameterValue("noEmail", true)! ])! manager.build.addAction(pa)!}

Page 32: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Step 2: Mail Ext Plugin

import hudson.model.*!!build.actions.each { action ->! if (action instanceof ParametersAction) {! if (action.getParameter("noEmail")) {! cancel = true! }! }!}

Pre-send Script

Page 33: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Results

+ use the Scriptler plugin to automate configuration for all jobs

Page 34: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Quality Tip #5 !

Bug Fixing Day

Page 35: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

The Problem

Bugs increasing, even simple to fix ones, devs focusing too much on new

features (i.e. scope creep) vs fixing what exists

Bugs created vs closed

Page 36: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Bug Fixing Day

• Every Thursday

• Goal is to close the max number of bugs

• Triaging: Can be closed with Won’t fix, Duplicate, Cannot Reproduce, etc

• Close low hanging fruits in priority

• Started with last 365 days then with last 547 days and currently with last 1500 days (we need to catch up with 22 bugs!)

• Today is BFD#40 (and I’m missing it!)

Page 37: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Results (1/2)

As many bugs closed over past 4 years than created!

Page 38: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Results (2/2)

Page 39: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

27 au 29 mars 2013

Conclusion

Page 40: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Parting words

• Slowly add new quality check over time

• Everyone must be on board

• Favor Active Quality (i.e. make the build fail) over Passive checks

• Be ready to adapt/remove checks if found not useful enough

• Quality brings some risks:

• Potentially less committers for your project (especially open source)

• Project seen as “less fun”

Page 41: Implementing Quality on a Java Project

Be proud of your Quality!

“I have offended God and mankind because my work didn't reach the quality it should have.”

Leonardo da Vinci, on his death bed