JEE File Discoverer - 2.3

Extension ID

com.castsoftware.dmtjeefilediscoverer

What’s new?

See JEE File Discoverer 2.3 - Release Notes.

Extension description

This discoverer detects “projects” (and therefore Analysis Units) based on the presence of .java files.

In what situation should you install this extension?

This extension should be used when the Java/JSP project files such as .project or pom.xml are not delivered with the source code (without these files, the discoverers provided “out of the box” in CAST Imaging Core cannot detect all .java files). In summary the extension provides a “catch-all” to ensure that all .java/.jsp files will be packaged for analysis.

Note that this discoverer also supports .wsdl/.wsdd files which belong to a path of an already discovered project (i.e. these files will be analyzed). However, if these files are located outside the path of a discovered project path, then they will not cause the creation of a project/Analysis Unit and will therefore be skipped during the analysis.

Technical information

This extension is designed to detect .java/.jsp files in the following scenarios:

Case 1

The package identified in the first .java file matches the folder hierarchy. In this situation one project is created by the discoverer as follows:

  • the project name will be the name of the parent folder of the folder containing the main package (i.e. com)
  • the root path of the project will be the same as the project name
  • the folder containing the main package (i.e. com) will be selected as the source code

For example, for a .java file with the following folder hierarchy C:\temp\project1\src\com\cast\test.java, the project will be named “project1”, the root path will be “project1” and the selected folder is “project1/src”.

Case 2

Similar to Case 1 above, when a sub-folder “src” and a sub-folder “test” are located inside the same folder “project1”, the project created by the discoverer (“project1”) will reference the two folders for the source code: “project1/src” and “project1/test”.

Case 3

In this situation the .java files do not have a package and one project will be created by the discoverer for each .java file that is discovered (and not each folder). The project name uses the same name as the discovered .java file.

This is known as an Unnamed Package and will be recorded as such in the CAST Delivery Manager Tool log - see “Unnamed Package” below for more information.

Case 4

In this situation, the package doesn’t match the folder hierarchy (for example, a.b.c.class1 but the folders a and b are missing). A warning is displayed and the folder c is considered as the main package. The parent folder of c is selected for the source code and the grand-parent is used for the project name and root.

This is known as an Incomplete Package and will be recorded as such in the CAST Delivery Manager Tool log - see “Incomplete Package” below for more information.

Case 5

Similar to Case 4 above, however, the .java file is not located in the correct folder. In this situation (known as an “UnmatchingPackage”) the behavior of the discovery is the same as Case 4, however, the log file generated by the CAST Delivery Manager Tool will contain the following to indicate the nature of the discovery:

This is known as an Unmatching Package and will be recorded as such in the CAST Delivery Manager Tool log - see “Unmatching Package” below for more information.

Case 6

In this situation, each Java branch is assigned to a separate project, for example:

  • c:\temp\Project1\src\com\cast\file1.java
  • c:\temp\Project1\x\y\z\src\com\component\file2.java

In the above situation (known as a ParentProject), two projects will be created.

This is known as a Parent Project and will be recorded as such in the CAST Delivery Manager Tool log - see “Parent Project” below for more information.

About dependencies

No dependencies to other Analysis Units/Technologies will be automatically created based on the use of this extension since the “discovery” is based on the presence of .java files, rather than Maven or Eclipse projects. As such, you may need to manually create dependencies between Analysis Units to achieve any inter-Analysis Unit links you require.

Upgrading from JEE File Extension 1.x

If you have previously been actively using the JEE File Extension 1.x with existing Applications and you decide to install JEE File Extension 2.x and use it with these Applications, you will find that a new packaging action on the same source code may produce different packaging results, i.e the list of projects discovered may change.

Compatibility

CAST Imaging Core release Supported
8.3.x ✔️

Activation using CAST Imaging Console

Console will automatically install the JEE File Discoverer whenever a .java file is encountered in your delivered source code. This extension will ensure that the required Analysis Units are created for your source code and that an analysis can proceed without issue.

Extension interface in legacy CAST Delivery Manager Studio

In the CAST Delivery Manager Tool, in the Package configuration tab, the interface will contain a new item in the list of Project types discovered called Java files per package folder:

When the extension is installed after the creation of the package, the item shown above is not selected by default. If you activate it after the Package action has been executed, you must re-package (without forcing the re-extraction) to discover the projects.

In the CAST Delivery Manager Tool, in the Package configuration tab, the interface contains three exclusion rules in the “Project to exclude” section - these are all active by default:

Option Description
Exclude all ‘Java files per package folder’ projects when a full JEE project also exists for these files If the “out of the box” JEE discoverer and the “JEE File Discoverer” identify projects for the same .java files, then the “JEE File Discoverer” projects will be ignored in the Package Content tab after packaging in favour of the standard “out of the box” JEE discoverer projects.
Exclude all ‘Java files per package folder’ projects with an incomplete package If the “JEE File Discoverer” identifies projects known as “Incomplete Packages” (as shown in the packaging log), then these will automatically be ignored in the Package Content tab after packaging.
Exclude all ‘Java files per package folder’ projects with an unnamed package If the “JEE File Discoverer” identifies projects known as “Unnamed Packages” (as shown in the packaging log), then these will automatically be ignored in the Package Content tab after packaging.

In the CAST Delivery Manager Tool, in the Package content tab, when the package contains some .java files, the interface will display a new item in the list of “Project types discovered”:

In the CAST Management Studio, when the delivery is accepted and set as current version, the package will contain Analysis Units corresponding to these projects:

In the CAST Management Studio, the Analysis Units will contain:

  •  the Source Settings discovered by the extension:
    • Application Root Path
    • Java Files: list of parent folders of the main package folder

 

  • the Analysis Settings discovered by the extension:
    • Class Paths: list of jar files inside the Project Path

 

Packaging your source code with the CAST Delivery Manager Tool

When you use the CAST Delivery Manager Tool to package the source code, please ensure that you tick the following option in the CAST Delivery Manager Tool to activate the extension:

Note that:

  • this option will be disabled (unticked) in all pre-existing packages - you need to check it before starting the packaging process otherwise it will be ignored.
  • for new packages created after the extension’s installation, the option will be enabled by default

Log messages

When packaging your source code and you have activated the JEE File Discoverer, the following messages will be present in the log file to help you understand the nature of the discovery:

For performance reasons, the extension only scans ONE .java file per folder it encounters, therefore it is highly recommended that if a log message is emitted for a .java file in a specific folder, ALL the .java files in that folder are manually checked consistency.

Unnamed Package

  • Message type: INFO
  • Location: Scan and Discover phases
  • Meaning: The package declaration is missing; therefore, the corresponding .java file should be considered as a “batch” written in Java.
Java file %FILE_PATH% has no package, and will lead to a specific JEE file project

Invalid Package

  • Message type: WARNING
  • Location: Scan phase
  • Meaning: The package declaration is incorrect; therefore, the corresponding .java file is skipped from any Java project.
Java file %FILE_PATH% has an invalid package, and will be skipped

This warning corresponds to an invalid declaration in the .java file, for example:

package;

package a.b

These invalid declarations are typically found in “scrap” .java files, i.e. files which are bundled in the delivery but which are not taken into account during compilation.

Incomplete Package

  • Message type: INFO
  • Location: Scan and Discover phases
  • Meaning: The package declaration does not match the directory structure; therefore, the discovered project might be incomplete.
Java file %FILE_PATH% has an incomplete package

Unmatching Package

  • Message type: INFO
  • Location: Scan phase
  • Meaning: The package declaration does not at all match the directory structure; therefore, the discovered project might be incomplete.
Java file %FILE_PATH% has an unmatching package

Parent Project

  • Message type: INFO
  • Location: Discover phase
  • Meaning: The folder associated to the project contains sub folders associated with valid (i.e., they are not Invalid Packages, Incomplete Packages or Unmatching Packages) projects; in this situation, some XML and properties resource references are added to the configuration, so that the application root path, which is too large, will not be used as a default by the analyzer to scan the XML and properties files.
Java project %PROJECT_NAME% under %PROJECT_PATH% contains additional Java projects