Piranha requires that you build your code with Error Prone, version 2.4.0 or higher. See the Error Prone documentation for instructions on getting started with Error Prone and integration with your build system.
While not required, we strongly recommend that you use Piranha in combination with an automated code formatter, such as Google Java Format running as a pre-commit hook. This is because Piranha will transform code without any particular way to configure code style guidelines into the tool directly. While we strive to produce clean and readable refactorings by default, no commitment exists to any particular whitespace, line length, or styling behavior, nor even consistency between Piranha minor versions.
To integrate Piranha into your Java project you'll need a version of the following additions to your build.gradle
file:
plugins {
id "com.github.sherter.google-java-format" version "0.7.1"
id "net.ltgt.errorprone" version "0.6" apply false
id "java"
}
sourceCompatibility = "1.8"
targetCompatibility = "1.8"
dependencies {
annotationProcessor "com.uber.piranha:piranha:0.1.8"
errorprone "com.google.errorprone:error_prone_core:2.4.0"
errorproneJavac "com.google.errorprone:javac:9+181-r4173-1"
}
import net.ltgt.gradle.errorprone.CheckSeverity
tasks.withType(JavaCompile) {
options.errorprone {
check("Piranha", CheckSeverity.WARN)
}
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepPatchChecks:Piranha"
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepPatchLocation:IN_PLACE"
// The lines below should be replaced by code that loads the specific flag to patch
// and final treatment condition.
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepOpt:Piranha:FlagName=SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG"
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepOpt:Piranha:IsTreated=true"
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepOpt:Piranha:Config=config/properties.json"
}
The plugins
section pulls in the Gradle Error Prone plugin for Error Prone integration. In dependencies
, the annotationProcessor
line loads Piranha, the errorprone
line ensures that a compatible version of Error Prone is used, and the errorproneJavac
line is needed for JDK 8 compatibility.
In the tasks.withType(JavaCompile)
section, we pass some configuration options to Piranha. First check("Piranha", CheckSeverity.WARN)
sets Piranha issues to the warning level. Then, option.errorprone.errorproneArgs
is used to add a set of arguments to Piranha. XepPatchChecks:Piranha
and -XepPatchLocation:IN_PLACE
arguments are used together to enable in-place refactoring of the code. -XepOpt:Piranha:FlagName
is used to specify a stale flag name that is used in the code, -XepOpt:Piranha:IsTreated
is used to specify whether the treatment (true
) branch or the control (false
) branch needs to be taken during refactoring. Then -XepOpt:Piranha:Config
is used to provide the properties file which specifies the APIs and annotations that are considered for refactoring.
The properties file has the following template:
{
"methodProperties":
[
{
"methodName": "isToggleEnabled",
"flagType": "treated",
"returnType": "boolean",
"receiverType": "com.uber.piranha.XPTest",
"argumentIndex": 0
},
...
],
"enumProperties":
[
{
"enumName": "TestExperimentName",
"argumentIndex": 0
},
...
],
"linkURL": "<provide_your_url>",
"annotations": ["ToggleTesting"]
}
The required top-level field is methodProperties
.
Within that, there is an array of JSON objects, having the required fields methodName
, flagType
and argumentIndex
.
The optional fields are returnType
, receiverType
.
The flagType
of treated
are the APIs which correspond to checking for the treatment behavior of the flag, control
correspond to checking for the control behavior of the flag. In the above example, the API flagEnabled
corresponds to treatment behavior. Hence, when the IsTreated
Piranha argument is set to true
, flagEnabled(SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG)
will be evaluated to true
. Similarly, flagDisabled(SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG)
which corresponds to the control behavior will evaluate to false
.
The flagType
of set_treated
and set_control
represent APIs that force the value of the flag (to treated
or control
, respectively). These APIs are often used as part of testing, and Piranha includes (optional) logic to remove unit tests which set the value of removed flags to an impossible treatment condition (see cleanupOptions
in the example properties.json
). Elsewhere in the code, these calls will simply be removed with the flag.
The flagType
of empty
specifies the APIs which need to be discarded from the code. For example, if refreshFlag
is listed as a method in properties.json, with flagType=empty
, a statement refreshFlag(SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG);
will be deleted from the code.
The argumentIndex
field specifies where to look for the flag name (given by -XepOpt:Piranha:FlagName
) in the method's arguments. We follow 0 based indexing.
If your toggle methods take no arguments, or if you want to delete all occurrences of a given methodName
irrespective of their arguments, you can set the Piranha:ArgumentIndexOptional
to true
to make specifying argumentIndex
optional.
For returnType
and receiverType
, types should be written as boolean
or void
for primitive types, and fully qualified for custom defined types. eg: com.uber.piranha.XPTest
or java.lang.String
(not case-sensitive)
The annotations
specify the annotations used (e.g., in unit testing) to determine treatment or control behavior. For example:
@FlagTesting(treated = TestExperimentName.SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG)
public void some_unit_test() { ... }
will be refactored to
public void some_unit_test() { ... }
when IsTreated
is true
, and will be deleted completely when IsTreated
is false
.
An optional top-level field is enumProperties
.
Within that, there is an array of JSON objects, having the required fields enumName
and argumentIndex
.
What this field does, is if you specify an enum class name, Piranha will remove enum constants that have a constructor with a string argument that matches your FlagName
value, along with their usages.
For example, if your FlagName
is set to stale.flag
, and TestExperimentName
is configured in enumProperties
with an argumentIndex
of 0
:
public enum TestExperimentName {
STALE_FLAG("stale.flag"),
OTHER_FLAG("other");
...
}
will be refactored to
public enum TestExperimentName {
OTHER_FLAG("other");
...
}
Additionally, usages of STALE_FLAG
will be removed as if the enum itself had been passed as the flag to be cleaned by Piranha, rather than the string "stale.flag"
Finally, the setting linkURL
in the properties file is to provide a URL describing the Piranha tooling and any custom configurations associated with the codebase.
Another top-level optional field is unnecessaryTestMethodProperties
. Within that, there is an array of JSON objects,
having the fields methodName
, argumentIndex
, receiverType
, returnType
and isStatic
.
The refactored code may contain unnecessary method invocations. For instance,
Piranha changes the statement when(experimentation.isToggleDisabled("STALE_FLAG")).thenReturn(false);
to when(true).thenReturn(false);
,
where the invocation when(true)
is unnecessary, and could be deleted.
This field (unnecessaryTestMethodProperties
) is used to define such potentially unnecessary method invocations.
Piranha will delete a statement if it invokes one of these pre-defined methods with a stale flag as an argument.
Consider a simple example
public class MyClass {
private XPTest expt;
...
public void foo() {
if(expt.flagEnabled(TestExperimentName.SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG)) {
System.out.println("Hello World");
}
}
public void bar() {
if(expt.flagDisabled(TestExperimentName.SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG)) {
System.out.println("Hi World");
}
}
}
and the following arguments to Piranha
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepOpt:Piranha:FlagName=SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG"
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepOpt:Piranha:IsTreated=true"
options.errorprone.errorproneArgs << "-XepOpt:Piranha:Config=config/properties.json
where properties.json
contains the following,
{
"methodProperties":
[
{
"methodName": "flagEnabled",
"flagType": "treated",
"argumentIndex": 0
},
{
"methodName": "flagDisabled",
"flagType": "control",
"argumentIndex": 0
},
{
"methodName": "enableFlag",
"flagType": "set_treated",
"argumentIndex": 0
},
{
"methodName": "disableFlag",
"flagType": "set_control",
"argumentIndex": 0
},
{
"methodName": "refreshFlag",
"flagType": "empty",
"argumentIndex": 0
}
],
"linkURL": "<provide_your_url>",
"annotations": ["FlagTesting"]
}
the refactored output will be
public class MyClass {
private XPTest expt;
...
public void foo() {
System.out.println("Hello World");
}
public void bar() {
}
}
When IsTreated
is false
, then the refactored output will be
public class MyClass {
private XPTest expt;
...
public void foo() {
}
public void bar() {
System.out.println("Hi World");
}
}
This example is present in the sample directory.
IMPORTANT: Please note that the gradle build script included in that directory assumes that the sample will be built as part of the full Piranha Java build project (i.e. it depends on other gradle files within that project and assumes some setup done by them). If you wish to build the sample
project as a standalone, you might need to recreate the build.gradle
file included there using the instructions elsewhere in this readme.
-
For the example Piranha configuration discussed above, follow steps given for the ErrorProne example to setup the
pom.xml
to run with ErrorProne. -
Update the
pom.xml
with Piranha related configuration. It will be as follows:
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<version>3.8.0</version>
<configuration>
<source>8</source>
<target>8</target>
<showWarnings>true</showWarnings>
<compilerArgs>
<arg>-XDcompilePolicy=simple</arg>
<arg>-Xplugin:ErrorProne -Xep:Piranha:WARN -XepPatchChecks:Piranha -XepPatchLocation:IN_PLACE -XepOpt:Piranha:FlagName=SAMPLE_STALE_FLAG -XepOpt:Piranha:IsTreated=true -XepOpt:Piranha:Config=config/properties.json</arg>
</compilerArgs>
<annotationProcessorPaths>
<path>
<groupId>com.uber.piranha</groupId>
<artifactId>piranha</artifactId>
<version>0.1.8</version>
</path>
<path>
<groupId>com.google.errorprone</groupId>
<artifactId>error_prone_core</artifactId>
<version>2.4.0</version>
</path>
</annotationProcessorPaths>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>