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Summary: This page provides information that should help you to qualify the JEE application you need to analyze.

Step 1: Gather code context

At the end of this step, you should know:

  • The JDK version used to compile the source code
  • The frameworks used and the version numbers
  • The different application layers
  • The archives (third-party)
  • The application server used to run the application

And you should have:

  • All the JAVA/JSP application source code, the relevant XML and .properties files and all the client files (HTML, HTM, JavaScript ...). Note that the JEE Analyzer does not analyze HTML, HTM, JavaScript, CSS files. Instead you must use the HTML5 and JavaScript extension.
  • The deployment descriptor files required for EJB and Web Services analyses
  • The archives of libraries required to run the application, including those of the application server

Questions to ask

  • What JDK version is used?
  • Which frameworks are used for the presentation layer and the persistence layer?
  • Are there other frameworks used, and if so, for what purpose? Frameworks like:
    • Spring
    • Custom framework
  • What are the application server brands and versions used for persistence and/or web services?
  • Get the software development guide if possible. This will give you the naming convention used and will allow you to customize quality rules.

Required source code components for the analysis

RequirementComment
All the source code must encoded in ASCII or in a supported Unicode encoding (UTF-8, …). 
All .java files in the applicationWhen collecting application source code, ensure that you will have the .java files and not .class or .jar files for source code within the scope of the analysis. .class and .jar files are decompiled only to extract the signature.
All libraries (.JAR) required to build the application including JDK, J2EE, related libraries e.g. application server, 3rd party, framework, presentation, persistence, etc.

Custom JAR files, included e.g. custom J2EE.JAR, used for Presentation and Persistence should be delivered with the source code. Failure to do so will prevent transaction identification, and all depending metrics.

.XML files used by frameworks 
.properties files 
EJB configuration files and all their deployment mapping filesEJB configuration files (ejb-jar.xml)
All associated Deployment Mapping Files (required to link with the database). 
web.xml for each webapplicationMust be provided in the WEB-INF directory of each web-application
All .jsp / .jcx / .jspf / .jhtml and similar types of files  in the application 
All xsl files 
All Tags libs (.tld)If the application uses custom tags (JSTL), please provide the TLD documentation
All XML configuration files (struts-config.xml, ...) and mapping files. 
All DTD files associated to the XML files 
All HTML filesNote that the JEE Analyzer does not analyze these files types. Instead you must use the HTML5 and JavaScript extension.
  
All JavaScript files
All css and image files
for webservices, WSDL/WSDD/mapping files 
TLD documentation 
Maven and/or Eclipse project files : *.pom, *.project, *.classpathIncluding the parent .pom. These files will allow automated discovery and analysis configuration.
.EAR or .WAR (Production archive)Required to reproduce the real production structure with the sources.
 All test code and redundant components must be excluded before using Cast DMT 
  • When collecting application source code, ensure that you will have the .java files and not .class or .jar files for source code within the scope of the analysis. These files (.class and .jar), are decompiled only to extract the signature. As a result, metrics and quality rules based on the code (such as Cyclomatic Complexity) will not apply to them.
  • Mostly, the structure of the source code does not reflect the production tree. In this case, you may have a lot of unresolved links between html, JSP, Java Script, and JAVA files.The correct way to handle this situation is to ask for the production package (WAR or EAR). With this archive you will be able to reproduce the real production structure with the sources and avoid link issues between components.
  • The incorrect way is to try to handle this situation with Text Replacement because the risk is the influence of Text Replacement on correct links. You will have to write lot of regexp and it will be hard to validate their effects. So, first change the source tree to reflect the production environment and then you can use Text Replacement.
  • For Java files, there is no issue with regard to their location since links with these files are based on their name or full qualified name. The full qualified name is derived from their package that is specified with the keyword package in the Java file.
  • The production package provided could be a different version from the source code. As a result, don't rely on it for the analysis, just use it to copy the tree.

Step 2: Identify your application components

A typical J2EE application is composed of:

  • A presentation layer
  • A persistent/session layer
  • A business layer
  • (Optionally) a web service layer
  • (Optionally) other components

A typical J2EE source path tree:

Before starting this analysis, you should have a tool such as grep (free to download from http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/), Notepad++ (http://notepad-plus.sourceforge.net) or UltraEdit (http://www.ultraedit.com/) to search for expressions in files. These tools have the advantage over Windows tools to output the text that matches a given expression for each parsed file.

The methodology is as follows:

Identifying the presentation layer

There are various ways to find out what the presentation layer is based on:

Different methods

  • Look at the libraries included in the distribution of your application on the file system: for example if you find struts.jar, there is a high chance that the Struts framework is used. To verify this, you can read the web.xml (see below)
  • Look at the XML files in the WEB-INF directory: if you find struts-config.xml, there is a high chance that the Struts framework is used. To verify this, you can read the web.xml (see below)
  • Look at the XML in the java source directory, if you find a struts.xml file then there is a high chance that the Struts framework is used.
  • Read the web.xml file in the WEB-INF directory and identify the technology that the servlets are based on (see the next chapter). This is the only method that is 100% foolproof since this file is used by the application server to load the application.

Reading a web.xml file

When reading the web.xml file, pay attention to the classes and related parameters referred by the Servlet tag to get information on the underlying technology:

For example, a Servlet class that has an init-param value equal to struts-config.xml means that you are using the struts framework:

<servlet-name>action</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>org.apache.struts.action.ActionServlet</servlet-class>
<init-param>
    <param-name>config</param-name>
    <param-value>/WEB-INF/struts-config.xml</param-value>
</init-param>

Another example is a reference to the StrutsCX servlet meaning that you are using the StrutsCX framework:

<servlet>
     <servlet-name>StrutsCXServlet</servlet-name>
     <servlet-class>*com.cappuccinonet.strutscx.xslt.StrutsCXServlet*</servlet-class>
     <init-param>
          <param-name>debug</param-name>
          <param-value>false</param-value>
    </init-param>
    <load-on-startup>2</load-on-startup>
</servlet>

Another interesting tag is servlet-mapping that allows you to identify which type of files are handled by your web server.
For example:

<servlet-mapping>
    <servlet-name>jsp</servlet-name>
    <url-pattern>**.jspf*</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>

These extensions will allow you to check if the default extension list handled by the analyzer is correct.

Specific action if Struts is used

If you find that Struts is the presentation layer framework, open the struts-config.xml file to see if there are other frameworks used, such as StrutsCX.
To do so look at the specific tag plug-in:
For example:

<plug-in className="com.cappuccinonet.strutscx.util.StrutsCXPlugIn">
   <set-property property="config" value="/WEB-INF/strutscx-config.xml"/>
</plug-in>

Struts PlugIns are configured using the <plug-in> element within the Struts configuration file. This element only has one valid attribute, 'className', which is the fully qualified name of the Java class which implements the org.apache.struts.action.PlugIn interface. For PlugIns that require configuration themselves, the nested <set-property> element is available. The plug-in tag in the struts-config.xml file is used to declare the PlugIn to be loaded at the time of server start-up. Since Struts PlugIns can be developed by anyone, you can find various plug-ins, but the most common is StrutsCX. Here is a link about Struts plug-ins: http://www.roseindia.net/struts/developing-struts-plugin.shtml

Identifying the Persistent/Session layer

To identify the persistent layer, first look at the META-INF directory. Is there an ejb-jar.xml? If yes, the application is using EJBs to make persistence and/or sessions. NOTE:the presence of the ejb-jar.xml file does not always mean that EJB is used for persistence. It can be used for EJB sessions with another framework like hibernate for the persistence. As a result you must also look for other frameworks.

If this is not the case, you can use Hibernate or another ORM framework to ensure persistence if any. See Identifying other components/frameworks below.

Identifying Web services

To find out if your application implements web services, simply search for files with the extension .wsdl or .wsdd in the source file directories. Usually, these files are located in the META-INF directory, but as the source folders do not always match the production folder tree, we recommend searching all the source files.

Identifying other components/frameworks

To identify unknown frameworks or custom frameworks, there are various methods:

Find all the XML files and look at the DTD they are referring to. This allows you to find frameworks like Spring, Hibernate... (You can use UltraEdit or a grep command to find the pattern DTD inside XML files in one go).Examples:

Framework

DTD

Hibernate

<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD 2.0//EN"
"http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-mapping-2.0.dtd">

<!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Configuration DTD 2.0//EN"
"http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-configuration-2.0.dtd">

iBATIS

<!DOCTYPE daoConfigPUBLIC "-//iBATIS.com//DTD DAO Configuration 2.0//EN""http://www.ibatis.com/dtd/dao-2.dtd">

Spring

<!DOCTYPE beans PUBLIC "-//SPRING//DTD BEAN//EN" "http://www.springframework.org/dtd/spring-beans.dtd">

Look at the libraries: the names of the libraries can give you an indication.Examples:

Framework

Libraries

Hibernate

hibernate3.jar

iBATIS

ibatis-common-2.jar
ibatis-dao-2.jar
ibatis-sqlmap-2.jar

Spring

spring-1.2.7.jar

Look at the different extensions used throughout the entire application. This information will also allow you to verify if the default extension list used by the analyzer to parse client and server source code is complete.Examples:

If you have detected this framework through an XML file, you can start to customize the support of this XML (see chapter 9.1 Manage XML files), but in any case, we recommend that you read up on how it works and how it is configured.

Step 3: Identify the limit of your application

Identify what the limits of your analysis are

  • You should not include framework or tool source code if they are not part of your development (the related .jar will be referenced as an archive through a J2EE Environment Profile > Classpath or the Classpath of an Analysis Unit; refer to for more information).
  • You must pay attention to the .jar that contains source code: a source code delivery often contains both the Java source code and .jar that contains the compilation of these Java classes. You must refer only to the Java source code and never to the compiled Java classes.
  • In many cases, a 2EE application contains generated code (stubs for Web Services (AXIS), presentation layer and/or DAO with velocity templates, SAP connectors via BAPI, Mainframe integration with SCORT...). Usually, the generated code must be analyzed in a specific Analysis Unit to avoid influencing the metrics associated to the developed code. This is important in the case of Third Party Application Maintenance where usually, the integrator is not responsible for the generated code.Taking into account the previous constraints, there are two cases:
    • If the generated code concerns fully generated classes, it is possible to analyze them in a specific Analysis Unit
    • If the generated code concerns the skeleton of classes, there are no possibilities for handling this case.

Notion of internal and external Java components

When determining the limit of a JEE analysis it is important to make a distinction between Java components that are internal to an Analysis Unit, external to this Analysis Unit and external to the application:

  • Internal: means that the source code will produce the Java module in the Analysis Service. This refers to:
    • All Java sources referenced through Analysis Unit > Java Files

  • External: this refers to all java files, .class files or Archive files that are referenced through:
    • Any J2EE Analysis Units selected as a target dependency will be implicitly referenced by the other J2EE Analysis Units source of the dependency. 
    • Java code that is referenced in Analysis > Java > Define classpaths used by the application
    • Environment Profile: in General > Add Path (for the classes and Java sources) and General > Add Archive or Add Archive folder for the JAR files.

    • Analysis Unit: an analysis unit which is marked "don't show in dashboard" will be considered as external and it's content will only be used by other analysis unit to resolve objects. No quality rules will be computed on the analysis unit code when this option is selected.

Important:

  • when Java files are shared between different Analysis Unit, the only means to refer them as external is to refer them through the Add New Class Root Folder option. Never refer the related JAR files or .class files to make them external: it will create two distinct objects in the KB. As a result, metrics will not work and some Java classes may appear as unreferenced. Note that this means also that any .class or JAR that contains class that are defined as Java file in any Analysis Units MUST NOT be selected in any Analysis Units.
  • don't forget to select the checkbox to save the links from internal artifacts to external artifacts.