source: local/greenstone3/darwin-64bit/apache-ant-1.9.6/etc/mmetrics-frames.xsl@ 30383

Last change on this file since 30383 was 30383, checked in by davidb, 8 years ago

Newer version of ant needed to compile GS3

File size: 36.9 KB
Line 
1<?xml version="1.0"?>
2<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" version="1.0"
3 xmlns:lxslt="http://xml.apache.org/xslt"
4 xmlns:xalan="http://xml.apache.org/xalan"
5 xmlns:redirect="org.apache.xalan.lib.Redirect"
6 exclude-result-prefixes="xalan"
7 extension-element-prefixes="redirect">
8<xsl:output method="html" indent="yes" encoding="US-ASCII"/>
9<xsl:decimal-format decimal-separator="." grouping-separator="," />
10<!--
11 Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
12 contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
13 this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
14 The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
15 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
16 the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
17
18 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
19
20 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
21 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
22 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
23 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
24 limitations under the License.
25-->
26<xsl:param name="output.dir" select="'.'"/>
27
28<!-- default max value for the metrics -->
29<xsl:param name="vg.max" select="10"/>
30<xsl:param name="loc.max" select="1000"/>
31<xsl:param name="dit.max" select="10"/>
32<xsl:param name="noa.max" select="250"/>
33<xsl:param name="nrm.max" select="50"/>
34<xsl:param name="nlm.max" select="250"/>
35<xsl:param name="wmc.max" select="250"/>
36<xsl:param name="rfc.max" select="50"/>
37<xsl:param name="dac.max" select="10"/>
38<xsl:param name="fanout.max" select="10"/>
39<xsl:param name="cbo.max" select="15"/>
40<xsl:param name="lcom.max" select="10"/>
41<xsl:param name="nocl.max" select="10"/>
42
43
44<!-- create a tree fragment to speed up processing -->
45<xsl:variable name="doctree.var">
46 <xsl:element name="classes">
47 <xsl:for-each select=".//class">
48 <xsl:element name="class">
49 <xsl:attribute name="package">
50 <xsl:value-of select="(ancestor::package)[last()]/@name"/>
51 </xsl:attribute>
52 <xsl:copy-of select="@*"/>
53 <xsl:attribute name="name">
54 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="class.name"/>
55 </xsl:attribute>
56 <xsl:copy-of select="method"/>
57 </xsl:element>
58 </xsl:for-each>
59 </xsl:element>
60</xsl:variable>
61
62<xsl:variable name="doctree" select="xalan:nodeset($doctree.var)"/>
63
64<xsl:template match="metrics">
65
66 <!-- create the index.html -->
67 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/index.html">
68 <xsl:call-template name="index.html"/>
69 </redirect:write>
70
71 <!-- create the stylesheet.css -->
72 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/stylesheet.css">
73 <xsl:call-template name="stylesheet.css"/>
74 </redirect:write>
75
76 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/metrics-reference.html">
77 <xsl:call-template name="metrics-reference.html"/>
78 </redirect:write>
79
80 <!-- create the overview-packages.html at the root -->
81 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/overview-summary.html">
82 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="overview.packages"/>
83 </redirect:write>
84
85 <!-- create the all-packages.html at the root -->
86 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/overview-frame.html">
87 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="all.packages"/>
88 </redirect:write>
89
90 <!-- create the all-classes.html at the root -->
91 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/allclasses-frame.html">
92 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="all.classes"/>
93 </redirect:write>
94
95 <!-- process all packages -->
96 <xsl:apply-templates select=".//package"/>
97</xsl:template>
98
99
100<xsl:template match="package">
101 <xsl:variable name="package.name" select="@name"/>
102 <xsl:variable name="package.dir">
103 <xsl:if test="not($package.name = 'unnamed package')"><xsl:value-of select="translate($package.name,'.','/')"/></xsl:if>
104 <xsl:if test="$package.name = 'unnamed package'">.</xsl:if>
105 </xsl:variable>
106 <!-- create a classes-list.html in the package directory -->
107 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/{$package.dir}/package-frame.html">
108 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="classes.list"/>
109 </redirect:write>
110
111 <!-- create a package-summary.html in the package directory -->
112 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/{$package.dir}/package-summary.html">
113 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="package.summary"/>
114 </redirect:write>
115
116 <!-- for each class, creates a @name.html -->
117 <!-- @bug there will be a problem with inner classes having the same name, it will be overwritten -->
118 <xsl:for-each select="$doctree/classes/class[@package = current()/@name]">
119 <!--Processing <xsl:value-of select="$class.name"/><xsl:text>&#10;</xsl:text> -->
120 <redirect:write file="{$output.dir}/{$package.dir}/{@name}.html">
121 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="class.details"/>
122 </redirect:write>
123 </xsl:for-each>
124</xsl:template>
125
126<!-- little trick to compute the classname for inner and non inner classes -->
127<!-- this is all in one line to avoid CRLF in the name -->
128<xsl:template match="class" mode="class.name">
129 <xsl:if test="parent::class"><xsl:apply-templates select="parent::class" mode="class.name"/>.<xsl:value-of select="@name"/></xsl:if><xsl:if test="not(parent::class)"><xsl:value-of select="@name"/></xsl:if>
130</xsl:template>
131
132
133<xsl:template name="index.html">
134<HTML>
135 <HEAD><TITLE>Metrics Results.</TITLE></HEAD>
136 <FRAMESET cols="20%,80%">
137 <FRAMESET rows="30%,70%">
138 <FRAME src="overview-frame.html" name="packageListFrame"/>
139 <FRAME src="allclasses-frame.html" name="classListFrame"/>
140 </FRAMESET>
141 <FRAME src="overview-summary.html" name="classFrame"/>
142 </FRAMESET>
143 <noframes>
144 <H2>Frame Alert</H2>
145 <P>
146 This document is designed to be viewed using the frames feature. If you see this message, you are using a non-frame-capable web client.
147 </P>
148 </noframes>
149</HTML>
150</xsl:template>
151
152<!-- this is the stylesheet css to use for nearly everything -->
153<xsl:template name="metrics-reference.html">
154<html>
155<head>
156<link title="Style" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="stylesheet.css"/>
157</head>
158<body style="text-align:justify;">
159<h2>Metrics Reference</h2>
160<a href="#V(G)">V(G)</a> |
161<a href="#LOC">LOC</a> |
162<a href="#DIT">DIT</a> |
163<a href="#NOA">NOA</a> |
164<a href="#NRM">NRM</a> |
165<a href="#NLM">NLM</a> |
166<a href="#WMC">WMC</a> |
167<a href="#RFC">RFC</a> |
168<a href="#DAC">DAC</a> |
169<a href="#FANOUT">FANOUT</a> |
170<a href="#CBO">CBO</a> |
171<a href="#LCOM">LCOM</a> |
172<a href="#NOC">NOC</a>
173
174<a name="V(G)"/>
175<h3>Cyclomatic Complexity - V(G)</h3>
176This metric was introduced in the 1970s to measure the amount of control
177flow complexity or branching complexity in a module such as a
178subroutine. It gives the number of paths that may be taken through the
179code, and was initially developed to give some measure of the cost of
180producing a test case for the module by executing each path.
181<p/>
182Methods with a high cyclomatic complexity tend to be more difficult to
183understand and maintain. In general the more complex the methods of an
184application, the more difficult it will be to test it, and this will adversely
185affect its reliability.
186<p/>
187V(G) is a measure of the control flow complexity of a method or
188constructor. It counts the number of branches in the body of the method,
189defined as:
190<ul>
191<li>while statements;</li>
192<li>if statements;</li>
193<li>for statements.</li>
194</ul>
195
196The metric can also be configured to count each case of a switch
197statement as well.
198
199<a name="LOC"/>
200<h3>Lines of Code - LOC</h3>
201
202This is perhaps the simplest of all the metrics to define and compute.
203Counting lines has a long history as a software metric dating from before
204the rise of structured programming, and it is still in widespread use today.
205The size of a method affects the ease with which it can be understood, its
206reusability and its maintainability. There are a variety of ways that the size
207can be calculated. These include counting all the lines of code, the number
208of statements, the blank lines of code, the lines of commentary, and the
209lines consisting only of syntax such as block delimiters.
210<p/>
211This metric can also be used for sizing other constructs as well, for
212example, the overall size of a Java class or package can be measured by
213counting the number of source lines it consists of.
214<p/>
215LOC can be used to determine the size of a compilation unit (source file),
216class or interface, method, constructor, or field. It can be configured to
217ignore:
218<ul>
219<li>blank lines;</li>
220<li>lines consisting only of comments;</li>
221<li>lines consisting only of opening and closing braces.</li>
222</ul>
223
224<a name="DIT"/>
225<h3>Depth of Inheritance Hierarchy - DIT</h3>
226
227This metric calculates how far down the inheritance hierarchy a class is
228declared. In Java all classes have java.lang.Object as their ultimate
229superclass, which is defined to have a depth of 1. So a class that
230immediately extends java.lang.Object has a metric value of 2; any of its
231subclasses will have a value of 3, and so on.
232<p/>
233A class that is deep within the tree inherits more methods and state
234variables, thereby increasing its complexity and making it difficult to
235predict its behavior. It can be harder to understand a system with many
236inheritance layers.
237<p/>
238DIT is defined for classes and interfaces:
239<ul>
240<li>all interface types have a depth of 1;</li>
241<li>the class java.lang.Object has a depth of 1;</li>
242<li>all other classes have a depth of 1 + the depth of their super class.</li>
243</ul>
244
245<a name="NOA"/>
246<h3>Number of Attributes - NOA</h3>
247
248The number of distinct state variables in a class serves as one measure of
249its complexity. The more state a class represents the more difficult it is to
250maintain invariants for it. It also hinders comprehensibility and reuse.
251<p/>
252In Java, state can be exposed to subclasses through protected fields, which
253entails that the subclass also be aware of and maintain any invariants. This
254interference with the class's data encapsulation can be a source of defects
255and hidden dependencies between the state variables.
256<p/>
257NOA is defined for classes and interfaces. It counts the number of fields
258declared in the class or interface.
259
260<a name="NRM"/>
261<h3>Number of Remote Methods - NRM</h3>
262
263NRM is defined for classes. A remote method call is defined as an
264invocation of a method that is not declared in any of:
265<ul>
266<li>the class itself;</li>
267<li>a class or interface that the class extends or implements;</li>
268<li>a class or method that extends the class.</li>
269</ul>
270
271The value is the count of all the remote method calls in all of the methods
272and constructors of the class.
273
274<a name="NLM"/>
275<h3>Number of Local Methods - NLM</h3>
276
277NLM is defined for classes and interfaces. A local method is defined as a
278method that is declared in the class or interface. NLM can be configured to
279include the local methods of all of the class's superclasses. Methods with
280public, protected, package and private visibility can be independently
281counted by setting configuration parameters.
282
283<a name="WMC"/>
284<h3>Weighted Methods per Class - WMC</h3>
285
286If the number of methods in a class can be determined during the design
287and modeling phase of a project, it can be used as a predictor of how
288much time and effort is needed to develop, debug and maintain it. This
289metric can be further refined by incorporating a weighting for the
290complexity of each method. The usual weighting is given by the cyclomatic
291complexity of the method.
292<p/>
293The subclasses of a class inherit all of its public and protected methods,
294and possibly its package methods as well, so the number of methods a
295class has directly impacts the complexity of its subclasses. Classes with
296large numbers of methods are often specific to a particular application,
297reducing the ability to reuse them.
298<p/>
299The definition of WMC is based upon NLM, and it provides the same
300configuration parameters for counting inherited methods and of varying
301visibility. The main difference is that NLM always counts each method as 1,
302whereas WMC will weight each method. There are two weighting schemes:
303<ul>
304<li>V(G) the cyclomatic complexity of the method is used as its weight.
305 Methods from class files are given a V(G) of 1.</li>
306<li>the arity, or the number of parameters of the method are used to
307 determine the weight.</li>
308</ul>
309
310<a name="RFC"/>
311<h3>Response For Class - RFC</h3>
312
313The response set of a class is the set of all methods that can be invoked as
314a result of a message sent to an object of the class. This includes methods
315in the class's inheritance hierarchy and methods that can be invoked on
316other objects. The Response For Class metric is defined to be size of the
317response set for the class. A class which provides a larger response set is
318considered to be more complex than one with a smaller response set.
319<p/>
320One reason for this is that if a method call on a class can result in a large
321number of different method calls on the target and other classes, then it
322can be harder to test the behavior of the class and debug problems. It will
323typically require a deeper understanding of the potential interactions that
324objects of the class can have with the rest of the system.
325<p/>
326RFC is defined as the sum of NLM and NRM for the class. The local methods
327include all of the public, protected, package and private methods, but not
328methods declared only in a superclass.
329
330<a name="DAC"/>
331<h3>Data Abstraction Coupling - DAC</h3>
332
333DAC is defined for classes and interfaces. It counts the number of reference
334types that are used in the field declarations of the class or interface. The
335component types of arrays are also counted. Any field with a type that is
336either a supertype or a subtype of the class is not counted.
337
338<a name="FANOUT"/>
339<h3>Fan Out - FANOUT</h3>
340
341FANOUT is defined for classes and interfaces, constructors and methods. It
342counts the number of reference types that are used in:
343<ul>
344<li>field declarations;</li>
345<li>formal parameters and return types;</li>
346<li>throws declarations;</li>
347<li>local variables.</li>
348</ul>
349
350The component types of arrays are also counted. Any type that is either a
351supertype or a subtype of the class is not counted.
352
353<a name="CBO"/>
354<h3>Coupling Between Objects - CBO</h3>
355
356When one object or class uses another object or class they are said to be
357coupled. One major source of coupling is that between a superclass and a
358subclass. A coupling is also introduced when a method or field in another
359class is accessed, or when an object of another class is passed into or out
360of a method invocation. Coupling Between Objects is a measure of the
361non-inheritance coupling between two objects.
362<p/>
363A high value of coupling reduces the modularity of the class and makes
364reuse more difficult. The more independent a class is the more likely it is
365that it will be possible to reuse it in another part of the system. When a
366class is coupled to another class it becomes sensitive to changes in that
367class, thereby making maintenance for difficult. In addition, a class that is
368overly dependent on other classes can be difficult to understand and test in
369isolation.
370<p/>
371CBO is defined for classes and interfaces, constructors and methods. It
372counts the number of reference types that are used in:
373<ul>
374<li>field declarations</li>
375<li>formal parameters and return types</li>
376<li>throws declarations</li>
377<li>local variables</li>
378</ul>
379
380It also counts:
381<ul>
382<li>types from which field and method selections are made</li>
383</ul>
384
385The component types of arrays are also counted. Any type that is either a
386supertype or a subtype of the class is not counted.
387
388<a name="LCOM"/>
389<h3>Lack of Cohesion Of Methods - LCOM</h3>
390
391The cohesion of a class is the degree to which its methods are related to
392each other. It is determined by examining the pattern of state variable
393accesses within the set of methods. If all the methods access the same state
394variables then they have high cohesion; if they access disjoint sets of
395variables then the cohesion is low. An extreme example of low cohesion
396would be if none of the methods accessed any of the state variables.
397
398If a class exhibits low method cohesion it indicates that the design of the
399class has probably been partitioned incorrectly, and could benefit by being
400split into more classes with individually higher cohesion. On the other
401hand, a high value of cohesion (a low lack of cohesion) implies that the
402class is well designed. A cohesive class will tend to provide a high degree
403of encapsulation, whereas a lack of cohesion decreases encapsulation and
404increases complexity.
405<p/>
406Another form of cohesion that is useful for Java programs is cohesion
407between nested and enclosing classes. A nested class that has very low
408cohesion with its enclosing class would probably better designed as a peer
409class rather than a nested class.
410<p/>
411LCOM is defined for classes. Operationally, LCOM takes each pair of
412methods in the class and determines the set of fields they each access. If
413they have disjoint sets of field accesses increase the count P by one. If they
414share at least one field access then increase Q by one. After considering
415each pair of methods,
416LCOM = (P > Q) ? (P - Q) : 0
417<p/>
418Indirect access to fields via local methods can be considered by setting a
419metric configuration parameter.
420
421<a name="NOC"/>
422<h3>Number Of Classes - NOC</h3>
423
424The overall size of the system can be estimated by calculating the number
425of classes it contains. A large system with more classes is more complex
426than a smaller one because the number of potential interactions between
427objects is higher. This reduces the comprehensibility of the system which
428in turn makes it harder to test, debug and maintain.
429<p/>
430If the number of classes in the system can be projected during the initial
431design phase of the project it can serve as a base for estimating the total
432effort and cost of developing, debugging and maintaining the system.
433<p/>
434The NOC metric can also usefully be applied at the package and class level
435as well as the total system.
436<p/>
437NOCL is defined for class and interfaces. It counts the number of classes or
438interfaces that are declared. This is usually 1, but nested class declarations
439will increase this number.
440</body>
441</html>
442</xsl:template>
443
444<!-- this is the stylesheet css to use for nearly everything -->
445<xsl:template name="stylesheet.css">
446 .bannercell {
447 border: 0px;
448 padding: 0px;
449 }
450 body {
451 margin-left: 10;
452 margin-right: 10;
453 font:normal 80% arial,helvetica,sanserif;
454 background-color:#FFFFFF;
455 color:#000000;
456 }
457 .a td {
458 background: #efefef;
459 }
460 .b td {
461 background: #fff;
462 }
463 th, td {
464 text-align: left;
465 vertical-align: top;
466 }
467 th {
468 font-weight:bold;
469 background: #ccc;
470 color: black;
471 }
472 table, th, td {
473 font-size:100%;
474 border: none
475 }
476 table.log tr td, tr th {
477
478 }
479 h2 {
480 font-weight:bold;
481 font-size:140%;
482 margin-bottom: 5;
483 }
484 h3 {
485 font-size:100%;
486 font-weight:bold;
487 background: #525D76;
488 color: white;
489 text-decoration: none;
490 padding: 5px;
491 margin-right: 2px;
492 margin-left: 2px;
493 margin-bottom: 0;
494 }
495 .Error {
496 font-weight:bold; color:red;
497 }
498
499</xsl:template>
500
501<!-- print the metrics of the class -->
502<xsl:template match="class" mode="class.details">
503 <!--xsl:variable name="package.name" select="(ancestor::package)[last()]/@name"/-->
504 <xsl:variable name="package.name" select="@package"/>
505 <HTML>
506 <HEAD>
507 <xsl:call-template name="create.stylesheet.link">
508 <xsl:with-param name="package.name" select="$package.name"/>
509 </xsl:call-template>
510 </HEAD>
511 <BODY>
512 <xsl:call-template name="pageHeader"/>
513
514 <H3>Class <xsl:if test="not($package.name = 'unnamed package')"><xsl:value-of select="$package.name"/>.</xsl:if><xsl:value-of select="@name"/></H3>
515 <table class="log" border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2" width="100%">
516 <xsl:call-template name="all.metrics.header"/>
517 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="print.metrics"/>
518 </table>
519
520 <H3>Methods</H3>
521 <table class="log" border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2" width="100%">
522 <xsl:call-template name="method.metrics.header"/>
523 <xsl:apply-templates select="method" mode="print.metrics"/>
524 </table>
525
526 <xsl:call-template name="pageFooter"/>
527 </BODY>
528 </HTML>
529</xsl:template>
530
531
532<!-- list of classes in a package -->
533<xsl:template match="package" mode="classes.list">
534 <HTML>
535 <HEAD>
536 <xsl:call-template name="create.stylesheet.link">
537 <xsl:with-param name="package.name" select="@name"/>
538 </xsl:call-template>
539 </HEAD>
540 <BODY>
541 <table width="100%">
542 <tr>
543 <td nowrap="nowrap">
544 <H2><a href="package-summary.html" target="classFrame"><xsl:value-of select="@name"/></a></H2>
545 </td>
546 </tr>
547 </table>
548
549 <H2>Classes</H2>
550 <TABLE WIDTH="100%">
551 <!-- xalan-nodeset:nodeset for Xalan 1.2.2 -->
552 <xsl:for-each select="$doctree/classes/class[@package = current()/@name]">
553 <xsl:sort select="@name"/>
554 <tr>
555 <td nowrap="nowrap">
556 <a href="{@name}.html" target="classFrame"><xsl:value-of select="@name"/></a>
557 </td>
558 </tr>
559 </xsl:for-each>
560 </TABLE>
561 </BODY>
562 </HTML>
563</xsl:template>
564
565
566<!--
567 Creates an all-classes.html file that contains a link to all package-summary.html
568 on each class.
569-->
570<xsl:template match="metrics" mode="all.classes">
571 <html>
572 <head>
573 <xsl:call-template name="create.stylesheet.link">
574 <xsl:with-param name="package.name" select="''"/>
575 </xsl:call-template>
576 </head>
577 <body>
578 <h2>Classes</h2>
579 <table width="100%">
580 <xsl:for-each select="$doctree/classes/class">
581 <xsl:sort select="@name"/>
582 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="all.classes"/>
583 </xsl:for-each>
584 </table>
585 </body>
586 </html>
587</xsl:template>
588
589<xsl:template match="class" mode="all.classes">
590 <xsl:variable name="package.name" select="@package"/>
591 <xsl:variable name="class.name" select="@name"/>
592 <tr>
593 <td nowrap="nowrap">
594 <a target="classFrame">
595 <xsl:attribute name="href">
596 <xsl:if test="not($package.name='unnamed package')">
597 <xsl:value-of select="translate($package.name,'.','/')"/><xsl:text>/</xsl:text>
598 </xsl:if>
599 <xsl:value-of select="$class.name"/><xsl:text>.html</xsl:text>
600 </xsl:attribute>
601 <xsl:value-of select="$class.name"/>
602 </a>
603 </td>
604 </tr>
605</xsl:template>
606
607<!--
608 Creates an html file that contains a link to all package-summary.html files on
609 each package existing on testsuites.
610 @bug there will be a problem here, I don't know yet how to handle unnamed package :(
611-->
612<xsl:template match="metrics" mode="all.packages">
613 <html>
614 <head>
615 <xsl:call-template name="create.stylesheet.link">
616 <xsl:with-param name="package.name" select="./package/@name"/>
617 </xsl:call-template>
618 </head>
619 <body>
620 <h2><a href="overview-summary.html" target="classFrame">Home</a></h2>
621 <h2>Packages</h2>
622 <table width="100%">
623 <xsl:apply-templates select=".//package[not(./@name = 'unnamed package')]" mode="all.packages">
624 <xsl:sort select="@name"/>
625 </xsl:apply-templates>
626 </table>
627 </body>
628 </html>
629</xsl:template>
630
631<xsl:template match="package" mode="all.packages">
632 <tr>
633 <td nowrap="nowrap">
634 <a href="{translate(@name,'.','/')}/package-summary.html" target="classFrame">
635 <xsl:value-of select="@name"/>
636 </a>
637 </td>
638 </tr>
639</xsl:template>
640
641
642<xsl:template match="metrics" mode="overview.packages">
643 <html>
644 <head>
645 <xsl:call-template name="create.stylesheet.link">
646 <xsl:with-param name="package.name" select="''"/>
647 </xsl:call-template>
648 </head>
649 <body onload="open('allclasses-frame.html','classListFrame')">
650 <xsl:call-template name="pageHeader"/>
651 <h3>Summary</h3>
652 <table class="log" border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2" width="100%">
653 <tr>
654 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#V(G)">V(G)</a></th>
655 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#LOC">LOC</a></th>
656 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#DIT">DIT</a></th>
657 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#NOA">NOA</a></th>
658 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#NRM">NRM</a></th>
659 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#NLM">NLM</a></th>
660 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#WMC">WMC</a></th>
661 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#RFC">RFC</a></th>
662 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#DAC">DAC</a></th>
663 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#FANOUT">FANOUT</a></th>
664 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#CBO">CBO</a></th>
665 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#LCOM">LCOM</a></th>
666 <th><a href="metrics-reference.html#NOCL">NOCL</a></th>
667 </tr>
668 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="print.metrics"/>
669 </table>
670 <table border="0" width="100%">
671 <tr>
672 <td style="text-align: justify;">
673 Note: Metrics evaluate the quality of software by analyzing the program source and quantifying
674 various kind of complexity. Complexity is a common source of problems and defects in software.
675 High complexity makes it more difficult to develop, understand, maintain, extend, test and debug
676 a program.
677 <p/>
678 The primary use of metrics is to focus your attention on those parts of code that potentially are
679 complexity hot spots. Once the complex areas your program have been uncovered, you can take remedial
680 actions.
681 For additional information about metrics and their meaning, please consult
682 Metamata Metrics manual.
683 </td>
684 </tr>
685 </table>
686
687 <h3>Packages</h3>
688 <table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2" width="100%">
689 <xsl:call-template name="all.metrics.header"/>
690 <xsl:for-each select=".//package[not(@name = 'unnamed package')]">
691 <xsl:sort select="@name" order="ascending"/>
692 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="print.metrics"/>
693 </xsl:for-each>
694 </table>
695 <!-- @bug there could some classes at this level (classes in unnamed package) -->
696 <xsl:call-template name="pageFooter"/>
697 </body>
698 </html>
699</xsl:template>
700
701<xsl:template match="package" mode="package.summary">
702 <HTML>
703 <HEAD>
704 <xsl:call-template name="create.stylesheet.link">
705 <xsl:with-param name="package.name" select="@name"/>
706 </xsl:call-template>
707 </HEAD>
708 <body onload="open('package-frame.html','classListFrame')">
709 <xsl:call-template name="pageHeader"/>
710 <!-- create an anchor to this package name -->
711 <h3>Package <xsl:value-of select="@name"/></h3>
712
713 <table class="log" border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2" width="100%">
714 <xsl:call-template name="all.metrics.header"/>
715 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="print.metrics"/>
716 </table>
717
718 <table border="0" width="100%">
719 <tr>
720 <td style="text-align: justify;">
721 Note: Metrics evaluate the quality of software by analyzing the program source and quantifying
722 various kind of complexity. Complexity is a common source of problems and defects in software.
723 High complexity makes it more difficult to develop, understand, maintain, extend, test and debug
724 a program.
725 <p/>
726 The primary use of metrics is to focus your attention on those parts of code that potentially are
727 complexity hot spots. Once the complex areas your program have been uncovered, you can take remedial
728 actions.
729 For additional information about metrics and their meaning, please consult
730 Metamata Metrics manual.
731 </td>
732 </tr>
733 </table>
734
735 <xsl:variable name="classes-in-package" select="$doctree/classes/class[@package = current()/@name]"/>
736 <xsl:if test="count($classes-in-package) &gt; 0">
737 <H3>Classes</H3>
738 <table class="log" border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="2" width="100%">
739 <xsl:call-template name="all.metrics.header"/>
740 <xsl:for-each select="$classes-in-package">
741 <xsl:sort select="@name"/>
742 <xsl:apply-templates select="." mode="print.metrics"/>
743 </xsl:for-each>
744 </table>
745 </xsl:if>
746
747 <xsl:call-template name="pageFooter"/>
748 </body>
749 </HTML>
750</xsl:template>
751
752
753<!--
754 transform string like a.b.c to ../../../
755 @param path the path to transform into a descending directory path
756-->
757<xsl:template name="path">
758 <xsl:param name="path"/>
759 <xsl:if test="contains($path,'.')">
760 <xsl:text>../</xsl:text>
761 <xsl:call-template name="path">
762 <xsl:with-param name="path"><xsl:value-of select="substring-after($path,'.')"/></xsl:with-param>
763 </xsl:call-template>
764 </xsl:if>
765 <xsl:if test="not(contains($path,'.')) and not($path = '')">
766 <xsl:text>../</xsl:text>
767 </xsl:if>
768</xsl:template>
769
770
771<!-- create the link to the stylesheet based on the package name -->
772<xsl:template name="create.stylesheet.link">
773 <xsl:param name="package.name"/>
774 <LINK REL ="stylesheet" TYPE="text/css" TITLE="Style"><xsl:attribute name="href"><xsl:if test="not($package.name = 'unnamed package')"><xsl:call-template name="path"><xsl:with-param name="path" select="$package.name"/></xsl:call-template></xsl:if>stylesheet.css</xsl:attribute></LINK>
775</xsl:template>
776
777
778<!-- Page Header -->
779<xsl:template name="pageHeader">
780
781 <!-- jakarta logo -->
782 <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%">
783 <tr>
784 <td class="bannercell" rowspan="2">
785 <a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/">
786 <img src="http://jakarta.apache.org/images/jakarta-logo.gif" alt="http://jakarta.apache.org" align="left" border="0"/>
787 </a>
788 </td>
789 <td style="text-align:right"><h2>Source Code Metrics</h2></td>
790 </tr>
791 <tr>
792 <td style="text-align:right">Designed for use with <a href='http://www.webgain.com/products/quality_analyzer/'>Webgain QA/Metamata Metrics</a> and <a href='http://jakarta.apache.org'>Ant</a>.</td>
793 </tr>
794 </table>
795 <hr size="1"/>
796</xsl:template>
797
798<!-- Page Footer -->
799<xsl:template name="pageFooter">
800</xsl:template>
801
802<!-- class header -->
803<xsl:template name="all.metrics.header">
804 <tr>
805 <th width="80%">Name</th>
806 <th nowrap="nowrap">V(G)</th>
807 <th>LOC</th>
808 <th>DIT</th>
809 <th>NOA</th>
810 <th>NRM</th>
811 <th>NLM</th>
812 <th>WMC</th>
813 <th>RFC</th>
814 <th>DAC</th>
815 <th>FANOUT</th>
816 <th>CBO</th>
817 <th>LCOM</th>
818 <th>NOCL</th>
819 </tr>
820</xsl:template>
821
822<!-- method header -->
823<xsl:template name="method.metrics.header">
824 <tr>
825 <th width="80%">Name</th>
826 <th nowrap="nowrap">V(G)</th>
827 <th>LOC</th>
828 <th>FANOUT</th>
829 <th>CBO</th>
830 </tr>
831</xsl:template>
832
833<!-- method information -->
834<xsl:template match="method" mode="print.metrics">
835 <tr>
836 <xsl:call-template name="alternate-row"/>
837 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@name"/></td>
838 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@vg"/></td>
839 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@loc"/></td>
840 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@fanout"/></td>
841 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@cbo"/></td>
842 </tr>
843</xsl:template>
844
845<!-- class information -->
846<xsl:template match="class" mode="print.metrics">
847 <tr>
848 <xsl:call-template name="alternate-row"/>
849 <td><a href="{@name}.html"><xsl:value-of select="@name"/></a></td>
850 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@vg"/></td>
851 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@loc"/></td>
852 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@dit"/></td>
853 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@noa"/></td>
854 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@nrm"/></td>
855 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@nlm"/></td>
856 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@wmc"/></td>
857 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@rfc"/></td>
858 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@dac"/></td>
859 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@fanout"/></td>
860 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@cbo"/></td>
861 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@lcom"/></td>
862 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@nocl"/></td>
863 </tr>
864</xsl:template>
865
866<xsl:template match="file|package" mode="print.metrics">
867 <tr>
868 <xsl:call-template name="alternate-row"/>
869 <td>
870 <a href="{translate(@name,'.','/')}/package-summary.html" target="classFrame">
871 <xsl:value-of select="@name"/>
872 </a>
873 </td>
874 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@vg"/></td>
875 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@loc"/></td>
876 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@dit"/></td>
877 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@noa"/></td>
878 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@nrm"/></td>
879 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@nlm"/></td>
880 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@wmc"/></td>
881 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@rfc"/></td>
882 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@dac"/></td>
883 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@fanout"/></td>
884 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@cbo"/></td>
885 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@lcom"/></td>
886 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="@nocl"/></td>
887 </tr>
888</xsl:template>
889
890<xsl:template match="metrics" mode="print.metrics">
891 <tr>
892 <xsl:call-template name="alternate-row"/>
893 <!-- the global metrics is the top package metrics -->
894 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@vg"/></td>
895 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@loc"/></td>
896 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@dit"/></td>
897 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@noa"/></td>
898 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@nrm"/></td>
899 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@nlm"/></td>
900 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@wmc"/></td>
901 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@rfc"/></td>
902 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@dac"/></td>
903 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@fanout"/></td>
904 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@cbo"/></td>
905 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@lcom"/></td>
906 <td><xsl:apply-templates select="./package/@nocl"/></td>
907 </tr>
908</xsl:template>
909
910<!-- alternated row style -->
911<xsl:template name="alternate-row">
912<xsl:attribute name="class">
913 <xsl:if test="position() mod 2 = 1">a</xsl:if>
914 <xsl:if test="position() mod 2 = 0">b</xsl:if>
915</xsl:attribute>
916</xsl:template>
917
918
919<!-- how to display the metrics with their max value -->
920<!-- @todo the max values must be external to the xsl -->
921
922 <xsl:template match="@vg">
923 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
924 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
925 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$vg.max"/>
926 </xsl:call-template>
927 </xsl:template>
928
929 <xsl:template match="@loc">
930 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
931 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
932 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$loc.max"/>
933 </xsl:call-template>
934 </xsl:template>
935
936 <xsl:template match="@dit">
937 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
938 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
939 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$dit.max"/>
940 </xsl:call-template>
941 </xsl:template>
942
943 <xsl:template match="@noa">
944 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
945 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
946 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$noa.max"/>
947 </xsl:call-template>
948 </xsl:template>
949
950 <xsl:template match="@nrm">
951 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
952 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
953 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$nrm.max"/>
954 </xsl:call-template>
955 </xsl:template>
956
957 <xsl:template match="@nlm">
958 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
959 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
960 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$nlm.max"/>
961 </xsl:call-template>
962 </xsl:template>
963
964 <xsl:template match="@wmc">
965 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
966 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
967 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$wmc.max"/>
968 </xsl:call-template>
969 </xsl:template>
970
971 <xsl:template match="@rfc">
972 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
973 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
974 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$rfc.max"/>
975 </xsl:call-template>
976 </xsl:template>
977
978 <xsl:template match="@dac">
979 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
980 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
981 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$dac.max"/>
982 </xsl:call-template>
983 </xsl:template>
984
985 <xsl:template match="@fanout">
986 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
987 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
988 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$fanout.max"/>
989 </xsl:call-template>
990 </xsl:template>
991
992 <xsl:template match="@cbo">
993 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
994 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
995 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$cbo.max"/>
996 </xsl:call-template>
997 </xsl:template>
998
999 <xsl:template match="@lcom">
1000 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
1001 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
1002 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$lcom.max"/>
1003 </xsl:call-template>
1004 </xsl:template>
1005
1006 <xsl:template match="@nocl">
1007 <xsl:call-template name="display-value">
1008 <xsl:with-param name="value" select="current()"/>
1009 <xsl:with-param name="max" select="$nocl.max"/>
1010 </xsl:call-template>
1011 </xsl:template>
1012
1013 <xsl:template name="display-value">
1014 <xsl:param name="value"/>
1015 <xsl:param name="max"/>
1016 <xsl:if test="$value > $max">
1017 <xsl:attribute name="class">Error</xsl:attribute>
1018 </xsl:if>
1019 <xsl:value-of select="$value"/>
1020 </xsl:template>
1021
1022</xsl:stylesheet>
1023
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