Skip to content
/ jpeek Public
forked from cqfn/jpeek

Hosted and command-line calculator of cohesion metrics for Java code

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

starkda/jpeek

 
 

Repository files navigation

logo

EO principles respected here DevOps By Rultor.com We recommend IntelliJ IDEA

mvn Javadoc PDD status Maven Central License codecov jpeek report SonarQube Hits-of-Code

jPeek is a static collector of Java code metrics.

Motivation: Class cohesion, for example, is considered as one of most important object-oriented software attributes. There are over 30 different cohesion metrics invented so far, but almost none of them have calculators available. The situation with other metrics is very similar. We want to create such a tool that will make it possible to analyze code quality more or less formally (with hundreds of metrics). Then, we will apply this analysis to different Java libraries with an intent to prove that the ideas from Elegant Objects book series make sense.

How to use?

Load the latest jar-with-dependencies.jar file from here and then:

$ java -jar jpeek-jar-with-dependencies.jar --sources . --target ./jpeek

jPeek will analyze Java files in the current directory. XML reports will be generated in the ./jpeek directory. Enjoy.

Available CLI options
Option Description
-s, --sources <path> Required. Path to directory with the class files
-t, --target <path> Required. Path to directory where the reports will be generated
--include-ctors Include constructors into all formulas
--include-static-methods Include static methods into all formulas
--include-private-methods Include private methods into all formulas
--metrics <metrics> Comma-separated list of metrics to include (default: "LCOM5,NHD,MMAC,SCOM,CAMC")
--overwrite Overwrite the target directory, if it exists, or exit with error
--quiet Turn off logging
--help Display help message

You can also deploy it as a web service to your own platform. Just compile it with mvn clean package --settings settings.xml and then run, as Procfile suggests. You will need to have settings.xml with the following data:

<settings>
  <profiles>
    <profile>
      <id>jpeek-heroku</id>
      <activation>
        <activeByDefault>true</activeByDefault>
      </activation>
      <properties>
        <sentry.dsn>https://...</sentry.dsn>
        <dynamo.key>AKIAI..........LNN6A</dynamo.key>
        <dynamo.secret>6560KMv5+8Ti....................Qdwob63Z</dynamo.secret>
      </properties>
    </profile>
  </profiles>
</settings>

You will also need these tables in DynamoDB (all indexes must deliver ALL attributes):

jpeek-mistakes:
  metric (HASH/String)
  version (RANGE/String)
  indexes:
    mistakes (GSI):
      version (HASH/String),
      avg (RANGE/Number)
jpeek-results:
  artifact (HASH/String)
  indexes:
    ranks (GSI):
      version (HASH/String)
      rank (RANGE/Number)
    scores (GSI):
      version (HASH/String)
      score (RANGE/Number)
    recent (GSI):
      good (HASH/String)
      added (RANGE/Number)

Cohesion Metrics

These papers provide a pretty good summary of cohesion metrics:

[izadkhah17] Habib Izadkhah et al.,
Class Cohesion Metrics for Software Engineering: A Critical Review,
Computer Science Journal of Moldova, vol.25, no.1(73), 2017, PDF.

[badri08] Linda Badri et al.,
Revisiting Class Cohesion: An empirical investigation on several systems,
Journal of Object Technology, vol.7, no.6, 2008, PDF.

Here is a list of metrics we have already implemented (in order or their appearance):

[chidamber94] Lack of Cohesion in Methods (LCOM).
Shyam Chidamber et al.,
A metrics suite for object oriented design,
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, vol.20, no.6, 1994, PDF.

[bieman95] Tight Class Cohesion (TCC) and Loose Class Cohesion (LCC).
James M. Bieman et al.,
Cohesion and Reuse in an Object-Oriented System,
Department of Computer Science, Colorado State University, 1995, PDF.

[hitz95] Lack of Cohesion in Methods 4 (LCOM4).
Martin Hitz et al.,
Measuring Coupling and Cohesion In Object-Oriented Systems,
Institute of Applied Computer Science and Systems Analysis, University of Vienna, 1995, PDF.

[sellers96] Lack of Cohesion in Methods 2-3 (LCOM 2, 3 and 5).
B. Henderson-Sellers et al.,
Coupling and cohesion (towards a valid metrics suite for object-oriented analysis and design),
Object Oriented Systems 3, 1996, PDF.

[bansiya99] Cohesion Among Methods of Classes (CAMC).
Jagdish Bansiya et al.,
A class cohesion metric for object-oriented designs,
Journal of Object-Oriented Programming, vol. 11, no. 8, 1999, PDF.

[etzkorn00] LOgical Relatedness of Methods (LORM).
L. Etzkorn and H. Delugach,
Towards a semantic metrics suite for object-oriented design,
Technology of Object-Oriented Languages and Systems, 2000. TOOLS 34. Proceedings. 34th International Conference on. IEEE, 2000, pp. 71–80, PDF

[wasiq01] Class Connection Metric (CCM).
M. Wasiq
Measuring Class Cohesion in Object-Oriented Systems,
Master Thesis at the King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals, 2001, PDF.

[aman04] Optimistic Class Cohesion (OCC) and Pessimistic Class Cohesion (PCC).
Hirohisa Aman et al.,
A proposal of class cohesion metrics using sizes of cohesive parts,
Proc. of Fifth Joint Conference on Knowledge-based Software Engineering, 2002, PDF.

[marcus05] Conceptual Cohesion of Classes (C3).
A. Marcus and D. Poshyvanyk,
The conceptual cohesion of classes,
21st IEEE International Conference on Software Maintenance (ICSM'05), Budapest, Hungary, 2005, pp. 133-142, PDF

[counsell06] Normalized Hamming Distance (NHD).
Steve Counsell et al.,
The interpretation and utility of three cohesion metrics for object-oriented design,
ACM TOSEM, April 2006, PDF.

[fernandez06] A Sensitive Metric of Class Cohesion (SCOM).
Luis Fernández et al.,
[A] new metric [...] yielding meaningful values [...] more sensitive than those previously reported,
International Journal "Information Theories & Applications", Volume 13, 2006, PDF.

[dallal07] Method-Method through Attributes Cohesion (MMAC).
Jehad Al Dallal,
A Design-Based Cohesion Metric for Object-Oriented Classes,
World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology International Journal of Computer and Information Engineering Vol:1, No:10, 2007, PDF.

[liu09] Maximal Weighted Entropy (MWE).
Y. Liu, D. Poshyvanyk, R. Ferenc, T. Gyim´othy, and N. Chrisochoides,
Modeling class cohesion as mixtures of latent topics,
Software Maintenance, 2009. ICSM 2009. IEEE International Conference on. IEEE, 2009, pp. 233–242, PDF

[dallal11] Transitive Lack of Cohesion in Methods (TLCOM).
Jehad Al Dallal,
Transitive-based object-oriented lack-of-cohesion metric,
Department of Information Science, Kuwait University, 2011, PDF.

How it works?

First, Skeleton parses Java bytecode using Javaassit and ASM, in order to produce skeleton.xml. This XML document contains information about each class, which is necessary for the metrics calculations. For example, this simple Java class:

class Book {
  private int id;
  int getId() {
    return this.id;
  }
}

Will look like this in the skeleton.xml:

<class id='Book'>
  <attributes>
   <attribute public='false' static='false' type='I'>id</attribute>
  </attributes>
  <methods>
    <method abstract='false' ctor='true' desc='()I' name='getId' public='true' static='false'>
      <return>I</return>
      <args/>
    </method>
  </methods>
</class>

Then, we have a collection of XSL stylesheets, one per each metric. For example, LCOM.xsl transforms skeleton.xml into LCOM.xml, which may look like this:

<metric>
  <title>MMAC</title>
  <app>
    <class id='InstantiatorProvider' value='1'/>
    <class id='InstantationException' value='0'/>
    <class id='AnswersValidator' value='0.0583'/>
    <class id='ClassNode' value='0.25'/>
    [... skipped ...]
  </app>
</metric>

Thus, all calculations happen inside the XSLT files. We decided to implement it this way after a less successful attempt to do it all in Java. It seems that XSL is much more suitable for manipulations with data than Java.

jPeek maven plugin

We are developing a jPeek plugin for Maven, see jPeek Maven plugin project.

Known Limitations

  • The java compiler is known to inline constant variables as per JLS 13.1. This affects the results calculated by metrics that take into account access to class attributes if these are final constants. For instance, all LCOM and COM metrics are affected.

How to contribute?

Just fork, make changes, run mvn clean install -Pqulice and submit a pull request; read this, if lost.

Contributors

Don't hesitate to add your name to this list in your next pull request.

About

Hosted and command-line calculator of cohesion metrics for Java code

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 66.2%
  • XSLT 32.1%
  • Other 1.7%