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do-like-javac

do-like-javac (or dljc for short) is a tool for monitoring the build process of a Java project and recording information about what parameters were passed to javac for the purpose of later analysis. It can also automate the running of various analysis tools, including:

do-like-javac supports projects built with:

  • Apache Ant
  • Apache Maven
  • Gradle
  • Manual invocation of javac

If you have a project that builds through Eclipse that you want to analyze, Eclipse can generate an Ant-compatible build.xml file by right-clicking the project, selecting "Export" and choosing the "Ant Buildfiles" option.

Dependencies

  • Python 2.7

That's it. No other external dependencies for the core do-like-javac scripts.

Of course, you will also need to have installed:

  • The analysis tool(s) you want to run.
  • Any build dependencies of the project you're analyzing.

do-like-javac was built and tested on Mac OS X and GNU/Linux. It probably also works on Microsoft Windows, but the method of invocation is probably different and we provide no support.

Installation

git clone https://github.com/SRI-CSL/do-like-javac.git

Then symlink the dljc executable to somewhere in your $PATH, e.g.

ln -s /path/to/dljc $HOME/bin/dljc

Running

First, make sure your project is in a clean state (e.g. via ant clean, mvn clean, etc.). Since do-like-javac monitors the build process and build tools skip already-built files, if you run dljc on an already-built project, you won't get any results.

Next, invoke dljc from the directory of the project you want to analyze:

dljc -o logs -- ant build

Where "ant build" is replaced by whatever command builds your project. Output will be emitted to logs/toplevel.log

You may also run one or more checking tools on the discovered java files, by invoking with the -t option and a comma separated list of tools to use (e.g. "-t print", "-t randoop" or "-t print,randoop").

If you're running checking tools, there are a couple more flags that may be helpful. --quiet suppresses output from tools, and --timeout <seconds> kills any tool subcommand that runs longer than <seconds>.

Caching

do-like-javac can only extract data from a full compile of a project. That means if you want to re-run it with new arguments or different analysis tools, you will have to clean and fully re-compile your project. To save time and shortcut this process, we save a cache of the results in the output directory. If you want dljc to use this cache, simply add the --cache flag and the cache (if available) will be used instead of recompiling your project.

IMPORTANT NOTE: We don't do any sort of cache invalidation or freshness checking. If you add new files to your project and want dljc to pick up on them, you will have to do a full clean and run dljc without the --cache flag.

Supported Tools

Print

The print tool (dljc -t print) will pretty-print the detected javac commands, as well as any generated JAR files, and their entry points if applicable.

Bixie

The Bixie tool will run your project through Bixie. You will need to provide a library directory containing bixie.jar using the --lib option.

dljc --lib path/to/libs/ -t bixie -- mvn compile

Dyntrace

The Dyntrace tool will run your project through Randoop to generate tests, then run those tests with Daikon/Chicory to generate invariants. You will need to provide a library directory with the following jars using the --lib option:

  • randoop.jar
  • junit-4.12.jar
  • hamcrest-core-1.3.jar

You will also need Daikon built and installed somewhere, with the environment variable DAIKONDIR pointing to your installation.

dljc --lib path/to/libs/ -t dyntrace -- mvn compile

LICENSE

Parts of the code in this project were taken from the Facebook Infer project. Files containing such code have Facebook copyright notices at the top and are licensed under the terms laid out in LICENSE_Facebook.

The rest of the project is licensed under the BSD license under the terms laid out in LICENSE.

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