View Javadoc

1   package org.apache.maven.plugins.enforcer;
2   
3   /*
4    * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
5    * or more contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file
6    * distributed with this work for additional information
7    * regarding copyright ownership.  The ASF licenses this file
8    * to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
9    * "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
10   * with the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
11   *
12   *  http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
13   *
14   * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
15   * software distributed under the License is distributed on an
16   * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
17   * KIND, either express or implied.  See the License for the
18   * specific language governing permissions and limitations
19   * under the License.
20   */
21  
22  import java.io.File;
23  import java.util.ArrayList;
24  import java.util.List;
25  
26  import org.apache.maven.enforcer.rule.api.EnforcerRule;
27  import org.apache.maven.enforcer.rule.api.EnforcerRuleException;
28  import org.apache.maven.enforcer.rule.api.EnforcerRuleHelper;
29  
30  /**
31   * Contains the common code to compare an array of files against a requirement.
32   *
33   * @author <a href="mailto:brianf@apache.org">Brian Fox</a>
34   */
35  public abstract class AbstractRequireFiles
36      extends AbstractStandardEnforcerRule
37  {
38  
39      /** Array of files to check. */
40      File[] files;
41  
42      /** if null file handles should be allowed. If they are allowed, it means treat it as a success. */
43      boolean allowNulls = false;
44  
45      // check the file for the specific condition
46      /**
47       * Check one file.
48       *
49       * @param file the file
50       * @return <code>true</code> if successful
51       */
52      abstract boolean checkFile( File file );
53  
54      // return standard error message
55      /**
56       * Gets the error msg.
57       *
58       * @return the error msg
59       */
60      abstract String getErrorMsg();
61  
62      /*
63       * (non-Javadoc)
64       *
65       * @see org.apache.maven.enforcer.rule.api.EnforcerRule#execute(org.apache.maven.enforcer.rule.api.EnforcerRuleHelper)
66       */
67      public void execute( EnforcerRuleHelper helper )
68          throws EnforcerRuleException
69      {
70  
71          if ( !allowNulls && files.length == 0 )
72      	{
73              throw new EnforcerRuleException( "The file list is empty and Null files are disabled." );
74      	}
75  
76          List<File> failures = new ArrayList<File>();
77          for ( File file : files )
78          {
79              if ( !allowNulls && file == null )
80          	{
81                  failures.add( file );
82          	}
83          	else if ( !checkFile( file ) )
84              {
85                  failures.add( file );
86              }
87          }
88  
89          // if anything was found, log it with the optional message.
90          if ( !failures.isEmpty() )
91          {
92              StringBuilder buf = new StringBuilder();
93              if ( message != null )
94              {
95                  buf.append( message + "\n" );
96              }
97              buf.append( getErrorMsg() );
98  
99              for ( File file : failures )
100             {
101                 if ( file != null )
102                 {
103                     buf.append( file.getAbsolutePath() + "\n" );
104                 }
105                 else
106                 {
107                     buf.append( "(an empty filename was given and allowNulls is false)\n" );
108                 }
109             }
110 
111             throw new EnforcerRuleException( buf.toString() );
112         }
113     }
114 
115     /**
116      * If your rule is cacheable, you must return a unique id when parameters or conditions change that would cause the
117      * result to be different. Multiple cached results are stored based on their id. The easiest way to do this is to
118      * return a hash computed from the values of your parameters. If your rule is not cacheable, then the result here is
119      * not important, you may return anything.
120      *
121      * @return the cache id
122      */
123     public String getCacheId()
124     {
125         return Integer.toString( hashCode( files ) );
126     }
127 
128     /**
129      * Calculates a hash code for the specified array as <code>Arrays.hashCode()</code> would do. Unfortunately, the
130      * mentioned method is only available for Java 1.5 and later.
131      *
132      * @param items The array for which to compute the hash code, may be <code>null</code>.
133      * @return The hash code for the array.
134      */
135     private static int hashCode( Object[] items )
136     {
137         int hash = 0;
138         if ( items != null )
139         {
140             hash = 1;
141             for ( int i = 0; i < items.length; i++ )
142             {
143                 Object item = items[i];
144                 hash = 31 * hash + ( item == null ? 0 : item.hashCode() );
145             }
146         }
147         return hash;
148     }
149 
150     /**
151      * This tells the system if the results are cacheable at all. Keep in mind that during forked builds and other
152      * things, a given rule may be executed more than once for the same project. This means that even things that change
153      * from project to project may still be cacheable in certain instances.
154      *
155      * @return <code>true</code> if rule is cacheable
156      */
157     public boolean isCacheable()
158     {
159         return true;
160     }
161 
162     /**
163      * If the rule is cacheable and the same id is found in the cache, the stored results are passed to this method to
164      * allow double checking of the results. Most of the time this can be done by generating unique ids, but sometimes
165      * the results of objects returned by the helper need to be queried. You may for example, store certain objects in
166      * your rule and then query them later.
167      *
168      * @param cachedRule the cached rule
169      * @return <code>true</code> if the stored results are valid for the same id.
170      */
171     public boolean isResultValid( EnforcerRule cachedRule )
172     {
173         return true;
174     }
175 }