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Java

Java static code analysis

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

  • All rules 733
  • Vulnerability60
  • Bug175
  • Security Hotspot40
  • Code Smell458

  • Quick Fix 65
Filtered: 17 rules found
design
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Circular dependencies between classes across packages should be resolved

           Code Smell
        2. Circular dependencies between classes in the same package should be resolved

           Code Smell
        3. The Singleton design pattern should be used with care

           Code Smell
        4. Methods should not perform too many tasks (aka Brain method)

           Code Smell
        5. Classes should not depend on an excessive number of classes (aka Monster Class)

           Code Smell
        6. Constructors of an "abstract" class should not be declared "public"

           Code Smell
        7. Tests should use fixed data instead of randomized data

           Code Smell
        8. Tests should be stable

           Code Smell
        9. Spring components should use constructor injection

           Code Smell
        10. Constructor injection should be used instead of field injection

           Bug
        11. "ThreadGroup" should not be used

           Code Smell
        12. Classes without "public" constructors should be "final"

           Code Smell
        13. Public methods should not contain selector arguments

           Code Smell
        14. Double-checked locking should not be used

           Bug
        15. Two branches in a conditional structure should not have exactly the same implementation

           Code Smell
        16. String literals should not be duplicated

           Code Smell
        17. Utility classes should not have public constructors

           Code Smell

        Tests should be stable

        adaptability - tested
        maintainability
        reliability
        Code Smell
        • tests
        • design
        • unpredictable

        Why is this an issue?

        More Info

        Unstable / flaky tests are tests which sometimes pass and sometimes fail, without any code change. Obviously, they slow down developments when developers have to rerun failed tests. However, the real problem is that you can’t completely trust these tests, they might fail for many different reasons and you don’t know if any of them will happen in production.

        Some tools, such as TestNG, enable developers to automatically retry flaky tests. This might be acceptable as a temporary solution, but it should eventually be fixed. The more flaky tests you add, the more chances there are for a bug to arrive in production.

        This rule raises an issue when the annotation org.testng.annotations.Test is given a successPercentage argument with a value lower than 100.

        Noncompliant code example

        import org.testng.annotations.Test;
        
        public class PercentageTest {
            @Test(successPercentage = 80, invocationCount = 10)  // Noncompliant. The test is allowed to fail 2 times.
            public void flakyTest() {
            }
        }
        
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