SonarSource Rules
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Go

Go static code analysis

Unique rules to find Bugs, Vulnerabilities, Security Hotspots, and Code Smells in your GO code

  • All rules 70
  • Vulnerability20
  • Bug7
  • Security Hotspot14
  • Code Smell29
 
Tags
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Multi-line comments should not be empty

           Code Smell
        2. Functions should not have identical implementations

           Code Smell
        3. Cognitive Complexity of functions should not be too high

           Code Smell
        4. Go parser failure

           Code Smell
        5. Boolean checks should not be inverted

           Code Smell
        6. Two branches in a conditional structure should not have exactly the same implementation

           Code Smell
        7. "switch" statements should not be nested

           Code Smell
        8. "switch" statements should not have too many "case" clauses

           Code Smell
        9. Track lack of copyright and license headers

           Code Smell
        10. Functions and methods should not have too many lines

           Code Smell
        11. Control flow statements "if", "for" and "switch" should not be nested too deeply

           Code Smell
        12. Octal values should not be used

           Code Smell
        13. "switch" statements should have "default" clauses

           Code Smell
        14. "if ... else if" constructs should end with "else" clauses

           Code Smell
        15. Statements should be on separate lines

           Code Smell
        16. String literals should not be duplicated

           Code Smell
        17. Functions should not be empty

           Code Smell
        18. Local variable and function parameter names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell
        19. "switch case" clauses should not have too many lines

           Code Smell
        20. Track uses of "TODO" tags

           Code Smell
        21. Track uses of "FIXME" tags

           Code Smell
        22. Boolean literals should not be redundant

           Code Smell
        23. Redundant pairs of parentheses should be removed

           Code Smell
        24. Nested blocks of code should not be left empty

           Code Smell
        25. Functions should not have too many parameters

           Code Smell
        26. Expressions should not be too complex

           Code Smell
        27. Files should not have too many lines of code

           Code Smell
        28. Lines should not be too long

           Code Smell
        29. Function names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell

        "if ... else if" constructs should end with "else" clauses

        intentionality - clear
        maintainability
        Code Smell

          Why is this an issue?

          This rule applies whenever an if statement is followed by one or more else if statements; the final else if should be followed by an else statement.

          The requirement for a final else statement is defensive programming.

          The else statement should either take appropriate action or contain a suitable comment as to why no action is taken. This is consistent with the requirement to have a final default clause in a switch statement.

          Noncompliant code example

          if x == 0 {
          	doSomething()
          } else if x == 1 {
          	doSomethingElse()
          }
          

          Compliant solution

          if x == 0 {
          	doSomething()
          } else if x == 1 {
          	doSomethingElse()
          } else {
          	return errors.New("unsupported int")
          }
          

          Exceptions

          When all branches of an if-else if end with return or break, the code that comes after the if implicitly behaves as if it was in an else clause. This rule will therefore ignore that case.

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            in your IDE
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            on-premise CI
            Available Since
            9.1
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            Developer Edition
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