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Java

Language-specific properties

You can discover and update the Java-specific properties in Administration > General Settings > Languages > Java.

Java analysis and bytecode

Compiled .class files are required for Java projects with more than one Java file. If not provided properly, analysis will fail with the message:

Your project contains .java files, please provide compiled classes with sonar.java.binaries property, or exclude them from the analysis with sonar.exclusions property.

If only some .class files are missing, you'll see warnings like this:

Class 'XXXXXX' is not accessible through the ClassLoader.

If you are not using Maven or Gradle for analysis, you must manually provide bytecode to the analysis. You can also analyze test code, and for that you need to provide tests binaries and test libraries properties.

KeyValue
sonar.java.binaries (required)Comma-separated paths to directories containing the compiled bytecode files corresponding to your source files.
sonar.java.librariesComma-separated paths to files with third-party libraries (JAR or Zip files) used by your project. Wildcards can be used: sonar.java.libraries=path/to/Library.jar,directory/**/*.jar
sonar.java.test.binariesComma-separated paths to directories containing the compiled bytecode files corresponding to your test files
sonar.java.test.librariesComma-separated paths to files with third-party libraries (JAR or Zip files) used by your tests. (For example, this should include the junit jar). Wildcards can be used: sonar.java.test.libraries=directory/**/*.jar

Android users, Jack doesn't provide the required .class files.

Project's specific JDK

In some situations, you might have to analyze a project built with a different version of Java than the one executing the analysis. The most common case is to run the analysis with Java 17, while the project itself uses Java 11 or before for its build.

If this is your case, you will need to set the sonar.java.jdkHome property manually to point the appropriate JDK (see below). By doing this you will specify which JDK classes the analyzer must refer to during the analysis. Not setting this property, while it would have been required, usually leads to inconsistent or even impossible to fix issues being reported, especially in relation with native JDK classes.

When setting sonar.java.jdkHome, you need to provide the path to the JDK directory used by the project being analyzed, if different from the Java runtime executing the analysis. For example, for a Java 11 project, by setting it as follows: sonar.java.jdkHome=/usr/lib/jvm/jdk11.0.22/

# Here maven uses the default version of Java on the system but we specify that we want to analyze a Java 11 project.
mvn clean verify sonar:sonar \
  # other analysis parameters
  -Dsonar.java.jdkHome=/usr/lib/jvm/jdk11.0.22/
  # other analysis parameters

This option can of course be added to your sonar.properties configuration.

JDK preview features

To enable the JDK preview features in SonarQube, you can set the sonar.java.enablePreview analysis parameter to true (default is false). 

Turning issues off

The best way to deactivate an individual issue you don't intend to fix is to mark it as accepted or false positive through the SonarQube UI.

If you need to deactivate a rule (or all rules) for an entire file, then issue exclusions are the way to go. But if you only want to deactivate a rule across a subset of a file - all the lines of a method or a class - you can use @SuppressWarnings("all") or @SuppressWarnings with rule keys: @SuppressWarnings("java:S2077") or @SuppressWarnings({"java:S1118", "java:S3546"}).

Handling Java source version

Java analysis is able to react to the Java version used for sources. This feature allows the deactivation of rules that target higher versions of Java than the one in use in the project so that false positives aren't generated from irrelevant rules.

The feature relies entirely on the sonar.java.source property, which is automatically filled by most of the scanners used for analyses (Maven, Gradle). Java version-specific rules are not disabled when sonar.java.source is not provided. Concretely, rules that are designed to target specific Java versions (tagged "java8" or "java11") are activated by default in the Sonar Way Java profile. From a user perspective, the feature is fully automatic, but it means that you probably want your projects to be correctly configured.

When using SonarScanner to perform analyses of project, the property sonar.java.source can be set manually in sonar-project.properties. Accepted formats are:

  • "1.X" (for instance 1.6 for Java 6, 1.7 for Java 7, 1.8 for Java 8, etc.)
  • "X" (for instance 8 for Java 8, 11 for Java 11, etc. )

Example: sonar.java.source=11

If the property is provided, the analysis will take the source version into account, and execute related rules accordingly. At run time, each of these rules will be executed – or not – depending upon the Java version used by sources within the project. For instance, on a correctly configured project built with Java 11, rules targeting Java 17 and Java 21 will never raise issues, even though they are enabled in the associated rule profile.

Batch mode settings

By default, files are parsed in batches. The size of the batch is dynamically computed based on the maximum memory available. It is possible to manually set this value by using the property sonar.java.experimental.batchModeSizeInKB. Note that the perfect value depends on the project and the ecosystem setup, bigger batch size will not necessarily increase the performance and can even slow things down if the memory is a limiting factor. If needed, it is possible to run the parsing file by file by setting sonar.java.fileByFile=true.

More details can be found here.

Skipping unchanged files

Starting from April 2022, and by default, the Java analyzer optimizes the analysis of unchanged files in pull requests. In practice, this means that on a file that has not changed, the analyzer only runs a restricted list of rules. To get a better understanding of the rule exclusion mechanism, keep in mind that:

  • Rules that need to run on multiple files to decide whether they need to raise issues are always executed
  • Rules that need to run at the end of the analysis to decide whether they need to raise issues are always executed
  • Rules that are defined outside of the sonar.java.checks package are always executed

This last criteria implies that custom rules cannot be skipped.

If you wish to disable this optimization, you can set the value of the analysis parameter sonar.java.skipUnchanged to false. Leaving the parameter unset lets the server decide whether the optimization should be enabled.

Cache-enabled rules (experimental)

Starting from April 2022, the Java analyzer offers rule developers a SQ cache that can be used to store and retrieve information from one analysis to the other. The cache is provided by the underlying SonarQube instance and is branch-specific. Please refer to the sonar-java wiki for additional information.

Analyzing JSP and Thymeleaf for XSS vulnerabilities

In SonarQube Developer and Enterprise editions and on SonarCloud you can benefit from advanced security rules including XSS vulnerability detection. Java analysis supports analysis of Thymeleaf and JSP views when used with Java Servlets or Spring. To benefit from this analysis you need to make your views part of the project sources using sonar.sources property. In practice this usually means adding the following in your Maven pom.xml file

     <properties>
        <sonar.sources>src/main/java,src/main/webapp</sonar.sources>
      </properties>

or if you use Gradle

    sonarqube {
        properties {
            property "sonar.sources", "src/main/java,src/main/webapp"
        }
    }

where src/main/webapp is the directory which contains .jsp or Thymeleaf's .html files.

  • symbolic-execution: This tag is for rules that reason about the state of the program using data flow analysis. They usually work together to find path-sensitive bugs and vulnerabilities. As soon as an issue is raised, the symbolic execution (SE) analysis of the current path will stop. For that reason, it is not recommended to evaluate these rules independently of each other as it can give a false sense of undetected issues. It is important to keep in mind that SE can never achieve perfection, so we are always working on improving these rules. Finally, note that the Java rules relying on the SE engine operate cross-procedurally in certain circumstances. In particular, all non-overridable methods defined in the same file as the method under analysis and called from within the method's body, will be explored and learned from. Behaviors of overridable methods will be approximated.

Custom rules

Tutorial

The tutorial Writing custom Java rules 101 will help to quickly start writing custom rules for Java.

Configuring plugins for analyzer loading optimization

By default, the loading of analyzers is optimized (see Improving performance), SonarQube will only download analyzers and third-party plugins for the detected languages before running an analysis. 

When creating custom plugins, to prevent errors when projects are analyzed, you must use the requiredForLanguages property in your plugin's pom.xml file to specify the languages your plugin supports. Without this property, your plugin will be executed unconditionally during analysis, even when its language-specific dependencies are unavailable. See Plugin basics for details on this behavior and the requiredForLanguages property.

<configuration>
   [...]
   <requiredForLanguages>java</requiredForLanguages>
</configuration>

API changes

7.31

  • Now the Java analyzer requires Java 17 to run.
  • Deprecated methods:
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.IssuableSubscriptionVisitor#scanFile() 
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.IssuableSubscriptionVisitor#scanTree() 

      These methods cannot be overridden anymore. This change breaks compile time compatibility with any custom rules implementing any of these methods and will require an update of the custom rules plugin. Note that if the overrides were used as an attempt to clean the rule state, it was never called and most probably the source of a memory leak. While we strongly advise against having stateful rules, if the state of a class needs to be cleaned, use methods org.sonar.plugins.java.api.IssuableSubscriptionVisitor#setContext() (called prior to the exploration of a file) or org.sonar.plugins.java.api.IssuableSubscriptionVisitor#leaveFile() (after ending the exploration of a file).

7.29

All the API changes are related to ECJ utility methods that were commonly used in the analyzer and could benefit the implementation of custom rules.

  • New method: Symbol.TypeSymbol.superTypes(). Returns the list of super types of this type.
  • New method: Symbol.TypeSymbol.outermostClass(). Returns the outermost class of this type.
  • New method: Symbol.TypeSymbol.isAnnotation(). Returns whether this type is an annotation.
  • New method: Symbol.VariableSymbol.isEffectivelyFinal(). Returns whether this variable is effectively final.
  • New method: Symbol.VariableSymbol.constantValue(). Returns the constant value of this variable.
  • New Method: Symbol.MethodSymbol.isOverridable(). Returns whether this method is overridable.
  • New Method: Symbol.MethodSymbol.isVarArgsMethod(). Returns whether this method has a vararg parameter.
  • New Method: Symbol.MethodSymbol.isDefaultMethod(). Returns whether this method has a default implementation.
  • New Method: Symbol.MethodSymbol.isParametrizedMethod(). Returns whether this method has type parameters.
  • New Method: Symbol.MethodSymbol.isSynchronizedMethod(). Returns whether this method is synchronized.
  • New method: Symbol.isLocalVariable(). Returns whether this variable is a local variable.
  • New method: Symbol.isParameter(). Returns whether this variable is a parameter.
  • New method: Type.isPrimitiveWrapper(). Check if this type is a primitive wrapper.
  • New method: Type.primitiveWrapperType(). Returns the type of the primitive wrapper.
  • New method: Type.primitiveType(). Returns the type of the primitive.
  • New method: Type.isNullType(). Returns whether this type is the null type.
  • New method: Type.isTypeVar(). Returns whether this type represents a type variable.
  • New method: Type.isRawType(). Check if this type is a raw type.
  • New method: Type.declaringType(). Returns the declaring type of this type.
  • New method: ImportTree.symbol(). Returns the symbol of this ImportTree.
  • New method: TypeParameterTree.symbol(). Returns the symbol of this TypeParameterTree.

7.25

Update custom rules registration API CheckRegistrar.RegistrarContext to allow:

  • Registration of JavaCheck instances (previously only classes were supported)
    • registerMainChecks(String repositoryKey, Collection<?> javaCheckClassesAndInstances)
    • registerTestChecks(String repositoryKey, Collection<?> javaCheckClassesAndInstances)
  • Registration of a JavaCheck that has no @Rule annotation because it does not target one but several rules.
    • registerMainSharedCheck(JavaCheck check, Collection<RuleKey> ruleKeys)
    • registerTestSharedCheck(JavaCheck check, Collection<RuleKey> ruleKeys)
  • Deprecate useless getters from the RegistrarContext class and add TestCheckRegistrarContext for test purposes.

Add custom rules registration API ProfileRegistrar.RegistrarContext to allow:

  • Registration of rules in the "Sonar Way" built-in default quality profile for the Java language.
    • registerDefaultQualityProfileRules(Collection<RuleKey> ruleKeys)

7.19

All the API changes are related to the support of the preview feature of Java 19/20. These new types and methods are introduced as "deprecated" and will be marked out of deprecation with the introduction of the final features in the JDK.

  • New type: RecordPatternTree. Use this type to explore record patterns.
  • New method: RecordPatternTree#type(). Use this method to get the reference type in the record pattern.
  • New method: RecordPatternTree#patterns(). Use this method to get the patterns nested in the record pattern.
  • New method: RecordPatternTree#name(). Use this method get the optional record pattern identifier.
  • Dropped method: GuardedPatternTree#andOperator(). Use GuardedPatternTree#whenOperator() instead. The && operator from Java 18 got replaced by a new restricted keyword when in Java 19.
  • New method: GuardedPatternTree#whenOperator(). Use this method to get the when operator prefixing the guard.
  • Deprecated method: PatternInstanceOfTree#variable(). Use PatternInstanceOfTree#pattern() instead. Java 19 introduced record patterns and their support in the new instanceof.
  • New method: PatternInstanceOfTree#pattern(). Use this method to get the pattern in an instanceof expression. When the pattern is a TypePatternTree, the variable can then be extracted using TypePatternTree#patternVariable().
  • New method: TreeVisitor#visitRecordPattern(). Use this method to traverse a RecordPatternTree.

7.17

  • New method: ClassTree#recordOpenParenToken(). Use this method to get the opening parenthesis from the component list of a record declaration.
  • New method: ClassTree#recordCloseParenToken(). Use this method to get the closing parenthesis from the component list of a record declaration.

7.16

  • New method: Position#startOf(Tree). Use this static method to get the start position of a given Tree. Shortcuts the usually cumbersome operation of accessing a tree start position through the normal API, with tree.firstToken().range().start().
  • New method: Position#startOf(SyntaxToken). Use this static method to get the start position of a given SyntaxToken.
  • New method: Position#startOf(SyntaxTrivia). Use this static method to get the start position of a given SyntaxTrivia.
  • New method: Position#endOf(Tree). Use this static method to get the end position of a given Tree. Shortcuts the usually cumbersome operation of accessing a tree end position through the normal API, with tree.lastToken().range().end().
  • New method: Position#endOf(SyntaxToken). Use this static method to get the end position of a given SyntaxToken.
  • New method: Position#endOf(SyntaxTrivia). Use this static method to get the end position of a given SyntaxTrivia.
  • New method: MethodInvocationTree#methodSymbol(). Use this method to get the symbol of a method invocation. Returns a MethodSymbol.
  • New method: NewClassTree#methodSymbol(). Use this method to get the symbol of a constructor call. Returns a MethodSymbol.
  • Deprecated method: MethodInvocationTree#symbol(). Deprecated in favor of methodSymbol(), which has a narrower return type.
  • Deprecated method: NewClassTree#constructorSymbo(). Deprecated in favor of methodSymbol(), which has a narrower return type.

7.15

  • New method: JavaResourceLocator#binaryDirs(). Use this method to get the directories containing the .class files corresponding to the main code.
  • New method: JavaResourceLocator#testBinaryDirs(). Use this method to get the directories containing the .class files corresponding to the tests.
  • New method: JavaResourceLocator#testClasspath(). Use this method to retrieve the classpath configured for the project's tests.

7.12

  • New method: JavaFileScanner#scanWithoutParsing(InputFileScannerContext). Use this method to inspect an unchanged file before it is parsed. This method allows you to pre-compute some work and even signal that the rule does not need the file to be parsed.
  • TypeArguments extends ListTree<TypeTree> instead of ListTree<Tree>. This change does not impact the runtime compatibility but could break compile time compatibility in some rare cases.

7.7

  • Method MethodSymbol.overriddenSymbol() was dropped.. Deprecated in 6.15 and planned to be dropped in 7.0, overriddenSymbol() has now been removed from the API. Use MethodSymbol.overriddenSymbols() instead.

7.6

  • New method: MethodSymbol.declarationParameters(). Use this method to get the list of parameters symbols of this method. Placeholders symbols are created in case the declaration is not available (coming from an external dependency).

7.4

  • New method: JavaFileScannerContext.inAndroidContext(). Use this method to know if the current file being analyzed is coming from an Android context. The value is true if Android dependencies are found in the classpath of the current analysis.
  • Together with the previous method addition, you can use CheckVerifier.withinAndroidContext(true) in unit tests to test the behavior of the rules in an Android context.

7.1

  • Method TypeCastTree.bounds() changed its return type from ListTree<Tree> to ListTree<TypeTree>. Having any kind of tree is not possible. Only "Typed" Trees are possible as bound of a cast. The change fixes the inconsistency.
  • Method TypeParameterTree.bounds() changed its return type from ListTree<Tree> to ListTree<TypeTree>. Having any kind of tree is not possible. Only "Typed" Trees are possible as bound of a type parameter. The change fixes the inconsistency.
  • A new Tree Kind PATTERN_INSTANCE_OF has been formalized, with its new corresponding API class PatternInstanceOfTree. The change follows Java 16 introduction of Pattern Matching for instanceof (JEP-394).
  • A new Tree Kind RECORD has been formalized, adding a flavor to ClassTree. The change follows Java 16 introduction of records (JEP-395).

7.0

  • Method MethodTree.isOverriding() now correctly match the contract in case of unknowns in the hierarchy. Previously, the isOverriding implementation could return misleading results when the hierarchy of the class that the method belonged to contained unknowns. In such cases, null is now returned, because it is not possible to reliably determine if the method is an override or not.

The following deprecated methods have been dropped:

  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext.getFileKey() The method was deprecated for a long time and still used by Sonar-Security. It's not the case anymore, and the method can be dropped, without replacement.
  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.SourceMap.Location.inputFile() The method has been deprecated a few versions away and was only used by Sonar-Security. It's not used anymore, and the method can be dropped, without replacement.
  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.semantic.Symbol.MethodSymbol.overriddenSymbol() The method has been replaced by MethodSymbol.overriddenSymbols(), which provide a list of overridden methods instead of only one.
  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.BreakStatementTree.value() The method was deprecated in SonarJava 6.6. It was added to cover new switch expression of Java 12. The new switch expression was introduced officially in Java 14, using a new yield statement instead of relying on break statement, leading to the removal of this method.
  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.CaseLabelTree.expression() The method was deprecated since SonarJava 5.12 when introducing support of Java 12, in favor of CaseLabelTree.expressions() method.
  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.CaseLabelTree.colonToken() The method was deprecated since SonarJava 5.12 when introducing support of Java 12, in favor of CaseLabelTree.colonOrArrowToken() method.
  • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.SwitchStatementTree.asSwitchExpression() The method was making no sense and starting from SonarJava 6.15, switch expressions have their own distinct interface (org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.SwitchExpressionTree) and kind (org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.Tree.Kind.SWITCH_EXPRESSION).

The following classes have been dropped, since all their methods where already deprecated:

  • Classes org.sonar.java.checks.verifier.JavaCheckVerifier and org.sonar.java.checks.verifier.MultipleFilesJavaCheckVerifier. All features are new achievable through CheckVerifier.newVerifier().

6.15

  • Switch representation change in the AST Previously, Switch Statements were represented thanks to a Switch Expression. It means that the child of the Switch Statement was a Switch Expression. This is no longer the case, a Switch statement is now a distinct node in the AST and does not contain a Switch Expression anymore. This may impact existing custom rules relying explicitly on Switch Expressions, via the kind SWITCH_EXPRESSION or the method visitSwitchExpression. More rarely, this could also impact rules relying on parents of Tree, as the overall shape of the AST may also change.
  • Deprecated
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.SwitchStatementTree: The asSwitchExpression() method is deprecated for removal.
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.semantic.Symbol.MethodSymbol: The overriddenSymbol() method is deprecated for removal. It is replaced by method overriddenSymbols() which returns all the overridden symbols in the type hierarchy instead of only the first one found.
  • New interface SwitchTree Switch Expression and Switch Statement share the same fields, it can sometimes make sense to manipulate a Switch as either one. Previously, it was possible to use the method asSwitchExpression() to do this. Since this method is deprecated, you can now use the new common interface SwitchTree, containing all the elements shared between Switch Expressions and Statements.

6.3

  • API is now enriched with MethodMatchers. You can use it to identify a method with given a Type, Name and Parameters. We realized that MethodMatchers is a really convenient way of writing new rules, it will hopefully ease the addition of rules in custom plugins, without having to rewrite the logic. We are heavily using it in the different checks, plenty of examples can be found there.
  • Two new methods have been added in the semantic API in order to access parametrized type in custom rules. The changes are available in org.sonar.plugins.java.api.semantic.Type
/**
 * Check if the current type is a parameterized type or not.
 *
 * @return true in case of Generic and Parameterized types
 *
 * @since SonarJava 6.3
 */
boolean isParameterized();

/**
 * The arguments of a parameterized type, as a parameterization of a generic type.
 *
 * @return the ordered list of type arguments. Returns an empty lists for non-parameterized types.
 *
 * @since SonarJava 6.3
 */
List<Type> typeArguments();
  • The JavaCheckVerifier, used to test rules implementations and delivered with the java-checks-testkit package, has been fully reworked in order to tackle inconcistencies. All the previously existing methods from it has been deprecated. In addition, a new method has been added, which allows access to a new rule testing interface. Starting from 6.3, when writting custom rules test, you should therefore rely only on org.sonar.java.checks.verifier.JavaCheckVerifier.newVerifier(). Example of change: 
// old test prior to 6.3:
@Test
public void deprecatedCustomRuleTest() {
   JavaCheckVerifier.verify("path/to/my/custom/check/test/file.java", new MyCheck());
}

// new test starting from 6.3:
@Test
public void newCustomRuleTest() {
   JavaCheckVerifier.newVerifier()
     .onFile("path/to/my/custom/check/test/file.java")
     .withCheck(new MyCheck())
     .verifyIssues();
}

6.1

  • The ExpressionTree interface, from the AST API, is now enriched by two new methods Optional<Object> asConstant() and <T> Optional<T> asConstant(Class<T> type). These methods let you try to retrieve the equivalent constant value of an expression (from a variable, for instance). An example of usage would be:
class A {
  public static final String CONSTANT1 = "abc";
  public static final String CONSTANT2 = CONSTANT1 + "def";

  void foo() {
    System.out.println(CONSTANT2);
                    // ^^^^^^^^^ calling 'identifier.asConstant(String.class)' will return 'Optional.of("abcdef")'
  }
}

6.0

  • Deprecated method org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext.addIssue(File, JavaCheck, int, String) has been removed. Custom rules relying on it should report issues on a given Tree from now on.
  • Deprecated method org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext.getFile() has been removed. Custom rules relying on it should rely on content of SQ's API InputFile.
  • Deprecated method org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.TryStatementTree.resources() has been removed, in favor of org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.TryStatementTree.resourceList(), as Java 9 allows other trees than VariableTree to be placed as resources in try-with-resources statements.
  • Method org.sonar.plugins.java.api.semantic.Symbol.owner() has been flagged with @Nullable annotation, to explicitly document the fact that some symbols (package, unknown, recovered) might well return null.
  • Semantic engine
    • Return type of constructor is now void type instead of null.
    • raw type is now explicitly different from an erasure type. It is recommended to systematically use type erasure for type comparison when dealing with generics. 
class A<T> {
//    ^^^^ Definition of a Generic Type
  boolean equals(Object o) {
    if (o instance of A) {
                   // ^ this is a raw type, not erasure of A<T>
     return true;
    }
    return false;
  }

  A<String> foo() {
    return new A<String>();
           //  ^^^^^^^^^ Parameterization of a Generic Type
  }
}
    • According to Java Language Specification every array type implements the interface java.io.Serializable, calling isSubtypeOf("java.io.Serializable") on an array type now consistently returns true.
    • Symbol corresponding to generic method invocations are now correctly parameterized.
    • In some special cases (mostly missing bytecode dependencies, misconfigured projects), and due to ECJ recovery system, unknown/recovered types can now lead to unknown symbols, even on ClassTree/MethodTree/VariableTree. To illustrate this, the following example now associate the method to an unknown symbol, while previous semantic engine from version 5.X series was creating a Symbol.MethodSymbol with an unknown return type. 
Class A {
  UnknownType<String> myMethod() { /* ... */ }
                  //  ^^^^^^^^  symbol corresponding to the MethodTree will be unknown,
}
    • Thanks to improved semantic provided by ECJ engine, new semantic is now able to say that an unknown symbol is supposed to be type/variable/method (isTypeSymbol()isVariableSymbol(), ...). Old semantic was answering false for all of them. Consequently, be sure to always use isUnknown() to validate symbol resolution. Other is...Symbol() methods are only designed to know how to cast the symbols (e.g from Symbol to Symbol.MethodSymbol).

5.12

  • Dropped
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext: Drop deprecated method used to retrieve trees contributing to the complexity of a method from (deprecated since SonarJava 4.1). 
//org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext
/**
* Computes the list of syntax nodes which are contributing to increase the complexity for the given methodTree.
* @deprecated use {@link #getComplexityNodes(Tree)} instead
* @param enclosingClass not used.
* @param methodTree the methodTree to compute the complexity.
* @return the list of syntax nodes incrementing the complexity.
*/
@Deprecated
List<Tree> getMethodComplexityNodes(ClassTree enclosingClass, MethodTree methodTree);
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaResourceLocator: The following method has been dropped (deprecated since SonarJava 4.1), without replacement. 
//org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaResourceLocator
/**
* get source file key by class name.
* @deprecated since 4.1 : will be dropped with no replacement.
* @param className fully qualified name of the analyzed class.
* @return key of the source file for the given class.
*/
@Deprecated
String findSourceFileKeyByClassName(String className);
    • org.sonar.plugins.surefire.api.SurefireUtils: Dropping deprecated field with old property (deprecated since SonarJava 4.11) 
//org.sonar.plugins.surefire.api.SurefireUtils
/**
* @deprecated since 4.11
*/
@Deprecated
public static final String SUREFIRE_REPORTS_PATH_PROPERTY = "sonar.junit.reportsPath";
  • Deprecated
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext: Deprecate usage of File-based methods from API, which will be removed in future release. Starting from this version, methods relying on InputFile has to be preferred.
 //org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext
/**
* Report an issue at a specific line of a given file.
* This method is used for one
* @param file File on which to report
* @param check The check raising the issue.
* @param line line on which to report the issue
* @param message Message to display to the user
* @deprecated since SonarJava 5.12 - File are not supported anymore. Use corresponding 'reportIssue' methods, or directly at project level
*/
@Deprecated
void addIssue(File file, JavaCheck check, int line, String message);
/**
* FileKey of currently analyzed file.
* @return the fileKey of the file currently analyzed.
* @deprecated since SonarJava 5.12 - Rely on the InputFile key instead, using {@link #getInputFile()}
*/
@Deprecated
String getFileKey();

/**
* File under analysis.
* @return the currently analyzed file.
* @deprecated since SonarJava 5.12 - File are not supported anymore. Use {@link #getInputFile()} or {@link #getProject()} instead
*/
@Deprecated
File getFile();
    • Deprecate methods which are not relevant anymore in switch-related trees from API, following introduction of the new Java 12 switch expression: 
//org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.CaseLabelTree
/**
* @deprecated (since 5.12) use the {@link #expressions()} method.
*/
@Deprecated
@Nullable
ExpressionTree expression();

/**
* @deprecated (since 5.12) use the {@link #colonOrArrowToken()} method.
*/
@Deprecated
SyntaxToken colonToken();
  • Added
    • org.sonar.plugins.java.api.JavaFileScannerContext: Following methods have been added in order to provide help reporting issues at project level, and access data through SonarQube's InputFile API, which won't be possible anymore through files: 
//JavaFileScannerContext: New methods
/**
* Report an issue at at the project level.
* @param check The check raising the issue.
* @param message Message to display to the user
*/
void addIssueOnProject(JavaCheck check, String message);

/**
* InputFile under analysis.
* @return the currently analyzed inputFile.
*/
InputFile getInputFile();

/**
* InputComponent representing the project being analyzed
* @return the project component
*/
InputComponent getProject();
    • In order to cover the Java 12 new switch expression, introduce a new Tree in the SonarJava Syntax Tree API (Corresponding Tree.KindSWITCH_EXPRESSION ). New methods have also been added to fluently integrate the new switch expression into the SonarJava API. 
//org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.SwitchExpressionTree
/**
* 'switch' expression.
*
* JLS 14.11
*
* <pre>
*   switch ( {@link #expression()} ) {
*     {@link #cases()}
*   }
* </pre>
*
* @since Java 12
*/
@Beta
public interface SwitchExpressionTree extends ExpressionTree {

SyntaxToken switchKeyword();

SyntaxToken openParenToken();

ExpressionTree expression();

SyntaxToken closeParenToken();

SyntaxToken openBraceToken();

List<CaseGroupTree> cases();

SyntaxToken closeBraceToken();
}
 //org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.SwitchStatementTree
/**
* Switch expressions introduced with support Java 12
* @since SonarJava 5.12
*/
SwitchExpressionTree asSwitchExpression();
 //org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.CaseLabelTree
/**
* @return true for case with colon: "case 3:" or "default:"
*         false for case with arrow: "case 3 ->" or "default ->"
* @since 5.12 (Java 12 new features)
*/
boolean isFallThrough();

/**
* @since 5.12 (Java 12 new features)
*/
SyntaxToken colonOrArrowToken();
 //org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.BreakStatementTree
/**
* @since 5.12 (Java 12 new features)
*/
@Nullable
ExpressionTree value();
 //org.sonar.plugins.java.api.tree.TreeVisitor
void visitSwitchExpression(SwitchExpressionTree tree);

5.7

  • Breaking
    • This change will impact mostly the custom rules relying on semantic API. The type returned by some symbols will change from raw type to parameterized type with identity substitution and this will change how subtyping will answer. It is possible to get the previous behavior back by using type erasure on the newly returned type. Note that not all returned types are impacted by this change. Example: 
@Rule(key = "MyFirstCustomRule")
public class MyFirstCustomCheck extends IssuableSubscriptionVisitor {

    @Override
    public List<Kind> nodesToVisit() {
        return ImmutableList.of(Kind.METHOD);
    }

    @Override
    public void visitNode(Tree tree) {
        MethodTree method = (MethodTree) tree;
        MethodSymbol symbol = method.symbol();
        
        Type returnType = symbol.returnType().type();
        // When analyzing the code "MyClass<Integer> foo() {return null; }"
        // BEFORE: returnType == ClassJavaType
        // NOW: returnType == ParametrizedTypeJavaType

        // Getting back previous type
        Type erasedType = returnType.erasure();
        // erasedType == ClassJavaType
    }
}

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