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- """
- In this file we define a ProblemVault class where we store all the
- exceptions and all the problems we find with the code.
- The ProblemVault is capable of registering problems and also figuring out if a
- problem is worse than a registered exception so that it only warns when things
- get worse.
- """
- from __future__ import print_function
- import os.path
- import re
- import sys
- STATUS_ERR = 2
- STATUS_WARN = 1
- STATUS_OK = 0
- class ProblemVault(object):
- """
- Singleton where we store the various new problems we
- found in the code, and also the old problems we read from the exception
- file.
- """
- def __init__(self, exception_fname=None):
- # Exception dictionary: { problem.key() : Problem object }
- self.exceptions = {}
- # Exception dictionary: maps key to the problem it was used to
- # suppress.
- self.used_exception_for = {}
- if exception_fname == None:
- return
- try:
- with open(exception_fname, 'r') as exception_f:
- self.register_exceptions(exception_f)
- except IOError:
- print("No exception file provided", file=sys.stderr)
- def register_exceptions(self, exception_file):
- # Register exceptions
- for lineno, line in enumerate(exception_file, 1):
- try:
- problem = get_old_problem_from_exception_str(line)
- except ValueError as v:
- print("Exception file line {} not recognized: {}"
- .format(lineno,v),
- file=sys.stderr)
- continue
- if problem is None:
- continue
- # Fail if we see dup exceptions. There is really no reason to have dup exceptions.
- if problem.key() in self.exceptions:
- print("Duplicate exceptions lines found in exception file:\n\t{}\n\t{}\nAborting...".format(problem, self.exceptions[problem.key()]),
- file=sys.stderr)
- sys.exit(1)
- self.exceptions[problem.key()] = problem
- #print "Registering exception: %s" % problem
- def register_problem(self, problem):
- """
- Register this problem to the problem value. Return true if it was a new
- problem or it worsens an already existing problem. A true
- value may be STATUS_ERR to indicate a hard violation, or STATUS_WARN
- to indicate a warning.
- """
- # This is a new problem, print it
- if problem.key() not in self.exceptions:
- return STATUS_ERR
- # If it's an old problem, we don't warn if the situation got better
- # (e.g. we went from 4k LoC to 3k LoC), but we do warn if the
- # situation worsened (e.g. we went from 60 includes to 80).
- status = problem.is_worse_than(self.exceptions[problem.key()])
- # Remember that we used this exception, so that we can later
- # determine whether the exception was overbroad.
- self.used_exception_for[problem.key()] = problem
- return status
- def list_overbroad_exceptions(self):
- """Return an iterator of tuples containing (ex,prob) where ex is an
- exceptions in this vault that are stricter than it needs to be, and
- prob is the worst problem (if any) that it covered.
- """
- for k in self.exceptions:
- e = self.exceptions[k]
- p = self.used_exception_for.get(k)
- if p is None or e.is_worse_than(p):
- yield (e, p)
- def set_tolerances(self, fns):
- """Adjust the tolerances for the exceptions in this vault. Takes
- a map of problem type to a function that adjusts the permitted
- function to its new maximum value."""
- for k in self.exceptions:
- ex = self.exceptions[k]
- fn = fns.get(ex.problem_type)
- if fn is not None:
- ex.metric_value = fn(ex.metric_value)
- class ProblemFilter(object):
- def __init__(self):
- self.thresholds = dict()
- def addThreshold(self, item):
- self.thresholds[(item.get_type(),item.get_file_type())] = item
- def matches(self, item):
- key = (item.get_type(), item.get_file_type())
- filt = self.thresholds.get(key, None)
- if filt is None:
- return False
- return item.is_worse_than(filt)
- def filter(self, sequence):
- for item in iter(sequence):
- if self.matches(item):
- yield item
- class Item(object):
- """
- A generic measurement about some aspect of our source code. See
- the subclasses below for the specific problems we are trying to tackle.
- """
- def __init__(self, problem_type, problem_location, metric_value):
- self.problem_location = problem_location
- self.metric_value = int(metric_value)
- self.warning_threshold = self.metric_value
- self.problem_type = problem_type
- def is_worse_than(self, other_problem):
- """Return STATUS_ERR if this is a worse problem than other_problem.
- Return STATUS_WARN if it is a little worse, but falls within the
- warning threshold. Return STATUS_OK if this problem is not
- at all worse than other_problem.
- """
- if self.metric_value > other_problem.metric_value:
- return STATUS_ERR
- elif self.metric_value > other_problem.warning_threshold:
- return STATUS_WARN
- else:
- return STATUS_OK
- def key(self):
- """Generate a unique key that describes this problem that can be used as a dictionary key"""
- # Item location is a filesystem path, so we need to normalize this
- # across platforms otherwise same paths are not gonna match.
- canonical_location = os.path.normcase(self.problem_location)
- return "%s:%s" % (canonical_location, self.problem_type)
- def __str__(self):
- return "problem %s %s %s" % (self.problem_type, self.problem_location, self.metric_value)
- def get_type(self):
- return self.problem_type
- def get_file_type(self):
- if self.problem_location.endswith(".h"):
- return "*.h"
- else:
- return "*.c"
- class FileSizeItem(Item):
- """
- Denotes a problem with the size of a .c file.
- The 'problem_location' is the filesystem path of the .c file, and the
- 'metric_value' is the number of lines in the .c file.
- """
- def __init__(self, problem_location, metric_value):
- super(FileSizeItem, self).__init__("file-size", problem_location, metric_value)
- class IncludeCountItem(Item):
- """
- Denotes a problem with the number of #includes in a .c file.
- The 'problem_location' is the filesystem path of the .c file, and the
- 'metric_value' is the number of #includes in the .c file.
- """
- def __init__(self, problem_location, metric_value):
- super(IncludeCountItem, self).__init__("include-count", problem_location, metric_value)
- class FunctionSizeItem(Item):
- """
- Denotes a problem with a size of a function in a .c file.
- The 'problem_location' is "<path>:<function>()" where <path> is the
- filesystem path of the .c file and <function> is the name of the offending
- function.
- The 'metric_value' is the size of the offending function in lines.
- """
- def __init__(self, problem_location, metric_value):
- super(FunctionSizeItem, self).__init__("function-size", problem_location, metric_value)
- class DependencyViolationItem(Item):
- """
- Denotes a dependency violation in a .c or .h file. A dependency violation
- occurs when a file includes a file from some module that is not listed
- in its .may_include file.
- The 'problem_location' is the file that contains the problem.
- The 'metric_value' is the number of forbidden includes.
- """
- def __init__(self, problem_location, metric_value):
- super(DependencyViolationItem, self).__init__("dependency-violation",
- problem_location,
- metric_value)
- comment_re = re.compile(r'#.*$')
- def get_old_problem_from_exception_str(exception_str):
- orig_str = exception_str
- exception_str = comment_re.sub("", exception_str)
- fields = exception_str.split()
- if len(fields) == 0:
- # empty line or comment
- return None
- elif len(fields) == 4:
- # valid line
- _, problem_type, problem_location, metric_value = fields
- else:
- raise ValueError("Misformatted line {!r}".format(orig_str))
- if problem_type == "file-size":
- return FileSizeItem(problem_location, metric_value)
- elif problem_type == "include-count":
- return IncludeCountItem(problem_location, metric_value)
- elif problem_type == "function-size":
- return FunctionSizeItem(problem_location, metric_value)
- elif problem_type == "dependency-violation":
- return DependencyViolationItem(problem_location, metric_value)
- else:
- raise ValueError("Unknown exception type {!r}".format(orig_str))
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