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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: 21 rules found
junit
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Methods setUp() and tearDown() should be correctly annotated starting with JUnit4

           Code Smell
        2. JUnit5 test classes and methods should not be silently ignored

           Bug
        3. Migrate your tests from JUnit4 to the new JUnit5 annotations

           Code Smell
        4. JUnit5 inner test classes should be annotated with @Nested

           Bug
        5. JUnit5 test classes and methods should have default package visibility

           Code Smell
        6. JUnit assertTrue/assertFalse should be simplified to the corresponding dedicated assertion

           Code Smell
        7. Only one method invocation is expected when testing checked exceptions

           Bug
        8. Assertion methods should not be used within the try block of a try-catch catching an Error

           Bug
        9. Only one method invocation is expected when testing runtime exceptions

           Code Smell
        10. Exception testing via JUnit @Test annotation should be avoided

           Code Smell
        11. Exception testing via JUnit ExpectedException rule should not be mixed with other assertions

           Code Smell
        12. Unit tests should throw exceptions

           Code Smell
        13. Assertion arguments should be passed in the correct order

           Code Smell
        14. JUnit rules should be used

           Code Smell
        15. Literal boolean values and nulls should not be used in assertions

           Code Smell
        16. Tests should include assertions

           Code Smell
        17. Test assertions should include messages

           Code Smell
        18. JUnit test cases should call super methods

           Code Smell
        19. TestCases should contain tests

           Code Smell
        20. JUnit assertions should not be used in "run" methods

           Code Smell
        21. JUnit4 @Ignored and JUnit5 @Disabled annotations should be used to disable tests and should provide a rationale

           Code Smell

        Only one method invocation is expected when testing checked exceptions

        intentionality - logical
        reliability
        Bug
        • junit
        • tests

        Why is this an issue?

        When verifying that code raises an exception, a good practice is to avoid having multiple method calls inside the tested code, to be explicit about what is exactly tested.

        When two of the methods can raise the same checked exception, not respecting this good practice is a bug, since it is not possible to know what is really tested.

        You should make sure that only one method can raise the expected checked exception in the tested code.

        Noncompliant code example

        @Test
        public void testG() {
          // Do you expect g() or f() throwing the exception?
          assertThrows(IOException.class, () -> g(f(1)) ); // Noncompliant
        }
        
        @Test
        public void testGTryCatchIdiom() {
          try { // Noncompliant
            g(f(1));
            Assert.fail("Expected an IOException to be thrown");
          } catch (IOException e) {
            // Test exception message...
          }
        }
        
        int f(int x) throws IOException {
          // ...
        }
        
        int g(int x) throws IOException {
          // ...
        }
        

        Compliant solution

        @Test
        public void testG() {
          int y = f(1);
          // It is explicit that we expect an exception from g() and not f()
          assertThrows(IOException.class, () -> g(y) );
        }
        
        @Test
        public void testGTryCatchIdiom() {
          int y = f(1);
          try {
            g(y);
            Assert.fail("Expected an IOException to be thrown");
          } catch (IOException e) {
            // Test exception message...
          }
        }
        
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