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     52 <h1>FindBugs Bug Descriptions</h1>
     53 <p>This document lists the standard bug patterns reported by
     54 <a href="http://findbugs.sourceforge.net">FindBugs</a> version 2.0.3.</p>
     55 <h2>Summary</h2>
     56 <table width="100%">
     57 <tr bgcolor="#b9b9fe"><th>Description</th><th>Category</th></tr>
     58 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BC_EQUALS_METHOD_SHOULD_WORK_FOR_ALL_OBJECTS">BC: Equals method should not assume anything about the type of its argument</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     59 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BIT_SIGNED_CHECK">BIT: Check for sign of bitwise operation</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     60 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#CN_IDIOM">CN: Class implements Cloneable but does not define or use clone method</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     61 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#CN_IDIOM_NO_SUPER_CALL">CN: clone method does not call super.clone()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     62 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#CN_IMPLEMENTS_CLONE_BUT_NOT_CLONEABLE">CN: Class defines clone() but doesn't implement Cloneable</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     63 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#CO_ABSTRACT_SELF">Co: Abstract class defines covariant compareTo() method</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     64 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#CO_SELF_NO_OBJECT">Co: Covariant compareTo() method defined</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     65 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DE_MIGHT_DROP">DE: Method might drop exception</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     66 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DE_MIGHT_IGNORE">DE: Method might ignore exception</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     67 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_ENTRY_SETS_MAY_REUSE_ENTRY_OBJECTS">DMI: Adding elements of an entry set may fail due to reuse of Entry objects</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     68 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_RANDOM_USED_ONLY_ONCE">DMI: Random object created and used only once</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     69 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_USING_REMOVEALL_TO_CLEAR_COLLECTION">DMI: Don't use removeAll to clear a collection</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     70 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_EXIT">Dm: Method invokes System.exit(...)</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     71 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_RUN_FINALIZERS_ON_EXIT">Dm: Method invokes dangerous method runFinalizersOnExit</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     72 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ES_COMPARING_PARAMETER_STRING_WITH_EQ">ES: Comparison of String parameter using == or !=</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     73 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ES_COMPARING_STRINGS_WITH_EQ">ES: Comparison of String objects using == or !=</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     74 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_ABSTRACT_SELF">Eq: Abstract class defines covariant equals() method</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     75 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_CHECK_FOR_OPERAND_NOT_COMPATIBLE_WITH_THIS">Eq: Equals checks for incompatible operand</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     76 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_COMPARETO_USE_OBJECT_EQUALS">Eq: Class defines compareTo(...) and uses Object.equals()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     77 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_GETCLASS_AND_CLASS_CONSTANT">Eq: equals method fails for subtypes</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     78 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_SELF_NO_OBJECT">Eq: Covariant equals() method defined</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     79 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#FI_EMPTY">FI: Empty finalizer should be deleted</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     80 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#FI_EXPLICIT_INVOCATION">FI: Explicit invocation of finalizer</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     81 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#FI_FINALIZER_NULLS_FIELDS">FI: Finalizer nulls fields</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     82 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#FI_FINALIZER_ONLY_NULLS_FIELDS">FI: Finalizer only nulls fields</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     83 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#FI_MISSING_SUPER_CALL">FI: Finalizer does not call superclass finalizer</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     84 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#FI_NULLIFY_SUPER">FI: Finalizer nullifies superclass finalizer</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     85 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#FI_USELESS">FI: Finalizer does nothing but call superclass finalizer</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     86 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_USES_NEWLINE">FS: Format string should use %n rather than \n</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     87 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#GC_UNCHECKED_TYPE_IN_GENERIC_CALL">GC: Unchecked type in generic call</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     88 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#HE_EQUALS_NO_HASHCODE">HE: Class defines equals() but not hashCode()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     89 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#HE_EQUALS_USE_HASHCODE">HE: Class defines equals() and uses Object.hashCode()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     90 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#HE_HASHCODE_NO_EQUALS">HE: Class defines hashCode() but not equals()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     91 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#HE_HASHCODE_USE_OBJECT_EQUALS">HE: Class defines hashCode() and uses Object.equals()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     92 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#HE_INHERITS_EQUALS_USE_HASHCODE">HE: Class inherits equals() and uses Object.hashCode()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     93 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IC_SUPERCLASS_USES_SUBCLASS_DURING_INITIALIZATION">IC: Superclass uses subclass during initialization</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     94 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IMSE_DONT_CATCH_IMSE">IMSE: Dubious catching of IllegalMonitorStateException</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     95 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ISC_INSTANTIATE_STATIC_CLASS">ISC: Needless instantiation of class that only supplies static methods</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     96 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IT_NO_SUCH_ELEMENT">It: Iterator next() method can't throw NoSuchElementException</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     97 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#J2EE_STORE_OF_NON_SERIALIZABLE_OBJECT_INTO_SESSION">J2EE: Store of non serializable object into HttpSession</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     98 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#JCIP_FIELD_ISNT_FINAL_IN_IMMUTABLE_CLASS">JCIP: Fields of immutable classes should be final</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
     99 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_BOOLEAN_RETURN_NULL">NP: Method with Boolean return type returns explicit null</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    100 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_CLONE_COULD_RETURN_NULL">NP: Clone method may return null</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    101 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_EQUALS_SHOULD_HANDLE_NULL_ARGUMENT">NP: equals() method does not check for null argument</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    102 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_TOSTRING_COULD_RETURN_NULL">NP: toString method may return null</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    103 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_CLASS_NAMING_CONVENTION">Nm: Class names should start with an upper case letter</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    104 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_CLASS_NOT_EXCEPTION">Nm: Class is not derived from an Exception, even though it is named as such</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    105 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_CONFUSING">Nm: Confusing method names</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    106 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_FIELD_NAMING_CONVENTION">Nm: Field names should start with a lower case letter</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    107 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_FUTURE_KEYWORD_USED_AS_IDENTIFIER">Nm: Use of identifier that is a keyword in later versions of Java</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    108 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_FUTURE_KEYWORD_USED_AS_MEMBER_IDENTIFIER">Nm: Use of identifier that is a keyword in later versions of Java</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    109 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_METHOD_NAMING_CONVENTION">Nm: Method names should start with a lower case letter</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    110 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_SAME_SIMPLE_NAME_AS_INTERFACE">Nm: Class names shouldn't shadow simple name of implemented interface</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    111 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_SAME_SIMPLE_NAME_AS_SUPERCLASS">Nm: Class names shouldn't shadow simple name of superclass</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    112 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_VERY_CONFUSING_INTENTIONAL">Nm: Very confusing method names (but perhaps intentional)</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    113 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_WRONG_PACKAGE_INTENTIONAL">Nm: Method doesn't override method in superclass due to wrong package for parameter</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    114 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE">ODR: Method may fail to close database resource</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    115 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE_EXCEPTION_PATH">ODR: Method may fail to close database resource on exception</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    116 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#OS_OPEN_STREAM">OS: Method may fail to close stream</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    117 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#OS_OPEN_STREAM_EXCEPTION_PATH">OS: Method may fail to close stream on exception</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    118 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#PZ_DONT_REUSE_ENTRY_OBJECTS_IN_ITERATORS">PZ: Don't reuse entry objects in iterators</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    119 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RC_REF_COMPARISON_BAD_PRACTICE">RC: Suspicious reference comparison to constant</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    120 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RC_REF_COMPARISON_BAD_PRACTICE_BOOLEAN">RC: Suspicious reference comparison of Boolean values</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    121 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RR_NOT_CHECKED">RR: Method ignores results of InputStream.read()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    122 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SR_NOT_CHECKED">RR: Method ignores results of InputStream.skip()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    123 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RV_NEGATING_RESULT_OF_COMPARETO">RV: Negating the result of compareTo()/compare()</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    124 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED_BAD_PRACTICE">RV: Method ignores exceptional return value</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    125 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SI_INSTANCE_BEFORE_FINALS_ASSIGNED">SI: Static initializer creates instance before all static final fields assigned</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    126 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SW_SWING_METHODS_INVOKED_IN_SWING_THREAD">SW: Certain swing methods needs to be invoked in Swing thread</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    127 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_BAD_FIELD">Se: Non-transient non-serializable instance field in serializable class</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    128 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_BAD_FIELD_INNER_CLASS">Se: Non-serializable class has a serializable inner class</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    129 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_BAD_FIELD_STORE">Se: Non-serializable value stored into instance field of a serializable class</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    130 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_COMPARATOR_SHOULD_BE_SERIALIZABLE">Se: Comparator doesn't implement Serializable</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    131 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_INNER_CLASS">Se: Serializable inner class</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    132 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_NONFINAL_SERIALVERSIONID">Se: serialVersionUID isn't final</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    133 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_NONLONG_SERIALVERSIONID">Se: serialVersionUID isn't long</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    134 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_NONSTATIC_SERIALVERSIONID">Se: serialVersionUID isn't static</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    135 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_NO_SUITABLE_CONSTRUCTOR">Se: Class is Serializable but its superclass doesn't define a void constructor</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    136 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_NO_SUITABLE_CONSTRUCTOR_FOR_EXTERNALIZATION">Se: Class is Externalizable but doesn't define a void constructor</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    137 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_READ_RESOLVE_MUST_RETURN_OBJECT">Se: The readResolve method must be declared with a return type of Object. </a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    138 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_TRANSIENT_FIELD_NOT_RESTORED">Se: Transient field that isn't set by deserialization. </a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    139 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_NO_SERIALVERSIONID">SnVI: Class is Serializable, but doesn't define serialVersionUID</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    140 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UI_INHERITANCE_UNSAFE_GETRESOURCE">UI: Usage of GetResource may be unsafe if class is extended</a></td><td>Bad practice</td></tr>
    141 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BC_IMPOSSIBLE_CAST">BC: Impossible cast</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    142 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BC_IMPOSSIBLE_DOWNCAST">BC: Impossible downcast</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    143 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BC_IMPOSSIBLE_DOWNCAST_OF_TOARRAY">BC: Impossible downcast of toArray() result</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    144 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BC_IMPOSSIBLE_INSTANCEOF">BC: instanceof will always return false</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    145 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BIT_ADD_OF_SIGNED_BYTE">BIT: Bitwise add of signed byte value</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    146 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BIT_AND">BIT: Incompatible bit masks</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    147 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BIT_AND_ZZ">BIT: Check to see if ((...) & 0) == 0</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    148 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BIT_IOR">BIT: Incompatible bit masks</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    149 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BIT_IOR_OF_SIGNED_BYTE">BIT: Bitwise OR of signed byte value</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    150 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BIT_SIGNED_CHECK_HIGH_BIT">BIT: Check for sign of bitwise operation</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    151 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BOA_BADLY_OVERRIDDEN_ADAPTER">BOA: Class overrides a method implemented in super class Adapter wrongly</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    152 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ICAST_BAD_SHIFT_AMOUNT">BSHIFT: 32 bit int shifted by an amount not in the range -31..31</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    153 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BX_UNBOXED_AND_COERCED_FOR_TERNARY_OPERATOR">Bx: Primitive value is unboxed and coerced for ternary operator</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    154 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#CO_COMPARETO_RESULTS_MIN_VALUE">Co: compareTo()/compare() returns Integer.MIN_VALUE</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    155 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_INCREMENT_IN_RETURN">DLS: Useless increment in return statement</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    156 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DLS_DEAD_STORE_OF_CLASS_LITERAL">DLS: Dead store of class literal</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    157 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DLS_OVERWRITTEN_INCREMENT">DLS: Overwritten increment</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    158 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_ARGUMENTS_WRONG_ORDER">DMI: Reversed method arguments</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    159 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_BAD_MONTH">DMI: Bad constant value for month</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    160 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_BIGDECIMAL_CONSTRUCTED_FROM_DOUBLE">DMI: BigDecimal constructed from double that isn't represented precisely</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    161 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_CALLING_NEXT_FROM_HASNEXT">DMI: hasNext method invokes next</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    162 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_COLLECTIONS_SHOULD_NOT_CONTAIN_THEMSELVES">DMI: Collections should not contain themselves</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    163 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_DOH">DMI: D'oh! A nonsensical method invocation</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    164 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_INVOKING_HASHCODE_ON_ARRAY">DMI: Invocation of hashCode on an array</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    165 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_LONG_BITS_TO_DOUBLE_INVOKED_ON_INT">DMI: Double.longBitsToDouble invoked on an int</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    166 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_VACUOUS_SELF_COLLECTION_CALL">DMI: Vacuous call to collections</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    167 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_ANNOTATION_IS_NOT_VISIBLE_TO_REFLECTION">Dm: Can't use reflection to check for presence of annotation without runtime retention</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    168 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_FUTILE_ATTEMPT_TO_CHANGE_MAXPOOL_SIZE_OF_SCHEDULED_THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR">Dm: Futile attempt to change max pool size of ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    169 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_SCHEDULED_THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR_WITH_ZERO_CORE_THREADS">Dm: Creation of ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor with zero core threads</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    170 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_VACUOUS_CALL_TO_EASYMOCK_METHOD">Dm: Useless/vacuous call to EasyMock method</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    171 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EC_ARRAY_AND_NONARRAY">EC: equals() used to compare array and nonarray</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    172 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EC_BAD_ARRAY_COMPARE">EC: Invocation of equals() on an array, which is equivalent to ==</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    173 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EC_INCOMPATIBLE_ARRAY_COMPARE">EC: equals(...) used to compare incompatible arrays</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    174 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EC_NULL_ARG">EC: Call to equals(null)</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    175 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EC_UNRELATED_CLASS_AND_INTERFACE">EC: Call to equals() comparing unrelated class and interface</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    176 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EC_UNRELATED_INTERFACES">EC: Call to equals() comparing different interface types</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    177 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EC_UNRELATED_TYPES">EC: Call to equals() comparing different types</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    178 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EC_UNRELATED_TYPES_USING_POINTER_EQUALITY">EC: Using pointer equality to compare different types</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    179 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_ALWAYS_FALSE">Eq: equals method always returns false</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    180 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_ALWAYS_TRUE">Eq: equals method always returns true</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    181 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_COMPARING_CLASS_NAMES">Eq: equals method compares class names rather than class objects</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    182 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_DONT_DEFINE_EQUALS_FOR_ENUM">Eq: Covariant equals() method defined for enum</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    183 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_OTHER_NO_OBJECT">Eq: equals() method defined that doesn't override equals(Object)</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    184 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_OTHER_USE_OBJECT">Eq: equals() method defined that doesn't override Object.equals(Object)</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    185 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_OVERRIDING_EQUALS_NOT_SYMMETRIC">Eq: equals method overrides equals in superclass and may not be symmetric</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    186 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_SELF_USE_OBJECT">Eq: Covariant equals() method defined, Object.equals(Object) inherited</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    187 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#FE_TEST_IF_EQUAL_TO_NOT_A_NUMBER">FE: Doomed test for equality to NaN</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    188 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_ARGUMENT">FS: Format string placeholder incompatible with passed argument</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    189 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION">FS: The type of a supplied argument doesn't match format specifier</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    190 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_EXPECTED_MESSAGE_FORMAT_SUPPLIED">FS: MessageFormat supplied where printf style format expected</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    191 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS_PASSED">FS: More arguments are passed than are actually used in the format string</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    192 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_ILLEGAL">FS: Illegal format string</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    193 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_MISSING_ARGUMENT">FS: Format string references missing argument</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    194 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_NO_PREVIOUS_ARGUMENT">FS: No previous argument for format string</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    195 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#GC_UNRELATED_TYPES">GC: No relationship between generic parameter and method argument</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    196 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#HE_SIGNATURE_DECLARES_HASHING_OF_UNHASHABLE_CLASS">HE: Signature declares use of unhashable class in hashed construct</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    197 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#HE_USE_OF_UNHASHABLE_CLASS">HE: Use of class without a hashCode() method in a hashed data structure</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    198 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ICAST_INT_2_LONG_AS_INSTANT">ICAST: int value converted to long and used as absolute time</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    199 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ICAST_INT_CAST_TO_DOUBLE_PASSED_TO_CEIL">ICAST: Integral value cast to double and then passed to Math.ceil</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    200 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ICAST_INT_CAST_TO_FLOAT_PASSED_TO_ROUND">ICAST: int value cast to float and then passed to Math.round</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    201 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IJU_ASSERT_METHOD_INVOKED_FROM_RUN_METHOD">IJU: JUnit assertion in run method will not be noticed by JUnit</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    202 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IJU_BAD_SUITE_METHOD">IJU: TestCase declares a bad suite method </a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    203 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IJU_NO_TESTS">IJU: TestCase has no tests</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    204 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IJU_SETUP_NO_SUPER">IJU: TestCase defines setUp that doesn't call super.setUp()</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    205 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IJU_SUITE_NOT_STATIC">IJU: TestCase implements a non-static suite method </a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    206 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IJU_TEARDOWN_NO_SUPER">IJU: TestCase defines tearDown that doesn't call super.tearDown()</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    207 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IL_CONTAINER_ADDED_TO_ITSELF">IL: A collection is added to itself</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    208 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IL_INFINITE_LOOP">IL: An apparent infinite loop</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    209 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IL_INFINITE_RECURSIVE_LOOP">IL: An apparent infinite recursive loop</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    210 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IM_MULTIPLYING_RESULT_OF_IREM">IM: Integer multiply of result of integer remainder</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    211 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_INT_VALUE">INT: Bad comparison of int value with long constant</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    212 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_NONNEGATIVE_VALUE">INT: Bad comparison of nonnegative value with negative constant</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    213 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_SIGNED_BYTE">INT: Bad comparison of signed byte</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    214 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IO_APPENDING_TO_OBJECT_OUTPUT_STREAM">IO: Doomed attempt to append to an object output stream</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    215 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IP_PARAMETER_IS_DEAD_BUT_OVERWRITTEN">IP: A parameter is dead upon entry to a method but overwritten</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    216 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MF_CLASS_MASKS_FIELD">MF: Class defines field that masks a superclass field</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    217 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MF_METHOD_MASKS_FIELD">MF: Method defines a variable that obscures a field</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    218 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_ALWAYS_NULL">NP: Null pointer dereference</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    219 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_ALWAYS_NULL_EXCEPTION">NP: Null pointer dereference in method on exception path</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    220 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_ARGUMENT_MIGHT_BE_NULL">NP: Method does not check for null argument</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    221 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_CLOSING_NULL">NP: close() invoked on a value that is always null</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    222 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_GUARANTEED_DEREF">NP: Null value is guaranteed to be dereferenced</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    223 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_GUARANTEED_DEREF_ON_EXCEPTION_PATH">NP: Value is null and guaranteed to be dereferenced on exception path</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    224 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_NONNULL_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED_IN_CONSTRUCTOR">NP: Nonnull field is not initialized</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    225 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_NONNULL_PARAM_VIOLATION">NP: Method call passes null to a nonnull parameter </a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    226 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_NONNULL_RETURN_VIOLATION">NP: Method may return null, but is declared @NonNull</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    227 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_INSTANCEOF">NP: A known null value is checked to see if it is an instance of a type</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    228 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH">NP: Possible null pointer dereference</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    229 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_EXCEPTION">NP: Possible null pointer dereference in method on exception path</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    230 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF">NP: Method call passes null for nonnull parameter</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    231 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF_ALL_TARGETS_DANGEROUS">NP: Method call passes null for nonnull parameter</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    232 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF_NONVIRTUAL">NP: Non-virtual method call passes null for nonnull parameter</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    233 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_STORE_INTO_NONNULL_FIELD">NP: Store of null value into field annotated NonNull</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    234 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_UNWRITTEN_FIELD">NP: Read of unwritten field</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    235 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_BAD_EQUAL">Nm: Class defines equal(Object); should it be equals(Object)?</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    236 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_LCASE_HASHCODE">Nm: Class defines hashcode(); should it be hashCode()?</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    237 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_LCASE_TOSTRING">Nm: Class defines tostring(); should it be toString()?</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    238 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_METHOD_CONSTRUCTOR_CONFUSION">Nm: Apparent method/constructor confusion</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    239 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NM_VERY_CONFUSING">Nm: Very confusing method names</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    240 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NM_WRONG_PACKAGE">Nm: Method doesn't override method in superclass due to wrong package for parameter</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    241 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#QBA_QUESTIONABLE_BOOLEAN_ASSIGNMENT">QBA: Method assigns boolean literal in boolean expression</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    242 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RC_REF_COMPARISON">RC: Suspicious reference comparison</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    243 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_WOULD_HAVE_BEEN_A_NPE">RCN: Nullcheck of value previously dereferenced</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    244 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RE_BAD_SYNTAX_FOR_REGULAR_EXPRESSION">RE: Invalid syntax for regular expression</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    245 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RE_CANT_USE_FILE_SEPARATOR_AS_REGULAR_EXPRESSION">RE: File.separator used for regular expression</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    246 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RE_POSSIBLE_UNINTENDED_PATTERN">RE: "." or "|" used for regular expression</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    247 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RV_01_TO_INT">RV: Random value from 0 to 1 is coerced to the integer 0</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    248 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_ABSOLUTE_VALUE_OF_HASHCODE">RV: Bad attempt to compute absolute value of signed 32-bit hashcode </a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    249 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RV_ABSOLUTE_VALUE_OF_RANDOM_INT">RV: Bad attempt to compute absolute value of signed random integer</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    250 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_CHECK_COMPARETO_FOR_SPECIFIC_RETURN_VALUE">RV: Code checks for specific values returned by compareTo</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    251 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RV_EXCEPTION_NOT_THROWN">RV: Exception created and dropped rather than thrown</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    252 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED">RV: Method ignores return value</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    253 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RpC_REPEATED_CONDITIONAL_TEST">RpC: Repeated conditional tests</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    254 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SA_FIELD_SELF_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Self assignment of field</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    255 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SA_FIELD_SELF_COMPARISON">SA: Self comparison of field with itself</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    256 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SA_FIELD_SELF_COMPUTATION">SA: Nonsensical self computation involving a field (e.g., x & x)</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    257 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SA_LOCAL_SELF_ASSIGNMENT_INSTEAD_OF_FIELD">SA: Self assignment of local rather than assignment to field</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    258 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SA_LOCAL_SELF_COMPARISON">SA: Self comparison of value with itself</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    259 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SA_LOCAL_SELF_COMPUTATION">SA: Nonsensical self computation involving a variable (e.g., x & x)</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    260 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SF_DEAD_STORE_DUE_TO_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH">SF: Dead store due to switch statement fall through</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    261 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SF_DEAD_STORE_DUE_TO_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH_TO_THROW">SF: Dead store due to switch statement fall through to throw</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    262 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SIC_THREADLOCAL_DEADLY_EMBRACE">SIC: Deadly embrace of non-static inner class and thread local</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    263 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SIO_SUPERFLUOUS_INSTANCEOF">SIO: Unnecessary type check done using instanceof operator</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    264 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SQL_BAD_PREPARED_STATEMENT_ACCESS">SQL: Method attempts to access a prepared statement parameter with index 0</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    265 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SQL_BAD_RESULTSET_ACCESS">SQL: Method attempts to access a result set field with index 0</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    266 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#STI_INTERRUPTED_ON_CURRENTTHREAD">STI: Unneeded use of currentThread() call, to call interrupted() </a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    267 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#STI_INTERRUPTED_ON_UNKNOWNTHREAD">STI: Static Thread.interrupted() method invoked on thread instance</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    268 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_METHOD_MUST_BE_PRIVATE">Se: Method must be private in order for serialization to work</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    269 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_READ_RESOLVE_IS_STATIC">Se: The readResolve method must not be declared as a static method.  </a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    270 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#TQ_ALWAYS_VALUE_USED_WHERE_NEVER_REQUIRED">TQ: Value annotated as carrying a type qualifier used where a value that must not carry that qualifier is required</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    271 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#TQ_COMPARING_VALUES_WITH_INCOMPATIBLE_TYPE_QUALIFIERS">TQ: Comparing values with incompatible type qualifiers</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    272 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#TQ_MAYBE_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_ALWAYS_SINK">TQ: Value that might not carry a type qualifier is always used in a way requires that type qualifier</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    273 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#TQ_MAYBE_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_NEVER_SINK">TQ: Value that might carry a type qualifier is always used in a way prohibits it from having that type qualifier</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    274 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#TQ_NEVER_VALUE_USED_WHERE_ALWAYS_REQUIRED">TQ: Value annotated as never carrying a type qualifier used where value carrying that qualifier is required</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    275 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#TQ_UNKNOWN_VALUE_USED_WHERE_ALWAYS_STRICTLY_REQUIRED">TQ: Value without a type qualifier used where a value is required to have that qualifier</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    276 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UMAC_UNCALLABLE_METHOD_OF_ANONYMOUS_CLASS">UMAC: Uncallable method defined in anonymous class</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    277 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UR_UNINIT_READ">UR: Uninitialized read of field in constructor</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    278 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UR_UNINIT_READ_CALLED_FROM_SUPER_CONSTRUCTOR">UR: Uninitialized read of field method called from constructor of superclass</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    279 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_INVOKING_TOSTRING_ON_ANONYMOUS_ARRAY">USELESS_STRING: Invocation of toString on an unnamed array</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    280 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_INVOKING_TOSTRING_ON_ARRAY">USELESS_STRING: Invocation of toString on an array</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    281 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION_FROM_ARRAY">USELESS_STRING: Array formatted in useless way using format string</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    282 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UWF_NULL_FIELD">UwF: Field only ever set to null</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    283 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UWF_UNWRITTEN_FIELD">UwF: Unwritten field</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    284 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VA_PRIMITIVE_ARRAY_PASSED_TO_OBJECT_VARARG">VA: Primitive array passed to function expecting a variable number of object arguments</a></td><td>Correctness</td></tr>
    285 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#LG_LOST_LOGGER_DUE_TO_WEAK_REFERENCE">LG: Potential lost logger changes due to weak reference in OpenJDK</a></td><td>Experimental</td></tr>
    286 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#OBL_UNSATISFIED_OBLIGATION">OBL: Method may fail to clean up stream or resource</a></td><td>Experimental</td></tr>
    287 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#OBL_UNSATISFIED_OBLIGATION_EXCEPTION_EDGE">OBL: Method may fail to clean up stream or resource on checked exception</a></td><td>Experimental</td></tr>
    288 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_CONVERT_CASE">Dm: Consider using Locale parameterized version of invoked method</a></td><td>Internationalization</td></tr>
    289 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_DEFAULT_ENCODING">Dm: Reliance on default encoding</a></td><td>Internationalization</td></tr>
    290 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DP_CREATE_CLASSLOADER_INSIDE_DO_PRIVILEGED">DP: Classloaders should only be created inside doPrivileged block</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    291 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DP_DO_INSIDE_DO_PRIVILEGED">DP: Method invoked that should be only be invoked inside a doPrivileged block</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    292 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EI_EXPOSE_REP">EI: May expose internal representation by returning reference to mutable object</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    293 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EI_EXPOSE_REP2">EI2: May expose internal representation by incorporating reference to mutable object</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    294 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#FI_PUBLIC_SHOULD_BE_PROTECTED">FI: Finalizer should be protected, not public</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    295 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EI_EXPOSE_STATIC_REP2">MS: May expose internal static state by storing a mutable object into a static field</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    296 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MS_CANNOT_BE_FINAL">MS: Field isn't final and can't be protected from malicious code</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    297 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MS_EXPOSE_REP">MS: Public static method may expose internal representation by returning array</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    298 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MS_FINAL_PKGPROTECT">MS: Field should be both final and package protected</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    299 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MS_MUTABLE_ARRAY">MS: Field is a mutable array</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    300 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MS_MUTABLE_HASHTABLE">MS: Field is a mutable Hashtable</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    301 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MS_OOI_PKGPROTECT">MS: Field should be moved out of an interface and made package protected</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    302 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MS_PKGPROTECT">MS: Field should be package protected</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    303 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MS_SHOULD_BE_FINAL">MS: Field isn't final but should be</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    304 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MS_SHOULD_BE_REFACTORED_TO_BE_FINAL">MS: Field isn't final but should be refactored to be so</a></td><td>Malicious code vulnerability</td></tr>
    305 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#AT_OPERATION_SEQUENCE_ON_CONCURRENT_ABSTRACTION">AT: Sequence of calls to concurrent abstraction may not be atomic</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    306 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DC_DOUBLECHECK">DC: Possible double check of field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    307 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_BOOLEAN">DL: Synchronization on Boolean</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    308 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_BOXED_PRIMITIVE">DL: Synchronization on boxed primitive</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    309 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_SHARED_CONSTANT">DL: Synchronization on interned String </a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    310 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_UNSHARED_BOXED_PRIMITIVE">DL: Synchronization on boxed primitive values</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    311 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_MONITOR_WAIT_ON_CONDITION">Dm: Monitor wait() called on Condition</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    312 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_USELESS_THREAD">Dm: A thread was created using the default empty run method</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    313 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ESync_EMPTY_SYNC">ESync: Empty synchronized block</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    314 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IS2_INCONSISTENT_SYNC">IS: Inconsistent synchronization</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    315 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IS_FIELD_NOT_GUARDED">IS: Field not guarded against concurrent access</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    316 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#JLM_JSR166_LOCK_MONITORENTER">JLM: Synchronization performed on Lock</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    317 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#JLM_JSR166_UTILCONCURRENT_MONITORENTER">JLM: Synchronization performed on util.concurrent instance</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    318 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#JML_JSR166_CALLING_WAIT_RATHER_THAN_AWAIT">JLM: Using monitor style wait methods on util.concurrent abstraction</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    319 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#LI_LAZY_INIT_STATIC">LI: Incorrect lazy initialization of static field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    320 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#LI_LAZY_INIT_UPDATE_STATIC">LI: Incorrect lazy initialization and update of static field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    321 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ML_SYNC_ON_FIELD_TO_GUARD_CHANGING_THAT_FIELD">ML: Synchronization on field in futile attempt to guard that field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    322 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ML_SYNC_ON_UPDATED_FIELD">ML: Method synchronizes on an updated field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    323 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MSF_MUTABLE_SERVLET_FIELD">MSF: Mutable servlet field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    324 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MWN_MISMATCHED_NOTIFY">MWN: Mismatched notify()</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    325 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MWN_MISMATCHED_WAIT">MWN: Mismatched wait()</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    326 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NN_NAKED_NOTIFY">NN: Naked notify</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    327 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_SYNC_AND_NULL_CHECK_FIELD">NP: Synchronize and null check on the same field.</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    328 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NO_NOTIFY_NOT_NOTIFYALL">No: Using notify() rather than notifyAll()</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    329 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RS_READOBJECT_SYNC">RS: Class's readObject() method is synchronized</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    330 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_RETURN_VALUE_OF_PUTIFABSENT_IGNORED">RV: Return value of putIfAbsent ignored, value passed to putIfAbsent reused</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    331 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RU_INVOKE_RUN">Ru: Invokes run on a thread (did you mean to start it instead?)</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    332 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SC_START_IN_CTOR">SC: Constructor invokes Thread.start()</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    333 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SP_SPIN_ON_FIELD">SP: Method spins on field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    334 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#STCAL_INVOKE_ON_STATIC_CALENDAR_INSTANCE">STCAL: Call to static Calendar</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    335 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#STCAL_INVOKE_ON_STATIC_DATE_FORMAT_INSTANCE">STCAL: Call to static DateFormat</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    336 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#STCAL_STATIC_CALENDAR_INSTANCE">STCAL: Static Calendar field</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    337 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#STCAL_STATIC_SIMPLE_DATE_FORMAT_INSTANCE">STCAL: Static DateFormat</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    338 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SWL_SLEEP_WITH_LOCK_HELD">SWL: Method calls Thread.sleep() with a lock held</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    339 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#TLW_TWO_LOCK_WAIT">TLW: Wait with two locks held</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    340 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UG_SYNC_SET_UNSYNC_GET">UG: Unsynchronized get method, synchronized set method</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    341 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UL_UNRELEASED_LOCK">UL: Method does not release lock on all paths</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    342 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UL_UNRELEASED_LOCK_EXCEPTION_PATH">UL: Method does not release lock on all exception paths</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    343 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UW_UNCOND_WAIT">UW: Unconditional wait</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    344 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#VO_VOLATILE_INCREMENT">VO: An increment to a volatile field isn't atomic</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    345 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#VO_VOLATILE_REFERENCE_TO_ARRAY">VO: A volatile reference to an array doesn't treat the array elements as volatile</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    346 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#WL_USING_GETCLASS_RATHER_THAN_CLASS_LITERAL">WL: Synchronization on getClass rather than class literal</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    347 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#WS_WRITEOBJECT_SYNC">WS: Class's writeObject() method is synchronized but nothing else is</a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    348 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#WA_AWAIT_NOT_IN_LOOP">Wa: Condition.await() not in loop </a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    349 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#WA_NOT_IN_LOOP">Wa: Wait not in loop </a></td><td>Multithreaded correctness</td></tr>
    350 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BX_BOXING_IMMEDIATELY_UNBOXED">Bx: Primitive value is boxed and then immediately unboxed</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    351 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BX_BOXING_IMMEDIATELY_UNBOXED_TO_PERFORM_COERCION">Bx: Primitive value is boxed then unboxed to perform primitive coercion</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    352 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BX_UNBOXING_IMMEDIATELY_REBOXED">Bx: Boxed value is unboxed and then immediately reboxed</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    353 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_BOXED_PRIMITIVE_FOR_PARSING">Bx: Boxing/unboxing to parse a primitive</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    354 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_BOXED_PRIMITIVE_TOSTRING">Bx: Method allocates a boxed primitive just to call toString</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    355 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_FP_NUMBER_CTOR">Bx: Method invokes inefficient floating-point Number constructor; use static valueOf instead</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    356 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_NUMBER_CTOR">Bx: Method invokes inefficient Number constructor; use static valueOf instead</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    357 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_BLOCKING_METHODS_ON_URL">Dm: The equals and hashCode methods of URL are blocking</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    358 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_COLLECTION_OF_URLS">Dm: Maps and sets of URLs can be performance hogs</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    359 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_BOOLEAN_CTOR">Dm: Method invokes inefficient Boolean constructor; use Boolean.valueOf(...) instead</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    360 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_GC">Dm: Explicit garbage collection; extremely dubious except in benchmarking code</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    361 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_NEW_FOR_GETCLASS">Dm: Method allocates an object, only to get the class object</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    362 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_NEXTINT_VIA_NEXTDOUBLE">Dm: Use the nextInt method of Random rather than nextDouble to generate a random integer</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    363 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_STRING_CTOR">Dm: Method invokes inefficient new String(String) constructor</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    364 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DM_STRING_TOSTRING">Dm: Method invokes toString() method on a String</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    365 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DM_STRING_VOID_CTOR">Dm: Method invokes inefficient new String() constructor</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    366 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#HSC_HUGE_SHARED_STRING_CONSTANT">HSC: Huge string constants is duplicated across multiple class files</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    367 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ITA_INEFFICIENT_TO_ARRAY">ITA: Method uses toArray() with zero-length array argument</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    368 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SBSC_USE_STRINGBUFFER_CONCATENATION">SBSC: Method concatenates strings using + in a loop</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    369 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC">SIC: Should be a static inner class</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    370 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC_ANON">SIC: Could be refactored into a named static inner class</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    371 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC_NEEDS_THIS">SIC: Could be refactored into a static inner class</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    372 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SS_SHOULD_BE_STATIC">SS: Unread field: should this field be static?</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    373 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UM_UNNECESSARY_MATH">UM: Method calls static Math class method on a constant value</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    374 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UPM_UNCALLED_PRIVATE_METHOD">UPM: Private method is never called</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    375 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#URF_UNREAD_FIELD">UrF: Unread field</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    376 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UUF_UNUSED_FIELD">UuF: Unused field</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    377 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#WMI_WRONG_MAP_ITERATOR">WMI: Inefficient use of keySet iterator instead of entrySet iterator</a></td><td>Performance</td></tr>
    378 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_CONSTANT_DB_PASSWORD">Dm: Hardcoded constant database password</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    379 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_EMPTY_DB_PASSWORD">Dm: Empty database password</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    380 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#HRS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_COOKIE">HRS: HTTP cookie formed from untrusted input</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    381 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#HRS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_HTTP_HEADER">HRS: HTTP Response splitting vulnerability</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    382 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#PT_ABSOLUTE_PATH_TRAVERSAL">PT: Absolute path traversal in servlet</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    383 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#PT_RELATIVE_PATH_TRAVERSAL">PT: Relative path traversal in servlet</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    384 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SQL_NONCONSTANT_STRING_PASSED_TO_EXECUTE">SQL: Nonconstant string passed to execute method on an SQL statement</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    385 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SQL_PREPARED_STATEMENT_GENERATED_FROM_NONCONSTANT_STRING">SQL: A prepared statement is generated from a nonconstant String</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    386 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_JSP_WRITER">XSS: JSP reflected cross site scripting vulnerability</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    387 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_SEND_ERROR">XSS: Servlet reflected cross site scripting vulnerability in error page</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    388 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_SERVLET_WRITER">XSS: Servlet reflected cross site scripting vulnerability</a></td><td>Security</td></tr>
    389 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BC_BAD_CAST_TO_ABSTRACT_COLLECTION">BC: Questionable cast to abstract collection </a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    390 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BC_BAD_CAST_TO_CONCRETE_COLLECTION">BC: Questionable cast to concrete collection</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    391 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BC_UNCONFIRMED_CAST">BC: Unchecked/unconfirmed cast</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    392 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#BC_UNCONFIRMED_CAST_OF_RETURN_VALUE">BC: Unchecked/unconfirmed cast of return value from method</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    393 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#BC_VACUOUS_INSTANCEOF">BC: instanceof will always return true</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    394 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ICAST_QUESTIONABLE_UNSIGNED_RIGHT_SHIFT">BSHIFT: Unsigned right shift cast to short/byte</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    395 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#CI_CONFUSED_INHERITANCE">CI: Class is final but declares protected field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    396 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DB_DUPLICATE_BRANCHES">DB: Method uses the same code for two branches</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    397 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DB_DUPLICATE_SWITCH_CLAUSES">DB: Method uses the same code for two switch clauses</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    398 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE">DLS: Dead store to local variable</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    399 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_IN_RETURN">DLS: Useless assignment in return statement</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    400 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_OF_NULL">DLS: Dead store of null to local variable</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    401 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_SHADOWS_FIELD">DLS: Dead store to local variable that shadows field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    402 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_HARDCODED_ABSOLUTE_FILENAME">DMI: Code contains a hard coded reference to an absolute pathname</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    403 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_NONSERIALIZABLE_OBJECT_WRITTEN">DMI: Non serializable object written to ObjectOutput</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    404 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#DMI_USELESS_SUBSTRING">DMI: Invocation of substring(0), which returns the original value</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    405 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#DMI_THREAD_PASSED_WHERE_RUNNABLE_EXPECTED">Dm: Thread passed where Runnable expected</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    406 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#EQ_DOESNT_OVERRIDE_EQUALS">Eq: Class doesn't override equals in superclass</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    407 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#EQ_UNUSUAL">Eq: Unusual equals method </a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    408 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#FE_FLOATING_POINT_EQUALITY">FE: Test for floating point equality</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    409 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION_TO_BOOLEAN">FS: Non-Boolean argument formatted using %b format specifier</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    410 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IA_AMBIGUOUS_INVOCATION_OF_INHERITED_OR_OUTER_METHOD">IA: Potentially ambiguous invocation of either an inherited or outer method</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    411 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IC_INIT_CIRCULARITY">IC: Initialization circularity</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    412 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ICAST_IDIV_CAST_TO_DOUBLE">ICAST: Integral division result cast to double or float</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    413 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#ICAST_INTEGER_MULTIPLY_CAST_TO_LONG">ICAST: Result of integer multiplication cast to long</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    414 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#IM_AVERAGE_COMPUTATION_COULD_OVERFLOW">IM: Computation of average could overflow</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    415 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#IM_BAD_CHECK_FOR_ODD">IM: Check for oddness that won't work for negative numbers </a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    416 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#INT_BAD_REM_BY_1">INT: Integer remainder modulo 1</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    417 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#INT_VACUOUS_BIT_OPERATION">INT: Vacuous bit mask operation on integer value</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    418 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#INT_VACUOUS_COMPARISON">INT: Vacuous comparison of integer value</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    419 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#MTIA_SUSPECT_SERVLET_INSTANCE_FIELD">MTIA: Class extends Servlet class and uses instance variables</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    420 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#MTIA_SUSPECT_STRUTS_INSTANCE_FIELD">MTIA: Class extends Struts Action class and uses instance variables</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    421 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_DEREFERENCE_OF_READLINE_VALUE">NP: Dereference of the result of readLine() without nullcheck</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    422 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_IMMEDIATE_DEREFERENCE_OF_READLINE">NP: Immediate dereference of the result of readLine()</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    423 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_LOAD_OF_KNOWN_NULL_VALUE">NP: Load of known null value</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    424 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_METHOD_PARAMETER_TIGHTENS_ANNOTATION">NP: Method tightens nullness annotation on parameter</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    425 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_METHOD_RETURN_RELAXING_ANNOTATION">NP: Method relaxes nullness annotation on return value</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    426 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_FROM_RETURN_VALUE">NP: Possible null pointer dereference due to return value of called method</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    427 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_MIGHT_BE_INFEASIBLE">NP: Possible null pointer dereference on branch that might be infeasible</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    428 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NP_PARAMETER_MUST_BE_NONNULL_BUT_MARKED_AS_NULLABLE">NP: Parameter must be nonnull but is marked as nullable</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    429 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NP_UNWRITTEN_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">NP: Read of unwritten public or protected field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    430 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#NS_DANGEROUS_NON_SHORT_CIRCUIT">NS: Potentially dangerous use of non-short-circuit logic</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    431 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#NS_NON_SHORT_CIRCUIT">NS: Questionable use of non-short-circuit logic</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    432 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#PZLA_PREFER_ZERO_LENGTH_ARRAYS">PZLA: Consider returning a zero length array rather than null</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    433 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#QF_QUESTIONABLE_FOR_LOOP">QF: Complicated, subtle or wrong increment in for-loop </a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    434 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RCN_REDUNDANT_COMPARISON_OF_NULL_AND_NONNULL_VALUE">RCN: Redundant comparison of non-null value to null</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    435 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RCN_REDUNDANT_COMPARISON_TWO_NULL_VALUES">RCN: Redundant comparison of two null values</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    436 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_OF_NONNULL_VALUE">RCN: Redundant nullcheck of value known to be non-null</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    437 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_OF_NULL_VALUE">RCN: Redundant nullcheck of value known to be null</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    438 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#REC_CATCH_EXCEPTION">REC: Exception is caught when Exception is not thrown</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    439 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RI_REDUNDANT_INTERFACES">RI: Class implements same interface as superclass</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    440 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_CHECK_FOR_POSITIVE_INDEXOF">RV: Method checks to see if result of String.indexOf is positive</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    441 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RV_DONT_JUST_NULL_CHECK_READLINE">RV: Method discards result of readLine after checking if it is nonnull</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    442 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_REM_OF_HASHCODE">RV: Remainder of hashCode could be negative</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    443 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#RV_REM_OF_RANDOM_INT">RV: Remainder of 32-bit signed random integer</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    444 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED_INFERRED">RV: Method ignores return value, is this OK?</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    445 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SA_FIELD_DOUBLE_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Double assignment of field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    446 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SA_LOCAL_DOUBLE_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Double assignment of local variable </a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    447 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SA_LOCAL_SELF_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Self assignment of local variable</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    448 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SF_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH">SF: Switch statement found where one case falls through to the next case</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    449 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SF_SWITCH_NO_DEFAULT">SF: Switch statement found where default case is missing</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    450 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#ST_WRITE_TO_STATIC_FROM_INSTANCE_METHOD">ST: Write to static field from instance method</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    451 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#SE_PRIVATE_READ_RESOLVE_NOT_INHERITED">Se: Private readResolve method not inherited by subclasses</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    452 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#SE_TRANSIENT_FIELD_OF_NONSERIALIZABLE_CLASS">Se: Transient field of class that isn't Serializable. </a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    453 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#TQ_EXPLICIT_UNKNOWN_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_ALWAYS_SINK">TQ: Value required to have type qualifier, but marked as unknown</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    454 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#TQ_EXPLICIT_UNKNOWN_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_NEVER_SINK">TQ: Value required to not have type qualifier, but marked as unknown</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    455 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UCF_USELESS_CONTROL_FLOW">UCF: Useless control flow</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    456 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UCF_USELESS_CONTROL_FLOW_NEXT_LINE">UCF: Useless control flow to next line</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    457 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#URF_UNREAD_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">UrF: Unread public/protected field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    458 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UUF_UNUSED_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">UuF: Unused public or protected field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    459 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#UWF_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED_IN_CONSTRUCTOR">UwF: Field not initialized in constructor but dereferenced without null check</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    460 <tr bgcolor="#eeeeee"><td><a href="#UWF_UNWRITTEN_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">UwF: Unwritten public or protected field</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    461 <tr bgcolor="#ffffff"><td><a href="#XFB_XML_FACTORY_BYPASS">XFB: Method directly allocates a specific implementation of xml interfaces</a></td><td>Dodgy code</td></tr>
    462 </table>
    463 <h2>Descriptions</h2>
    464 <h3><a name="BC_EQUALS_METHOD_SHOULD_WORK_FOR_ALL_OBJECTS">BC: Equals method should not assume anything about the type of its argument (BC_EQUALS_METHOD_SHOULD_WORK_FOR_ALL_OBJECTS)</a></h3>
    465 
    466 
    467 <p>
    468 The <code>equals(Object o)</code> method shouldn't make any assumptions
    469 about the type of <code>o</code>. It should simply return
    470 false if <code>o</code> is not the same type as <code>this</code>.
    471 </p>
    472 
    473     
    474 <h3><a name="BIT_SIGNED_CHECK">BIT: Check for sign of bitwise operation (BIT_SIGNED_CHECK)</a></h3>
    475 
    476 
    477 <p> This method compares an expression such as</p>
    478 <pre>((event.detail &amp; SWT.SELECTED) &gt; 0)</pre>.
    479 <p>Using bit arithmetic and then comparing with the greater than operator can
    480 lead to unexpected results (of course depending on the value of
    481 SWT.SELECTED). If SWT.SELECTED is a negative number, this is a candidate
    482 for a bug. Even when SWT.SELECTED is not negative, it seems good practice
    483 to use '!= 0' instead of '&gt; 0'.
    484 </p>
    485 <p>
    486 <em>Boris Bokowski</em>
    487 </p>
    488 
    489     
    490 <h3><a name="CN_IDIOM">CN: Class implements Cloneable but does not define or use clone method (CN_IDIOM)</a></h3>
    491 
    492 
    493 <p>
    494    Class implements Cloneable but does not define or
    495    use the clone method.</p>
    496 
    497     
    498 <h3><a name="CN_IDIOM_NO_SUPER_CALL">CN: clone method does not call super.clone() (CN_IDIOM_NO_SUPER_CALL)</a></h3>
    499 
    500 
    501 <p> This non-final class defines a clone() method that does not call super.clone().
    502 If this class ("<i>A</i>") is extended by a subclass ("<i>B</i>"),
    503 and the subclass <i>B</i> calls super.clone(), then it is likely that
    504 <i>B</i>'s clone() method will return an object of type <i>A</i>,
    505 which violates the standard contract for clone().</p>
    506 
    507 <p> If all clone() methods call super.clone(), then they are guaranteed
    508 to use Object.clone(), which always returns an object of the correct type.</p>
    509 
    510     
    511 <h3><a name="CN_IMPLEMENTS_CLONE_BUT_NOT_CLONEABLE">CN: Class defines clone() but doesn't implement Cloneable (CN_IMPLEMENTS_CLONE_BUT_NOT_CLONEABLE)</a></h3>
    512 
    513 
    514 <p> This class defines a clone() method but the class doesn't implement Cloneable.
    515 There are some situations in which this is OK (e.g., you want to control how subclasses
    516 can clone themselves), but just make sure that this is what you intended.
    517 </p>
    518 
    519     
    520 <h3><a name="CO_ABSTRACT_SELF">Co: Abstract class defines covariant compareTo() method (CO_ABSTRACT_SELF)</a></h3>
    521 
    522 
    523   <p> This class defines a covariant version of <code>compareTo()</code>.&nbsp;
    524   To correctly override the <code>compareTo()</code> method in the
    525   <code>Comparable</code> interface, the parameter of <code>compareTo()</code>
    526   must have type <code>java.lang.Object</code>.</p>
    527 
    528     
    529 <h3><a name="CO_SELF_NO_OBJECT">Co: Covariant compareTo() method defined (CO_SELF_NO_OBJECT)</a></h3>
    530 
    531 
    532   <p> This class defines a covariant version of <code>compareTo()</code>.&nbsp;
    533   To correctly override the <code>compareTo()</code> method in the
    534   <code>Comparable</code> interface, the parameter of <code>compareTo()</code>
    535   must have type <code>java.lang.Object</code>.</p>
    536 
    537     
    538 <h3><a name="DE_MIGHT_DROP">DE: Method might drop exception (DE_MIGHT_DROP)</a></h3>
    539 
    540 
    541   <p> This method might drop an exception.&nbsp; In general, exceptions
    542   should be handled or reported in some way, or they should be thrown
    543   out of the method.</p>
    544 
    545     
    546 <h3><a name="DE_MIGHT_IGNORE">DE: Method might ignore exception (DE_MIGHT_IGNORE)</a></h3>
    547 
    548 
    549   <p> This method might ignore an exception.&nbsp; In general, exceptions
    550   should be handled or reported in some way, or they should be thrown
    551   out of the method.</p>
    552 
    553     
    554 <h3><a name="DMI_ENTRY_SETS_MAY_REUSE_ENTRY_OBJECTS">DMI: Adding elements of an entry set may fail due to reuse of Entry objects (DMI_ENTRY_SETS_MAY_REUSE_ENTRY_OBJECTS)</a></h3>
    555 
    556      
    557      <p> The entrySet() method is allowed to return a view of the
    558      underlying Map in which a single Entry object is reused and returned
    559      during the iteration.  As of Java 1.6, both IdentityHashMap
    560      and EnumMap did so. When iterating through such a Map,
    561      the Entry value is only valid until you advance to the next iteration.
    562      If, for example, you try to pass such an entrySet to an addAll method,
    563      things will go badly wrong.
    564     </p>
    565      
    566     
    567 <h3><a name="DMI_RANDOM_USED_ONLY_ONCE">DMI: Random object created and used only once (DMI_RANDOM_USED_ONLY_ONCE)</a></h3>
    568 
    569 
    570 <p> This code creates a java.util.Random object, uses it to generate one random number, and then discards
    571 the Random object. This produces mediocre quality random numbers and is inefficient.
    572 If possible, rewrite the code so that the Random object is created once and saved, and each time a new random number
    573 is required invoke a method on the existing Random object to obtain it.
    574 </p>
    575 
    576 <p>If it is important that the generated Random numbers not be guessable, you <em>must</em> not create a new Random for each random
    577 number; the values are too easily guessable. You should strongly consider using a java.security.SecureRandom instead
    578 (and avoid allocating a new SecureRandom for each random number needed).
    579 </p>
    580 
    581     
    582 <h3><a name="DMI_USING_REMOVEALL_TO_CLEAR_COLLECTION">DMI: Don't use removeAll to clear a collection (DMI_USING_REMOVEALL_TO_CLEAR_COLLECTION)</a></h3>
    583 
    584      
    585      <p> If you want to remove all elements from a collection <code>c</code>, use <code>c.clear</code>,
    586 not <code>c.removeAll(c)</code>. Calling  <code>c.removeAll(c)</code> to clear a collection
    587 is less clear, susceptible to errors from typos, less efficient and
    588 for some collections, might throw a <code>ConcurrentModificationException</code>.
    589     </p>
    590      
    591     
    592 <h3><a name="DM_EXIT">Dm: Method invokes System.exit(...) (DM_EXIT)</a></h3>
    593 
    594 
    595   <p> Invoking System.exit shuts down the entire Java virtual machine. This
    596    should only been done when it is appropriate. Such calls make it
    597    hard or impossible for your code to be invoked by other code.
    598    Consider throwing a RuntimeException instead.</p>
    599 
    600     
    601 <h3><a name="DM_RUN_FINALIZERS_ON_EXIT">Dm: Method invokes dangerous method runFinalizersOnExit (DM_RUN_FINALIZERS_ON_EXIT)</a></h3>
    602 
    603 
    604   <p> <em>Never call System.runFinalizersOnExit
    605 or Runtime.runFinalizersOnExit for any reason: they are among the most
    606 dangerous methods in the Java libraries.</em> -- Joshua Bloch</p>
    607 
    608     
    609 <h3><a name="ES_COMPARING_PARAMETER_STRING_WITH_EQ">ES: Comparison of String parameter using == or != (ES_COMPARING_PARAMETER_STRING_WITH_EQ)</a></h3>
    610 
    611 
    612   <p>This code compares a <code>java.lang.String</code> parameter for reference
    613 equality using the == or != operators. Requiring callers to
    614 pass only String constants or interned strings to a method is unnecessarily
    615 fragile, and rarely leads to measurable performance gains. Consider
    616 using the <code>equals(Object)</code> method instead.</p>
    617 
    618     
    619 <h3><a name="ES_COMPARING_STRINGS_WITH_EQ">ES: Comparison of String objects using == or != (ES_COMPARING_STRINGS_WITH_EQ)</a></h3>
    620 
    621 
    622   <p>This code compares <code>java.lang.String</code> objects for reference
    623 equality using the == or != operators.
    624 Unless both strings are either constants in a source file, or have been
    625 interned using the <code>String.intern()</code> method, the same string
    626 value may be represented by two different String objects. Consider
    627 using the <code>equals(Object)</code> method instead.</p>
    628 
    629     
    630 <h3><a name="EQ_ABSTRACT_SELF">Eq: Abstract class defines covariant equals() method (EQ_ABSTRACT_SELF)</a></h3>
    631 
    632 
    633   <p> This class defines a covariant version of <code>equals()</code>.&nbsp;
    634   To correctly override the <code>equals()</code> method in
    635   <code>java.lang.Object</code>, the parameter of <code>equals()</code>
    636   must have type <code>java.lang.Object</code>.</p>
    637 
    638     
    639 <h3><a name="EQ_CHECK_FOR_OPERAND_NOT_COMPATIBLE_WITH_THIS">Eq: Equals checks for incompatible operand (EQ_CHECK_FOR_OPERAND_NOT_COMPATIBLE_WITH_THIS)</a></h3>
    640 
    641 
    642   <p> This equals method is checking to see if the argument is some incompatible type
    643 (i.e., a class that is neither a supertype nor subtype of the class that defines
    644 the equals method). For example, the Foo class might have an equals method
    645 that looks like:
    646 </p>
    647 <pre>
    648 public boolean equals(Object o) {
    649   if (o instanceof Foo)
    650     return name.equals(((Foo)o).name);
    651   else if (o instanceof String)
    652     return name.equals(o);
    653   else return false;
    654 </pre>
    655 
    656 <p>This is considered bad practice, as it makes it very hard to implement an equals method that
    657 is symmetric and transitive. Without those properties, very unexpected behavoirs are possible.
    658 </p>
    659 
    660     
    661 <h3><a name="EQ_COMPARETO_USE_OBJECT_EQUALS">Eq: Class defines compareTo(...) and uses Object.equals() (EQ_COMPARETO_USE_OBJECT_EQUALS)</a></h3>
    662 
    663 
    664   <p> This class defines a <code>compareTo(...)</code> method but inherits its
    665   <code>equals()</code> method from <code>java.lang.Object</code>.
    666     Generally, the value of compareTo should return zero if and only if
    667     equals returns true. If this is violated, weird and unpredictable
    668     failures will occur in classes such as PriorityQueue.
    669     In Java 5 the PriorityQueue.remove method uses the compareTo method,
    670     while in Java 6 it uses the equals method.
    671 
    672 <p>From the JavaDoc for the compareTo method in the Comparable interface:
    673 <blockquote>
    674 It is strongly recommended, but not strictly required that <code>(x.compareTo(y)==0) == (x.equals(y))</code>.
    675 Generally speaking, any class that implements the Comparable interface and violates this condition
    676 should clearly indicate this fact. The recommended language
    677 is "Note: this class has a natural ordering that is inconsistent with equals."
    678 </blockquote>
    679 
    680     
    681 <h3><a name="EQ_GETCLASS_AND_CLASS_CONSTANT">Eq: equals method fails for subtypes (EQ_GETCLASS_AND_CLASS_CONSTANT)</a></h3>
    682 
    683 
    684   <p> This class has an equals method that will be broken if it is inherited by subclasses.
    685 It compares a class literal with the class of the argument (e.g., in class <code>Foo</code>
    686 it might check if <code>Foo.class == o.getClass()</code>).
    687 It is better to check if <code>this.getClass() == o.getClass()</code>.
    688 </p>
    689 
    690     
    691 <h3><a name="EQ_SELF_NO_OBJECT">Eq: Covariant equals() method defined (EQ_SELF_NO_OBJECT)</a></h3>
    692 
    693 
    694   <p> This class defines a covariant version of <code>equals()</code>.&nbsp;
    695   To correctly override the <code>equals()</code> method in
    696   <code>java.lang.Object</code>, the parameter of <code>equals()</code>
    697   must have type <code>java.lang.Object</code>.</p>
    698 
    699     
    700 <h3><a name="FI_EMPTY">FI: Empty finalizer should be deleted (FI_EMPTY)</a></h3>
    701 
    702 
    703   <p> Empty <code>finalize()</code> methods are useless, so they should
    704   be deleted.</p>
    705 
    706     
    707 <h3><a name="FI_EXPLICIT_INVOCATION">FI: Explicit invocation of finalizer (FI_EXPLICIT_INVOCATION)</a></h3>
    708 
    709 
    710   <p> This method contains an explicit invocation of the <code>finalize()</code>
    711   method on an object.&nbsp; Because finalizer methods are supposed to be
    712   executed once, and only by the VM, this is a bad idea.</p>
    713 <p>If a connected set of objects beings finalizable, then the VM will invoke the
    714 finalize method on all the finalizable object, possibly at the same time in different threads.
    715 Thus, it is a particularly bad idea, in the finalize method for a class X, invoke finalize
    716 on objects referenced by X, because they may already be getting finalized in a separate thread.
    717 
    718     
    719 <h3><a name="FI_FINALIZER_NULLS_FIELDS">FI: Finalizer nulls fields (FI_FINALIZER_NULLS_FIELDS)</a></h3>
    720 
    721 
    722   <p> This finalizer nulls out fields.  This is usually an error, as it does not aid garbage collection,
    723   and the object is going to be garbage collected anyway.
    724 
    725     
    726 <h3><a name="FI_FINALIZER_ONLY_NULLS_FIELDS">FI: Finalizer only nulls fields (FI_FINALIZER_ONLY_NULLS_FIELDS)</a></h3>
    727 
    728 
    729   <p> This finalizer does nothing except null out fields. This is completely pointless, and requires that
    730 the object be garbage collected, finalized, and then garbage collected again. You should just remove the finalize
    731 method.
    732 
    733     
    734 <h3><a name="FI_MISSING_SUPER_CALL">FI: Finalizer does not call superclass finalizer (FI_MISSING_SUPER_CALL)</a></h3>
    735 
    736 
    737   <p> This <code>finalize()</code> method does not make a call to its
    738   superclass's <code>finalize()</code> method.&nbsp; So, any finalizer
    739   actions defined for the superclass will not be performed.&nbsp;
    740   Add a call to <code>super.finalize()</code>.</p>
    741 
    742     
    743 <h3><a name="FI_NULLIFY_SUPER">FI: Finalizer nullifies superclass finalizer (FI_NULLIFY_SUPER)</a></h3>
    744 
    745 
    746   <p> This empty <code>finalize()</code> method explicitly negates the
    747   effect of any finalizer defined by its superclass.&nbsp; Any finalizer
    748   actions defined for the superclass will not be performed.&nbsp;
    749   Unless this is intended, delete this method.</p>
    750 
    751     
    752 <h3><a name="FI_USELESS">FI: Finalizer does nothing but call superclass finalizer (FI_USELESS)</a></h3>
    753 
    754 
    755   <p> The only thing this <code>finalize()</code> method does is call
    756   the superclass's <code>finalize()</code> method, making it
    757   redundant.&nbsp; Delete it.</p>
    758 
    759     
    760 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_USES_NEWLINE">FS: Format string should use %n rather than \n (VA_FORMAT_STRING_USES_NEWLINE)</a></h3>
    761 
    762 
    763 <p>
    764 This format string include a newline character (\n). In format strings, it is generally
    765  preferable better to use %n, which will produce the platform-specific line separator.
    766 </p>
    767 
    768      
    769 <h3><a name="GC_UNCHECKED_TYPE_IN_GENERIC_CALL">GC: Unchecked type in generic call (GC_UNCHECKED_TYPE_IN_GENERIC_CALL)</a></h3>
    770 
    771      
    772      <p> This call to a generic collection method passes an argument
    773     while compile type Object where a specific type from
    774     the generic type parameters is expected.
    775     Thus, neither the standard Java type system nor static analysis
    776     can provide useful information on whether the
    777     object being passed as a parameter is of an appropriate type.
    778     </p>
    779      
    780     
    781 <h3><a name="HE_EQUALS_NO_HASHCODE">HE: Class defines equals() but not hashCode() (HE_EQUALS_NO_HASHCODE)</a></h3>
    782 
    783 
    784   <p> This class overrides <code>equals(Object)</code>, but does not
    785   override <code>hashCode()</code>.&nbsp; Therefore, the class may violate the
    786   invariant that equal objects must have equal hashcodes.</p>
    787 
    788     
    789 <h3><a name="HE_EQUALS_USE_HASHCODE">HE: Class defines equals() and uses Object.hashCode() (HE_EQUALS_USE_HASHCODE)</a></h3>
    790 
    791 
    792   <p> This class overrides <code>equals(Object)</code>, but does not
    793   override <code>hashCode()</code>, and inherits the implementation of
    794   <code>hashCode()</code> from <code>java.lang.Object</code> (which returns
    795   the identity hash code, an arbitrary value assigned to the object
    796   by the VM).&nbsp; Therefore, the class is very likely to violate the
    797   invariant that equal objects must have equal hashcodes.</p>
    798 
    799 <p>If you don't think instances of this class will ever be inserted into a HashMap/HashTable,
    800 the recommended <code>hashCode</code> implementation to use is:</p>
    801 <pre>public int hashCode() {
    802   assert false : "hashCode not designed";
    803   return 42; // any arbitrary constant will do
    804   }</pre>
    805 
    806     
    807 <h3><a name="HE_HASHCODE_NO_EQUALS">HE: Class defines hashCode() but not equals() (HE_HASHCODE_NO_EQUALS)</a></h3>
    808 
    809 
    810   <p> This class defines a <code>hashCode()</code> method but not an
    811   <code>equals()</code> method.&nbsp; Therefore, the class may
    812   violate the invariant that equal objects must have equal hashcodes.</p>
    813 
    814     
    815 <h3><a name="HE_HASHCODE_USE_OBJECT_EQUALS">HE: Class defines hashCode() and uses Object.equals() (HE_HASHCODE_USE_OBJECT_EQUALS)</a></h3>
    816 
    817 
    818   <p> This class defines a <code>hashCode()</code> method but inherits its
    819   <code>equals()</code> method from <code>java.lang.Object</code>
    820   (which defines equality by comparing object references).&nbsp; Although
    821   this will probably satisfy the contract that equal objects must have
    822   equal hashcodes, it is probably not what was intended by overriding
    823   the <code>hashCode()</code> method.&nbsp; (Overriding <code>hashCode()</code>
    824   implies that the object's identity is based on criteria more complicated
    825   than simple reference equality.)</p>
    826 <p>If you don't think instances of this class will ever be inserted into a HashMap/HashTable,
    827 the recommended <code>hashCode</code> implementation to use is:</p>
    828 <pre>public int hashCode() {
    829   assert false : "hashCode not designed";
    830   return 42; // any arbitrary constant will do
    831   }</pre>
    832 
    833     
    834 <h3><a name="HE_INHERITS_EQUALS_USE_HASHCODE">HE: Class inherits equals() and uses Object.hashCode() (HE_INHERITS_EQUALS_USE_HASHCODE)</a></h3>
    835 
    836 
    837   <p> This class inherits <code>equals(Object)</code> from an abstract
    838   superclass, and <code>hashCode()</code> from
    839 <code>java.lang.Object</code> (which returns
    840   the identity hash code, an arbitrary value assigned to the object
    841   by the VM).&nbsp; Therefore, the class is very likely to violate the
    842   invariant that equal objects must have equal hashcodes.</p>
    843 
    844   <p>If you don't want to define a hashCode method, and/or don't
    845    believe the object will ever be put into a HashMap/Hashtable,
    846    define the <code>hashCode()</code> method
    847    to throw <code>UnsupportedOperationException</code>.</p>
    848 
    849     
    850 <h3><a name="IC_SUPERCLASS_USES_SUBCLASS_DURING_INITIALIZATION">IC: Superclass uses subclass during initialization (IC_SUPERCLASS_USES_SUBCLASS_DURING_INITIALIZATION)</a></h3>
    851 
    852 
    853   <p> During the initialization of a class, the class makes an active use of a subclass.
    854 That subclass will not yet be initialized at the time of this use.
    855 For example, in the following code, <code>foo</code> will be null.</p>
    856 
    857 <pre>
    858 public class CircularClassInitialization {
    859     static class InnerClassSingleton extends CircularClassInitialization {
    860         static InnerClassSingleton singleton = new InnerClassSingleton();
    861     }
    862 
    863     static CircularClassInitialization foo = InnerClassSingleton.singleton;
    864 }
    865 </pre>
    866 
    867 
    868     
    869 <h3><a name="IMSE_DONT_CATCH_IMSE">IMSE: Dubious catching of IllegalMonitorStateException (IMSE_DONT_CATCH_IMSE)</a></h3>
    870 
    871 
    872 <p>IllegalMonitorStateException is generally only
    873    thrown in case of a design flaw in your code (calling wait or
    874    notify on an object you do not hold a lock on).</p>
    875 
    876     
    877 <h3><a name="ISC_INSTANTIATE_STATIC_CLASS">ISC: Needless instantiation of class that only supplies static methods (ISC_INSTANTIATE_STATIC_CLASS)</a></h3>
    878 
    879 
    880 <p> This class allocates an object that is based on a class that only supplies static methods. This object
    881 does not need to be created, just access the static methods directly using the class name as a qualifier.</p>
    882 
    883         
    884 <h3><a name="IT_NO_SUCH_ELEMENT">It: Iterator next() method can't throw NoSuchElementException (IT_NO_SUCH_ELEMENT)</a></h3>
    885 
    886 
    887   <p> This class implements the <code>java.util.Iterator</code> interface.&nbsp;
    888   However, its <code>next()</code> method is not capable of throwing
    889   <code>java.util.NoSuchElementException</code>.&nbsp; The <code>next()</code>
    890   method should be changed so it throws <code>NoSuchElementException</code>
    891   if is called when there are no more elements to return.</p>
    892 
    893     
    894 <h3><a name="J2EE_STORE_OF_NON_SERIALIZABLE_OBJECT_INTO_SESSION">J2EE: Store of non serializable object into HttpSession (J2EE_STORE_OF_NON_SERIALIZABLE_OBJECT_INTO_SESSION)</a></h3>
    895 
    896 
    897 <p>
    898 This code seems to be storing a non-serializable object into an HttpSession.
    899 If this session is passivated or migrated, an error will result.
    900 </p>
    901 
    902     
    903 <h3><a name="JCIP_FIELD_ISNT_FINAL_IN_IMMUTABLE_CLASS">JCIP: Fields of immutable classes should be final (JCIP_FIELD_ISNT_FINAL_IN_IMMUTABLE_CLASS)</a></h3>
    904 
    905 
    906   <p> The class is annotated with net.jcip.annotations.Immutable or javax.annotation.concurrent.Immutable,
    907   and the rules for those annotations require that all fields are final.
    908    .</p>
    909 
    910     
    911 <h3><a name="NP_BOOLEAN_RETURN_NULL">NP: Method with Boolean return type returns explicit null (NP_BOOLEAN_RETURN_NULL)</a></h3>
    912 
    913        
    914        <p>
    915     A method that returns either Boolean.TRUE, Boolean.FALSE or null is an accident waiting to happen.
    916     This method can be invoked as though it returned a value of type boolean, and
    917     the compiler will insert automatic unboxing of the Boolean value. If a null value is returned,
    918     this will result in a NullPointerException.
    919        </p>
    920        
    921        
    922 <h3><a name="NP_CLONE_COULD_RETURN_NULL">NP: Clone method may return null (NP_CLONE_COULD_RETURN_NULL)</a></h3>
    923 
    924       
    925       <p>
    926     This clone method seems to return null in some circumstances, but clone is never
    927     allowed to return a null value.  If you are convinced this path is unreachable, throw an AssertionError
    928     instead.
    929       </p>
    930       
    931    
    932 <h3><a name="NP_EQUALS_SHOULD_HANDLE_NULL_ARGUMENT">NP: equals() method does not check for null argument (NP_EQUALS_SHOULD_HANDLE_NULL_ARGUMENT)</a></h3>
    933 
    934       
    935       <p>
    936       This implementation of equals(Object) violates the contract defined
    937       by java.lang.Object.equals() because it does not check for null
    938       being passed as the argument.  All equals() methods should return
    939       false if passed a null value.
    940       </p>
    941       
    942    
    943 <h3><a name="NP_TOSTRING_COULD_RETURN_NULL">NP: toString method may return null (NP_TOSTRING_COULD_RETURN_NULL)</a></h3>
    944 
    945       
    946       <p>
    947     This toString method seems to return null in some circumstances. A liberal reading of the
    948     spec could be interpreted as allowing this, but it is probably a bad idea and could cause
    949     other code to break. Return the empty string or some other appropriate string rather than null.
    950       </p>
    951       
    952    
    953 <h3><a name="NM_CLASS_NAMING_CONVENTION">Nm: Class names should start with an upper case letter (NM_CLASS_NAMING_CONVENTION)</a></h3>
    954 
    955 
    956   <p> Class names should be nouns, in mixed case with the first letter of each internal word capitalized. Try to keep your class names simple and descriptive. Use whole words-avoid acronyms and abbreviations (unless the abbreviation is much more widely used than the long form, such as URL or HTML).
    957 </p>
    958 
    959     
    960 <h3><a name="NM_CLASS_NOT_EXCEPTION">Nm: Class is not derived from an Exception, even though it is named as such (NM_CLASS_NOT_EXCEPTION)</a></h3>
    961 
    962 
    963 <p> This class is not derived from another exception, but ends with 'Exception'. This will
    964 be confusing to users of this class.</p>
    965 
    966     
    967 <h3><a name="NM_CONFUSING">Nm: Confusing method names (NM_CONFUSING)</a></h3>
    968 
    969 
    970   <p> The referenced methods have names that differ only by capitalization.</p>
    971 
    972     
    973 <h3><a name="NM_FIELD_NAMING_CONVENTION">Nm: Field names should start with a lower case letter (NM_FIELD_NAMING_CONVENTION)</a></h3>
    974 
    975 
    976   <p>
    977 Names of fields that are not final should be in mixed case with a lowercase first letter and the first letters of subsequent words capitalized.
    978 </p>
    979 
    980     
    981 <h3><a name="NM_FUTURE_KEYWORD_USED_AS_IDENTIFIER">Nm: Use of identifier that is a keyword in later versions of Java (NM_FUTURE_KEYWORD_USED_AS_IDENTIFIER)</a></h3>
    982 
    983 
    984 <p>The identifier is a word that is reserved as a keyword in later versions of Java, and your code will need to be changed
    985 in order to compile it in later versions of Java.</p>
    986 
    987 
    988     
    989 <h3><a name="NM_FUTURE_KEYWORD_USED_AS_MEMBER_IDENTIFIER">Nm: Use of identifier that is a keyword in later versions of Java (NM_FUTURE_KEYWORD_USED_AS_MEMBER_IDENTIFIER)</a></h3>
    990 
    991 
    992 <p>This identifier is used as a keyword in later versions of Java. This code, and
    993 any code that references this API,
    994 will need to be changed in order to compile it in later versions of Java.</p>
    995 
    996 
    997     
    998 <h3><a name="NM_METHOD_NAMING_CONVENTION">Nm: Method names should start with a lower case letter (NM_METHOD_NAMING_CONVENTION)</a></h3>
    999 
   1000 
   1001   <p>
   1002 Methods should be verbs, in mixed case with the first letter lowercase, with the first letter of each internal word capitalized.
   1003 </p>
   1004 
   1005     
   1006 <h3><a name="NM_SAME_SIMPLE_NAME_AS_INTERFACE">Nm: Class names shouldn't shadow simple name of implemented interface (NM_SAME_SIMPLE_NAME_AS_INTERFACE)</a></h3>
   1007 
   1008 
   1009   <p> This class/interface has a simple name that is identical to that of an implemented/extended interface, except
   1010 that the interface is in a different package (e.g., <code>alpha.Foo</code> extends <code>beta.Foo</code>).
   1011 This can be exceptionally confusing, create lots of situations in which you have to look at import statements
   1012 to resolve references and creates many
   1013 opportunities to accidently define methods that do not override methods in their superclasses.
   1014 </p>
   1015 
   1016     
   1017 <h3><a name="NM_SAME_SIMPLE_NAME_AS_SUPERCLASS">Nm: Class names shouldn't shadow simple name of superclass (NM_SAME_SIMPLE_NAME_AS_SUPERCLASS)</a></h3>
   1018 
   1019 
   1020   <p> This class has a simple name that is identical to that of its superclass, except
   1021 that its superclass is in a different package (e.g., <code>alpha.Foo</code> extends <code>beta.Foo</code>).
   1022 This can be exceptionally confusing, create lots of situations in which you have to look at import statements
   1023 to resolve references and creates many
   1024 opportunities to accidently define methods that do not override methods in their superclasses.
   1025 </p>
   1026 
   1027     
   1028 <h3><a name="NM_VERY_CONFUSING_INTENTIONAL">Nm: Very confusing method names (but perhaps intentional) (NM_VERY_CONFUSING_INTENTIONAL)</a></h3>
   1029 
   1030 
   1031   <p> The referenced methods have names that differ only by capitalization.
   1032 This is very confusing because if the capitalization were
   1033 identical then one of the methods would override the other. From the existence of other methods, it
   1034 seems that the existence of both of these methods is intentional, but is sure is confusing.
   1035 You should try hard to eliminate one of them, unless you are forced to have both due to frozen APIs.
   1036 </p>
   1037 
   1038     
   1039 <h3><a name="NM_WRONG_PACKAGE_INTENTIONAL">Nm: Method doesn't override method in superclass due to wrong package for parameter (NM_WRONG_PACKAGE_INTENTIONAL)</a></h3>
   1040 
   1041 
   1042   <p> The method in the subclass doesn't override a similar method in a superclass because the type of a parameter doesn't exactly match
   1043 the type of the corresponding parameter in the superclass. For example, if you have:</p>
   1044 
   1045 <blockquote>
   1046 <pre>
   1047 import alpha.Foo;
   1048 public class A {
   1049   public int f(Foo x) { return 17; }
   1050 }
   1051 ----
   1052 import beta.Foo;
   1053 public class B extends A {
   1054   public int f(Foo x) { return 42; }
   1055   public int f(alpha.Foo x) { return 27; }
   1056 }
   1057 </pre>
   1058 </blockquote>
   1059 
   1060 <p>The <code>f(Foo)</code> method defined in class <code>B</code> doesn't
   1061 override the
   1062 <code>f(Foo)</code> method defined in class <code>A</code>, because the argument
   1063 types are <code>Foo</code>'s from different packages.
   1064 </p>
   1065 
   1066 <p>In this case, the subclass does define a method with a signature identical to the method in the superclass,
   1067 so this is presumably understood. However, such methods are exceptionally confusing. You should strongly consider
   1068 removing or deprecating the method with the similar but not identical signature.
   1069 </p>
   1070 
   1071     
   1072 <h3><a name="ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE">ODR: Method may fail to close database resource (ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE)</a></h3>
   1073 
   1074 
   1075 <p> The method creates a database resource (such as a database connection
   1076 or row set), does not assign it to any
   1077 fields, pass it to other methods, or return it, and does not appear to close
   1078 the object on all paths out of the method.&nbsp; Failure to
   1079 close database resources on all paths out of a method may
   1080 result in poor performance, and could cause the application to
   1081 have problems communicating with the database.
   1082 </p>
   1083 
   1084     
   1085 <h3><a name="ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE_EXCEPTION_PATH">ODR: Method may fail to close database resource on exception (ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE_EXCEPTION_PATH)</a></h3>
   1086 
   1087 
   1088 <p> The method creates a database resource (such as a database connection
   1089 or row set), does not assign it to any
   1090 fields, pass it to other methods, or return it, and does not appear to close
   1091 the object on all exception paths out of the method.&nbsp; Failure to
   1092 close database resources on all paths out of a method may
   1093 result in poor performance, and could cause the application to
   1094 have problems communicating with the database.</p>
   1095 
   1096     
   1097 <h3><a name="OS_OPEN_STREAM">OS: Method may fail to close stream (OS_OPEN_STREAM)</a></h3>
   1098 
   1099 
   1100 <p> The method creates an IO stream object, does not assign it to any
   1101 fields, pass it to other methods that might close it,
   1102 or return it, and does not appear to close
   1103 the stream on all paths out of the method.&nbsp; This may result in
   1104 a file descriptor leak.&nbsp; It is generally a good
   1105 idea to use a <code>finally</code> block to ensure that streams are
   1106 closed.</p>
   1107 
   1108     
   1109 <h3><a name="OS_OPEN_STREAM_EXCEPTION_PATH">OS: Method may fail to close stream on exception (OS_OPEN_STREAM_EXCEPTION_PATH)</a></h3>
   1110 
   1111 
   1112 <p> The method creates an IO stream object, does not assign it to any
   1113 fields, pass it to other methods, or return it, and does not appear to close
   1114 it on all possible exception paths out of the method.&nbsp;
   1115 This may result in a file descriptor leak.&nbsp; It is generally a good
   1116 idea to use a <code>finally</code> block to ensure that streams are
   1117 closed.</p>
   1118 
   1119     
   1120 <h3><a name="PZ_DONT_REUSE_ENTRY_OBJECTS_IN_ITERATORS">PZ: Don't reuse entry objects in iterators (PZ_DONT_REUSE_ENTRY_OBJECTS_IN_ITERATORS)</a></h3>
   1121 
   1122      
   1123      <p> The entrySet() method is allowed to return a view of the
   1124      underlying Map in which an Iterator and Map.Entry. This clever
   1125      idea was used in several Map implementations, but introduces the possibility
   1126      of nasty coding mistakes. If a map <code>m</code> returns
   1127      such an iterator for an entrySet, then
   1128      <code>c.addAll(m.entrySet())</code> will go badly wrong. All of
   1129      the Map implementations in OpenJDK 1.7 have been rewritten to avoid this,
   1130      you should to.
   1131     </p>
   1132      
   1133     
   1134 <h3><a name="RC_REF_COMPARISON_BAD_PRACTICE">RC: Suspicious reference comparison to constant (RC_REF_COMPARISON_BAD_PRACTICE)</a></h3>
   1135 
   1136 
   1137 <p> This method compares a reference value to a constant using the == or != operator,
   1138 where the correct way to compare instances of this type is generally
   1139 with the equals() method.
   1140 It is possible to create distinct instances that are equal but do not compare as == since
   1141 they are different objects.
   1142 Examples of classes which should generally
   1143 not be compared by reference are java.lang.Integer, java.lang.Float, etc.</p>
   1144 
   1145     
   1146 <h3><a name="RC_REF_COMPARISON_BAD_PRACTICE_BOOLEAN">RC: Suspicious reference comparison of Boolean values (RC_REF_COMPARISON_BAD_PRACTICE_BOOLEAN)</a></h3>
   1147 
   1148 
   1149 <p> This method compares two Boolean values using the == or != operator.
   1150 Normally, there are only two Boolean values (Boolean.TRUE and Boolean.FALSE),
   1151 but it is possible to create other Boolean objects using the <code>new Boolean(b)</code>
   1152 constructor. It is best to avoid such objects, but if they do exist,
   1153 then checking Boolean objects for equality using == or != will give results
   1154 than are different than you would get using <code>.equals(...)</code>
   1155 </p>
   1156 
   1157     
   1158 <h3><a name="RR_NOT_CHECKED">RR: Method ignores results of InputStream.read() (RR_NOT_CHECKED)</a></h3>
   1159 
   1160 
   1161   <p> This method ignores the return value of one of the variants of
   1162   <code>java.io.InputStream.read()</code> which can return multiple bytes.&nbsp;
   1163   If the return value is not checked, the caller will not be able to correctly
   1164   handle the case where fewer bytes were read than the caller requested.&nbsp;
   1165   This is a particularly insidious kind of bug, because in many programs,
   1166   reads from input streams usually do read the full amount of data requested,
   1167   causing the program to fail only sporadically.</p>
   1168 
   1169     
   1170 <h3><a name="SR_NOT_CHECKED">RR: Method ignores results of InputStream.skip() (SR_NOT_CHECKED)</a></h3>
   1171 
   1172 
   1173   <p> This method ignores the return value of
   1174   <code>java.io.InputStream.skip()</code> which can skip multiple bytes.&nbsp;
   1175   If the return value is not checked, the caller will not be able to correctly
   1176   handle the case where fewer bytes were skipped than the caller requested.&nbsp;
   1177   This is a particularly insidious kind of bug, because in many programs,
   1178   skips from input streams usually do skip the full amount of data requested,
   1179   causing the program to fail only sporadically. With Buffered streams, however,
   1180   skip() will only skip data in the buffer, and will routinely fail to skip the
   1181   requested number of bytes.</p>
   1182 
   1183     
   1184 <h3><a name="RV_NEGATING_RESULT_OF_COMPARETO">RV: Negating the result of compareTo()/compare() (RV_NEGATING_RESULT_OF_COMPARETO)</a></h3>
   1185 
   1186 
   1187   <p> This code negatives the return value of a compareTo or compare method.
   1188 This is a questionable or bad programming practice, since if the return
   1189 value is Integer.MIN_VALUE, negating the return value won't
   1190 negate the sign of the result. You can achieve the same intended result
   1191 by reversing the order of the operands rather than by negating the results.
   1192 </p>
   1193 
   1194     
   1195 <h3><a name="RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED_BAD_PRACTICE">RV: Method ignores exceptional return value (RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED_BAD_PRACTICE)</a></h3>
   1196 
   1197 
   1198    <p> This method returns a value that is not checked. The return value should be checked
   1199 since it can indicate an unusual or unexpected function execution. For
   1200 example, the <code>File.delete()</code> method returns false
   1201 if the file could not be successfully deleted (rather than
   1202 throwing an Exception).
   1203 If you don't check the result, you won't notice if the method invocation
   1204 signals unexpected behavior by returning an atypical return value.
   1205 </p>
   1206 
   1207     
   1208 <h3><a name="SI_INSTANCE_BEFORE_FINALS_ASSIGNED">SI: Static initializer creates instance before all static final fields assigned (SI_INSTANCE_BEFORE_FINALS_ASSIGNED)</a></h3>
   1209 
   1210 
   1211 <p> The class's static initializer creates an instance of the class
   1212 before all of the static final fields are assigned.</p>
   1213 
   1214     
   1215 <h3><a name="SW_SWING_METHODS_INVOKED_IN_SWING_THREAD">SW: Certain swing methods needs to be invoked in Swing thread (SW_SWING_METHODS_INVOKED_IN_SWING_THREAD)</a></h3>
   1216 
   1217 
   1218 <p>(<a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20090526170426/http://java.sun.com/developer/JDCTechTips/2003/tt1208.html">From JDC Tech Tip</a>): The Swing methods
   1219 show(), setVisible(), and pack() will create the associated peer for the frame.
   1220 With the creation of the peer, the system creates the event dispatch thread.
   1221 This makes things problematic because the event dispatch thread could be notifying
   1222 listeners while pack and validate are still processing. This situation could result in
   1223 two threads going through the Swing component-based GUI -- it's a serious flaw that
   1224 could result in deadlocks or other related threading issues. A pack call causes
   1225 components to be realized. As they are being realized (that is, not necessarily
   1226 visible), they could trigger listener notification on the event dispatch thread.</p>
   1227 
   1228 
   1229     
   1230 <h3><a name="SE_BAD_FIELD">Se: Non-transient non-serializable instance field in serializable class (SE_BAD_FIELD)</a></h3>
   1231 
   1232 
   1233 <p> This Serializable class defines a non-primitive instance field which is neither transient,
   1234 Serializable, or <code>java.lang.Object</code>, and does not appear to implement
   1235 the <code>Externalizable</code> interface or the
   1236 <code>readObject()</code> and <code>writeObject()</code> methods.&nbsp;
   1237 Objects of this class will not be deserialized correctly if a non-Serializable
   1238 object is stored in this field.</p>
   1239 
   1240     
   1241 <h3><a name="SE_BAD_FIELD_INNER_CLASS">Se: Non-serializable class has a serializable inner class (SE_BAD_FIELD_INNER_CLASS)</a></h3>
   1242 
   1243 
   1244 <p> This Serializable class is an inner class of a non-serializable class.
   1245 Thus, attempts to serialize it will also attempt to associate instance of the outer
   1246 class with which it is associated, leading to a runtime error.
   1247 </p>
   1248 <p>If possible, making the inner class a static inner class should solve the
   1249 problem. Making the outer class serializable might also work, but that would
   1250 mean serializing an instance of the inner class would always also serialize the instance
   1251 of the outer class, which it often not what you really want.
   1252 
   1253     
   1254 <h3><a name="SE_BAD_FIELD_STORE">Se: Non-serializable value stored into instance field of a serializable class (SE_BAD_FIELD_STORE)</a></h3>
   1255 
   1256 
   1257 <p> A non-serializable value is stored into a non-transient field
   1258 of a serializable class.</p>
   1259 
   1260     
   1261 <h3><a name="SE_COMPARATOR_SHOULD_BE_SERIALIZABLE">Se: Comparator doesn't implement Serializable (SE_COMPARATOR_SHOULD_BE_SERIALIZABLE)</a></h3>
   1262 
   1263 
   1264   <p> This class implements the <code>Comparator</code> interface. You
   1265 should consider whether or not it should also implement the <code>Serializable</code>
   1266 interface. If a comparator is used to construct an ordered collection
   1267 such as a <code>TreeMap</code>, then the <code>TreeMap</code>
   1268 will be serializable only if the comparator is also serializable.
   1269 As most comparators have little or no state, making them serializable
   1270 is generally easy and good defensive programming.
   1271 </p>
   1272 
   1273     
   1274 <h3><a name="SE_INNER_CLASS">Se: Serializable inner class (SE_INNER_CLASS)</a></h3>
   1275 
   1276 
   1277 <p> This Serializable class is an inner class.  Any attempt to serialize
   1278 it will also serialize the associated outer instance. The outer instance is serializable,
   1279 so this won't fail, but it might serialize a lot more data than intended.
   1280 If possible, making the inner class a static inner class (also known as a nested class) should solve the
   1281 problem.
   1282 
   1283     
   1284 <h3><a name="SE_NONFINAL_SERIALVERSIONID">Se: serialVersionUID isn't final (SE_NONFINAL_SERIALVERSIONID)</a></h3>
   1285 
   1286 
   1287   <p> This class defines a <code>serialVersionUID</code> field that is not final.&nbsp;
   1288   The field should be made final
   1289    if it is intended to specify
   1290    the version UID for purposes of serialization.</p>
   1291 
   1292     
   1293 <h3><a name="SE_NONLONG_SERIALVERSIONID">Se: serialVersionUID isn't long (SE_NONLONG_SERIALVERSIONID)</a></h3>
   1294 
   1295 
   1296   <p> This class defines a <code>serialVersionUID</code> field that is not long.&nbsp;
   1297   The field should be made long
   1298    if it is intended to specify
   1299    the version UID for purposes of serialization.</p>
   1300 
   1301     
   1302 <h3><a name="SE_NONSTATIC_SERIALVERSIONID">Se: serialVersionUID isn't static (SE_NONSTATIC_SERIALVERSIONID)</a></h3>
   1303 
   1304 
   1305   <p> This class defines a <code>serialVersionUID</code> field that is not static.&nbsp;
   1306   The field should be made static
   1307    if it is intended to specify
   1308    the version UID for purposes of serialization.</p>
   1309 
   1310     
   1311 <h3><a name="SE_NO_SUITABLE_CONSTRUCTOR">Se: Class is Serializable but its superclass doesn't define a void constructor (SE_NO_SUITABLE_CONSTRUCTOR)</a></h3>
   1312 
   1313 
   1314   <p> This class implements the <code>Serializable</code> interface
   1315    and its superclass does not. When such an object is deserialized,
   1316    the fields of the superclass need to be initialized by
   1317    invoking the void constructor of the superclass.
   1318    Since the superclass does not have one,
   1319    serialization and deserialization will fail at runtime.</p>
   1320 
   1321     
   1322 <h3><a name="SE_NO_SUITABLE_CONSTRUCTOR_FOR_EXTERNALIZATION">Se: Class is Externalizable but doesn't define a void constructor (SE_NO_SUITABLE_CONSTRUCTOR_FOR_EXTERNALIZATION)</a></h3>
   1323 
   1324 
   1325   <p> This class implements the <code>Externalizable</code> interface, but does
   1326   not define a void constructor. When Externalizable objects are deserialized,
   1327    they first need to be constructed by invoking the void
   1328    constructor. Since this class does not have one,
   1329    serialization and deserialization will fail at runtime.</p>
   1330 
   1331     
   1332 <h3><a name="SE_READ_RESOLVE_MUST_RETURN_OBJECT">Se: The readResolve method must be declared with a return type of Object.  (SE_READ_RESOLVE_MUST_RETURN_OBJECT)</a></h3>
   1333 
   1334 
   1335   <p> In order for the readResolve method to be recognized by the serialization
   1336 mechanism, it must be declared to have a return type of Object.
   1337 </p>
   1338 
   1339     
   1340 <h3><a name="SE_TRANSIENT_FIELD_NOT_RESTORED">Se: Transient field that isn't set by deserialization.  (SE_TRANSIENT_FIELD_NOT_RESTORED)</a></h3>
   1341 
   1342 
   1343   <p> This class contains a field that is updated at multiple places in the class, thus it seems to be part of the state of the class. However, since the field is marked as transient and not set in readObject or readResolve, it will contain the default value in any
   1344 deserialized instance of the class.
   1345 </p>
   1346 
   1347     
   1348 <h3><a name="SE_NO_SERIALVERSIONID">SnVI: Class is Serializable, but doesn't define serialVersionUID (SE_NO_SERIALVERSIONID)</a></h3>
   1349 
   1350 
   1351   <p> This class implements the <code>Serializable</code> interface, but does
   1352   not define a <code>serialVersionUID</code> field.&nbsp;
   1353   A change as simple as adding a reference to a .class object
   1354     will add synthetic fields to the class,
   1355    which will unfortunately change the implicit
   1356    serialVersionUID (e.g., adding a reference to <code>String.class</code>
   1357    will generate a static field <code>class$java$lang$String</code>).
   1358    Also, different source code to bytecode compilers may use different
   1359    naming conventions for synthetic variables generated for
   1360    references to class objects or inner classes.
   1361    To ensure interoperability of Serializable across versions,
   1362    consider adding an explicit serialVersionUID.</p>
   1363 
   1364     
   1365 <h3><a name="UI_INHERITANCE_UNSAFE_GETRESOURCE">UI: Usage of GetResource may be unsafe if class is extended (UI_INHERITANCE_UNSAFE_GETRESOURCE)</a></h3>
   1366 
   1367 
   1368 <p>Calling <code>this.getClass().getResource(...)</code> could give
   1369 results other than expected if this class is extended by a class in
   1370 another package.</p>
   1371 
   1372     
   1373 <h3><a name="BC_IMPOSSIBLE_CAST">BC: Impossible cast (BC_IMPOSSIBLE_CAST)</a></h3>
   1374 
   1375 
   1376 <p>
   1377 This cast will always throw a ClassCastException.
   1378 FindBugs tracks type information from instanceof checks,
   1379 and also uses more precise information about the types
   1380 of values returned from methods and loaded from fields.
   1381 Thus, it may have more precise information that just
   1382 the declared type of a variable, and can use this to determine
   1383 that a cast will always throw an exception at runtime.
   1384 
   1385 </p>
   1386 
   1387     
   1388 <h3><a name="BC_IMPOSSIBLE_DOWNCAST">BC: Impossible downcast (BC_IMPOSSIBLE_DOWNCAST)</a></h3>
   1389 
   1390 
   1391 <p>
   1392 This cast will always throw a ClassCastException.
   1393 The analysis believes it knows
   1394 the precise type of the value being cast, and the attempt to
   1395 downcast it to a subtype will always fail by throwing a ClassCastException.
   1396 </p>
   1397 
   1398     
   1399 <h3><a name="BC_IMPOSSIBLE_DOWNCAST_OF_TOARRAY">BC: Impossible downcast of toArray() result (BC_IMPOSSIBLE_DOWNCAST_OF_TOARRAY)</a></h3>
   1400 
   1401 
   1402 <p>
   1403 This code is casting the result of calling <code>toArray()</code> on a collection
   1404 to a type more specific than <code>Object[]</code>, as in:</p>
   1405 <pre>
   1406 String[] getAsArray(Collection&lt;String&gt; c) {
   1407   return (String[]) c.toArray();
   1408   }
   1409 </pre>
   1410 <p>This will usually fail by throwing a ClassCastException. The <code>toArray()</code>
   1411 of almost all collections return an <code>Object[]</code>. They can't really do anything else,
   1412 since the Collection object has no reference to the declared generic type of the collection.
   1413 <p>The correct way to do get an array of a specific type from a collection is to use
   1414   <code>c.toArray(new String[]);</code>
   1415   or <code>c.toArray(new String[c.size()]);</code> (the latter is slightly more efficient).
   1416 <p>There is one common/known exception exception to this. The <code>toArray()</code>
   1417 method of lists returned by <code>Arrays.asList(...)</code> will return a covariantly
   1418 typed array. For example, <code>Arrays.asArray(new String[] { "a" }).toArray()</code>
   1419 will return a <code>String []</code>. FindBugs attempts to detect and suppress
   1420 such cases, but may miss some.
   1421 </p>
   1422 
   1423     
   1424 <h3><a name="BC_IMPOSSIBLE_INSTANCEOF">BC: instanceof will always return false (BC_IMPOSSIBLE_INSTANCEOF)</a></h3>
   1425 
   1426 
   1427 <p>
   1428 This instanceof test will always return false. Although this is safe, make sure it isn't
   1429 an indication of some misunderstanding or some other logic error.
   1430 </p>
   1431 
   1432     
   1433 <h3><a name="BIT_ADD_OF_SIGNED_BYTE">BIT: Bitwise add of signed byte value (BIT_ADD_OF_SIGNED_BYTE)</a></h3>
   1434 
   1435 
   1436 <p> Adds a byte value and a value which is known to have the 8 lower bits clear.
   1437 Values loaded from a byte array are sign extended to 32 bits
   1438 before any any bitwise operations are performed on the value.
   1439 Thus, if <code>b[0]</code> contains the value <code>0xff</code>, and
   1440 <code>x</code> is initially 0, then the code
   1441 <code>((x &lt;&lt; 8) + b[0])</code>  will sign extend <code>0xff</code>
   1442 to get <code>0xffffffff</code>, and thus give the value
   1443 <code>0xffffffff</code> as the result.
   1444 </p>
   1445 
   1446 <p>In particular, the following code for packing a byte array into an int is badly wrong: </p>
   1447 <pre>
   1448 int result = 0;
   1449 for(int i = 0; i &lt; 4; i++)
   1450   result = ((result &lt;&lt; 8) + b[i]);
   1451 </pre>
   1452 
   1453 <p>The following idiom will work instead: </p>
   1454 <pre>
   1455 int result = 0;
   1456 for(int i = 0; i &lt; 4; i++)
   1457   result = ((result &lt;&lt; 8) + (b[i] &amp; 0xff));
   1458 </pre>
   1459 
   1460 
   1461     
   1462 <h3><a name="BIT_AND">BIT: Incompatible bit masks (BIT_AND)</a></h3>
   1463 
   1464 
   1465 <p> This method compares an expression of the form (e &amp; C) to D,
   1466 which will always compare unequal
   1467 due to the specific values of constants C and D.
   1468 This may indicate a logic error or typo.</p>
   1469 
   1470     
   1471 <h3><a name="BIT_AND_ZZ">BIT: Check to see if ((...) & 0) == 0 (BIT_AND_ZZ)</a></h3>
   1472 
   1473 
   1474 <p> This method compares an expression of the form (e &amp; 0) to 0,
   1475 which will always compare equal.
   1476 This may indicate a logic error or typo.</p>
   1477 
   1478     
   1479 <h3><a name="BIT_IOR">BIT: Incompatible bit masks (BIT_IOR)</a></h3>
   1480 
   1481 
   1482 <p> This method compares an expression of the form (e | C) to D.
   1483 which will always compare unequal
   1484 due to the specific values of constants C and D.
   1485 This may indicate a logic error or typo.</p>
   1486 
   1487 <p> Typically, this bug occurs because the code wants to perform
   1488 a membership test in a bit set, but uses the bitwise OR
   1489 operator ("|") instead of bitwise AND ("&amp;").</p>
   1490 
   1491     
   1492 <h3><a name="BIT_IOR_OF_SIGNED_BYTE">BIT: Bitwise OR of signed byte value (BIT_IOR_OF_SIGNED_BYTE)</a></h3>
   1493 
   1494 
   1495 <p> Loads a byte value (e.g., a value loaded from a byte array or returned by a method
   1496 with return type byte)  and performs a bitwise OR with
   1497 that value. Byte values are sign extended to 32 bits
   1498 before any any bitwise operations are performed on the value.
   1499 Thus, if <code>b[0]</code> contains the value <code>0xff</code>, and
   1500 <code>x</code> is initially 0, then the code
   1501 <code>((x &lt;&lt; 8) | b[0])</code>  will sign extend <code>0xff</code>
   1502 to get <code>0xffffffff</code>, and thus give the value
   1503 <code>0xffffffff</code> as the result.
   1504 </p>
   1505 
   1506 <p>In particular, the following code for packing a byte array into an int is badly wrong: </p>
   1507 <pre>
   1508 int result = 0;
   1509 for(int i = 0; i &lt; 4; i++)
   1510   result = ((result &lt;&lt; 8) | b[i]);
   1511 </pre>
   1512 
   1513 <p>The following idiom will work instead: </p>
   1514 <pre>
   1515 int result = 0;
   1516 for(int i = 0; i &lt; 4; i++)
   1517   result = ((result &lt;&lt; 8) | (b[i] &amp; 0xff));
   1518 </pre>
   1519 
   1520 
   1521     
   1522 <h3><a name="BIT_SIGNED_CHECK_HIGH_BIT">BIT: Check for sign of bitwise operation (BIT_SIGNED_CHECK_HIGH_BIT)</a></h3>
   1523 
   1524 
   1525 <p> This method compares an expression such as</p>
   1526 <pre>((event.detail &amp; SWT.SELECTED) &gt; 0)</pre>.
   1527 <p>Using bit arithmetic and then comparing with the greater than operator can
   1528 lead to unexpected results (of course depending on the value of
   1529 SWT.SELECTED). If SWT.SELECTED is a negative number, this is a candidate
   1530 for a bug. Even when SWT.SELECTED is not negative, it seems good practice
   1531 to use '!= 0' instead of '&gt; 0'.
   1532 </p>
   1533 <p>
   1534 <em>Boris Bokowski</em>
   1535 </p>
   1536 
   1537     
   1538 <h3><a name="BOA_BADLY_OVERRIDDEN_ADAPTER">BOA: Class overrides a method implemented in super class Adapter wrongly (BOA_BADLY_OVERRIDDEN_ADAPTER)</a></h3>
   1539 
   1540 
   1541 <p> This method overrides a method found in a parent class, where that class is an Adapter that implements
   1542 a listener defined in the java.awt.event or javax.swing.event package. As a result, this method will not
   1543 get called when the event occurs.</p>
   1544 
   1545     
   1546 <h3><a name="ICAST_BAD_SHIFT_AMOUNT">BSHIFT: 32 bit int shifted by an amount not in the range -31..31 (ICAST_BAD_SHIFT_AMOUNT)</a></h3>
   1547 
   1548 
   1549 <p>
   1550 The code performs shift of a 32 bit int by a constant amount outside
   1551 the range -31..31.
   1552 The effect of this is to use the lower 5 bits of the integer
   1553 value to decide how much to shift by (e.g., shifting by 40 bits is the same as shifting by 8 bits,
   1554 and shifting by 32 bits is the same as shifting by zero bits). This probably isn't what was expected,
   1555 and it is at least confusing.
   1556 </p>
   1557 
   1558     
   1559 <h3><a name="BX_UNBOXED_AND_COERCED_FOR_TERNARY_OPERATOR">Bx: Primitive value is unboxed and coerced for ternary operator (BX_UNBOXED_AND_COERCED_FOR_TERNARY_OPERATOR)</a></h3>
   1560 
   1561 
   1562   <p>A wrapped primitive value is unboxed and converted to another primitive type as part of the
   1563 evaluation of a conditional ternary operator (the <code> b ? e1 : e2</code> operator). The
   1564 semantics of Java mandate that if <code>e1</code> and <code>e2</code> are wrapped
   1565 numeric values, the values are unboxed and converted/coerced to their common type (e.g,
   1566 if <code>e1</code> is of type <code>Integer</code>
   1567 and <code>e2</code> is of type <code>Float</code>, then <code>e1</code> is unboxed,
   1568 converted to a floating point value, and boxed. See JLS Section 15.25.
   1569 </p>
   1570 
   1571     
   1572 <h3><a name="CO_COMPARETO_RESULTS_MIN_VALUE">Co: compareTo()/compare() returns Integer.MIN_VALUE (CO_COMPARETO_RESULTS_MIN_VALUE)</a></h3>
   1573 
   1574 
   1575   <p> In some situation, this compareTo or compare method returns
   1576 the  constant Integer.MIN_VALUE, which is an exceptionally bad practice.
   1577   The only thing that matters about the return value of compareTo is the sign of the result.
   1578     But people will sometimes negate the return value of compareTo, expecting that this will negate
   1579     the sign of the result. And it will, except in the case where the value returned is Integer.MIN_VALUE.
   1580     So just return -1 rather than Integer.MIN_VALUE.
   1581 
   1582     
   1583 <h3><a name="DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_INCREMENT_IN_RETURN">DLS: Useless increment in return statement (DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_INCREMENT_IN_RETURN)</a></h3>
   1584 
   1585       
   1586 <p>This statement has a return such as <code>return x++;</code>. 
   1587 A postfix increment/decrement does not impact the value of the expression,
   1588 so this increment/decrement has no effect. 
   1589 Please verify that this statement does the right thing.
   1590 </p>
   1591 
   1592     
   1593 <h3><a name="DLS_DEAD_STORE_OF_CLASS_LITERAL">DLS: Dead store of class literal (DLS_DEAD_STORE_OF_CLASS_LITERAL)</a></h3>
   1594 
   1595 
   1596 <p>
   1597 This instruction assigns a class literal to a variable and then never uses it.
   1598 <a href="//java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/compatibility.html#literal">The behavior of this differs in Java 1.4 and in Java 5.</a>
   1599 In Java 1.4 and earlier, a reference to <code>Foo.class</code> would force the static initializer
   1600 for <code>Foo</code> to be executed, if it has not been executed already.
   1601 In Java 5 and later, it does not.
   1602 </p>
   1603 <p>See Sun's <a href="//java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/compatibility.html#literal">article on Java SE compatibility</a>
   1604 for more details and examples, and suggestions on how to force class initialization in Java 5.
   1605 </p>
   1606 
   1607     
   1608 <h3><a name="DLS_OVERWRITTEN_INCREMENT">DLS: Overwritten increment (DLS_OVERWRITTEN_INCREMENT)</a></h3>
   1609 
   1610 
   1611 <p>
   1612 The code performs an increment operation (e.g., <code>i++</code>) and then
   1613 immediately overwrites it. For example, <code>i = i++</code> immediately
   1614 overwrites the incremented value with the original value.
   1615 </p>
   1616 
   1617     
   1618 <h3><a name="DMI_ARGUMENTS_WRONG_ORDER">DMI: Reversed method arguments (DMI_ARGUMENTS_WRONG_ORDER)</a></h3>
   1619 
   1620 
   1621 <p> The arguments to this method call seem to be in the wrong order.
   1622 For example, a call <code>Preconditions.checkNotNull("message", message)</code>
   1623 has reserved arguments: the value to be checked is the first argument.
   1624 </p>
   1625 
   1626     
   1627 <h3><a name="DMI_BAD_MONTH">DMI: Bad constant value for month (DMI_BAD_MONTH)</a></h3>
   1628 
   1629 
   1630 <p>
   1631 This code passes a constant month
   1632 value outside the expected range of 0..11 to a method.
   1633 </p>
   1634 
   1635     
   1636 <h3><a name="DMI_BIGDECIMAL_CONSTRUCTED_FROM_DOUBLE">DMI: BigDecimal constructed from double that isn't represented precisely (DMI_BIGDECIMAL_CONSTRUCTED_FROM_DOUBLE)</a></h3>
   1637 
   1638       
   1639     <p>
   1640 This code creates a BigDecimal from a double value that doesn't translate well to a
   1641 decimal number.
   1642 For example, one might assume that writing new BigDecimal(0.1) in Java creates a BigDecimal which is exactly equal to 0.1 (an unscaled value of 1, with a scale of 1), but it is actually equal to 0.1000000000000000055511151231257827021181583404541015625.
   1643 You probably want to use the BigDecimal.valueOf(double d) method, which uses the String representation
   1644 of the double to create the BigDecimal (e.g., BigDecimal.valueOf(0.1) gives 0.1).
   1645 </p>
   1646 
   1647 
   1648     
   1649 <h3><a name="DMI_CALLING_NEXT_FROM_HASNEXT">DMI: hasNext method invokes next (DMI_CALLING_NEXT_FROM_HASNEXT)</a></h3>
   1650 
   1651 
   1652 <p>
   1653 The hasNext() method invokes the next() method. This is almost certainly wrong,
   1654 since the hasNext() method is not supposed to change the state of the iterator,
   1655 and the next method is supposed to change the state of the iterator.
   1656 </p>
   1657 
   1658     
   1659 <h3><a name="DMI_COLLECTIONS_SHOULD_NOT_CONTAIN_THEMSELVES">DMI: Collections should not contain themselves (DMI_COLLECTIONS_SHOULD_NOT_CONTAIN_THEMSELVES)</a></h3>
   1660 
   1661      
   1662      <p> This call to a generic collection's method would only make sense if a collection contained
   1663 itself (e.g., if <code>s.contains(s)</code> were true). This is unlikely to be true and would cause
   1664 problems if it were true (such as the computation of the hash code resulting in infinite recursion).
   1665 It is likely that the wrong value is being passed as a parameter.
   1666     </p>
   1667      
   1668     
   1669 <h3><a name="DMI_DOH">DMI: D'oh! A nonsensical method invocation (DMI_DOH)</a></h3>
   1670 
   1671       
   1672     <p>
   1673 This partical method invocation doesn't make sense, for reasons that should be apparent from inspection.
   1674 </p>
   1675 
   1676 
   1677     
   1678 <h3><a name="DMI_INVOKING_HASHCODE_ON_ARRAY">DMI: Invocation of hashCode on an array (DMI_INVOKING_HASHCODE_ON_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   1679 
   1680 
   1681 <p>
   1682 The code invokes hashCode on an array. Calling hashCode on
   1683 an array returns the same value as System.identityHashCode, and ingores
   1684 the contents and length of the array. If you need a hashCode that
   1685 depends on the contents of an array <code>a</code>,
   1686 use <code>java.util.Arrays.hashCode(a)</code>.
   1687 
   1688 </p>
   1689 
   1690     
   1691 <h3><a name="DMI_LONG_BITS_TO_DOUBLE_INVOKED_ON_INT">DMI: Double.longBitsToDouble invoked on an int (DMI_LONG_BITS_TO_DOUBLE_INVOKED_ON_INT)</a></h3>
   1692 
   1693 
   1694 <p> The Double.longBitsToDouble method is invoked, but a 32 bit int value is passed
   1695     as an argument. This almostly certainly is not intended and is unlikely
   1696     to give the intended result.
   1697 </p>
   1698 
   1699     
   1700 <h3><a name="DMI_VACUOUS_SELF_COLLECTION_CALL">DMI: Vacuous call to collections (DMI_VACUOUS_SELF_COLLECTION_CALL)</a></h3>
   1701 
   1702      
   1703      <p> This call doesn't make sense. For any collection <code>c</code>, calling <code>c.containsAll(c)</code> should
   1704 always be true, and <code>c.retainAll(c)</code> should have no effect.
   1705     </p>
   1706      
   1707     
   1708 <h3><a name="DMI_ANNOTATION_IS_NOT_VISIBLE_TO_REFLECTION">Dm: Can't use reflection to check for presence of annotation without runtime retention (DMI_ANNOTATION_IS_NOT_VISIBLE_TO_REFLECTION)</a></h3>
   1709 
   1710 
   1711   <p> Unless an annotation has itself been annotated with  @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME), the annotation can't be observed using reflection
   1712 (e.g., by using the isAnnotationPresent method).
   1713    .</p>
   1714 
   1715     
   1716 <h3><a name="DMI_FUTILE_ATTEMPT_TO_CHANGE_MAXPOOL_SIZE_OF_SCHEDULED_THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR">Dm: Futile attempt to change max pool size of ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor (DMI_FUTILE_ATTEMPT_TO_CHANGE_MAXPOOL_SIZE_OF_SCHEDULED_THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR)</a></h3>
   1717 
   1718       
   1719     <p>(<a href="http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor.html">Javadoc</a>)
   1720 While ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor inherits from ThreadPoolExecutor, a few of the inherited tuning methods are not useful for it. In particular, because it acts as a fixed-sized pool using corePoolSize threads and an unbounded queue, adjustments to maximumPoolSize have no useful effect.
   1721     </p>
   1722 
   1723 
   1724     
   1725 <h3><a name="DMI_SCHEDULED_THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR_WITH_ZERO_CORE_THREADS">Dm: Creation of ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor with zero core threads (DMI_SCHEDULED_THREAD_POOL_EXECUTOR_WITH_ZERO_CORE_THREADS)</a></h3>
   1726 
   1727       
   1728     <p>(<a href="http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor.html#ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor(int)">Javadoc</a>)
   1729 A ScheduledThreadPoolExecutor with zero core threads will never execute anything; changes to the max pool size are ignored.
   1730 </p>
   1731 
   1732 
   1733     
   1734 <h3><a name="DMI_VACUOUS_CALL_TO_EASYMOCK_METHOD">Dm: Useless/vacuous call to EasyMock method (DMI_VACUOUS_CALL_TO_EASYMOCK_METHOD)</a></h3>
   1735 
   1736       
   1737     <p>This call doesn't pass any objects to the EasyMock method, so the call doesn't do anything.
   1738 </p>
   1739 
   1740 
   1741     
   1742 <h3><a name="EC_ARRAY_AND_NONARRAY">EC: equals() used to compare array and nonarray (EC_ARRAY_AND_NONARRAY)</a></h3>
   1743 
   1744 
   1745 <p>
   1746 This method invokes the .equals(Object o) to compare an array and a reference that doesn't seem
   1747 to be an array. If things being compared are of different types, they are guaranteed to be unequal
   1748 and the comparison is almost certainly an error. Even if they are both arrays, the equals method
   1749 on arrays only determines of the two arrays are the same object.
   1750 To compare the
   1751 contents of the arrays, use java.util.Arrays.equals(Object[], Object[]).
   1752 </p>
   1753 
   1754     
   1755 <h3><a name="EC_BAD_ARRAY_COMPARE">EC: Invocation of equals() on an array, which is equivalent to == (EC_BAD_ARRAY_COMPARE)</a></h3>
   1756 
   1757 
   1758 <p>
   1759 This method invokes the .equals(Object o) method on an array. Since arrays do not override the equals
   1760 method of Object, calling equals on an array is the same as comparing their addresses. To compare the
   1761 contents of the arrays, use <code>java.util.Arrays.equals(Object[], Object[])</code>.
   1762 To compare the addresses of the arrays, it would be
   1763 less confusing to explicitly check pointer equality using <code>==</code>.
   1764 </p>
   1765 
   1766     
   1767 <h3><a name="EC_INCOMPATIBLE_ARRAY_COMPARE">EC: equals(...) used to compare incompatible arrays (EC_INCOMPATIBLE_ARRAY_COMPARE)</a></h3>
   1768 
   1769 
   1770 <p>
   1771 This method invokes the .equals(Object o) to compare two arrays, but the arrays of
   1772 of incompatible types (e.g., String[] and StringBuffer[], or String[] and int[]).
   1773 They will never be equal. In addition, when equals(...) is used to compare arrays it
   1774 only checks to see if they are the same array, and ignores the contents of the arrays.
   1775 </p>
   1776 
   1777     
   1778 <h3><a name="EC_NULL_ARG">EC: Call to equals(null) (EC_NULL_ARG)</a></h3>
   1779 
   1780 
   1781 <p> This method calls equals(Object), passing a null value as
   1782 the argument. According to the contract of the equals() method,
   1783 this call should always return <code>false</code>.</p>
   1784 
   1785     
   1786 <h3><a name="EC_UNRELATED_CLASS_AND_INTERFACE">EC: Call to equals() comparing unrelated class and interface (EC_UNRELATED_CLASS_AND_INTERFACE)</a></h3>
   1787 
   1788       
   1789 <p>
   1790 This method calls equals(Object) on two references,  one of which is a class
   1791 and the other an interface, where neither the class nor any of its
   1792 non-abstract subclasses implement the interface.
   1793 Therefore, the objects being compared
   1794 are unlikely to be members of the same class at runtime
   1795 (unless some application classes were not analyzed, or dynamic class
   1796 loading can occur at runtime).
   1797 According to the contract of equals(),
   1798 objects of different
   1799 classes should always compare as unequal; therefore, according to the
   1800 contract defined by java.lang.Object.equals(Object),
   1801 the result of this comparison will always be false at runtime.
   1802 </p>
   1803       
   1804    
   1805 <h3><a name="EC_UNRELATED_INTERFACES">EC: Call to equals() comparing different interface types (EC_UNRELATED_INTERFACES)</a></h3>
   1806 
   1807 
   1808 <p> This method calls equals(Object) on two references of unrelated
   1809 interface types, where neither is a subtype of the other,
   1810 and there are no known non-abstract classes which implement both interfaces.
   1811 Therefore, the objects being compared
   1812 are unlikely to be members of the same class at runtime
   1813 (unless some application classes were not analyzed, or dynamic class
   1814 loading can occur at runtime).
   1815 According to the contract of equals(),
   1816 objects of different
   1817 classes should always compare as unequal; therefore, according to the
   1818 contract defined by java.lang.Object.equals(Object),
   1819 the result of this comparison will always be false at runtime.
   1820 </p>
   1821 
   1822     
   1823 <h3><a name="EC_UNRELATED_TYPES">EC: Call to equals() comparing different types (EC_UNRELATED_TYPES)</a></h3>
   1824 
   1825 
   1826 <p> This method calls equals(Object) on two references of different
   1827 class types with no common subclasses.
   1828 Therefore, the objects being compared
   1829 are unlikely to be members of the same class at runtime
   1830 (unless some application classes were not analyzed, or dynamic class
   1831 loading can occur at runtime).
   1832 According to the contract of equals(),
   1833 objects of different
   1834 classes should always compare as unequal; therefore, according to the
   1835 contract defined by java.lang.Object.equals(Object),
   1836 the result of this comparison will always be false at runtime.
   1837 </p>
   1838 
   1839     
   1840 <h3><a name="EC_UNRELATED_TYPES_USING_POINTER_EQUALITY">EC: Using pointer equality to compare different types (EC_UNRELATED_TYPES_USING_POINTER_EQUALITY)</a></h3>
   1841 
   1842 
   1843 <p> This method uses using pointer equality to compare two references that seem to be of
   1844 different types.  The result of this comparison will always be false at runtime.
   1845 </p>
   1846 
   1847     
   1848 <h3><a name="EQ_ALWAYS_FALSE">Eq: equals method always returns false (EQ_ALWAYS_FALSE)</a></h3>
   1849 
   1850 
   1851   <p> This class defines an equals method that always returns false. This means that an object is not equal to itself, and it is impossible to create useful Maps or Sets of this class. More fundamentally, it means
   1852 that equals is not reflexive, one of the requirements of the equals method.</p>
   1853 <p>The likely intended semantics are object identity: that an object is equal to itself. This is the behavior inherited from class <code>Object</code>. If you need to override an equals inherited from a different
   1854 superclass, you can use use:</p>
   1855 <pre>
   1856 public boolean equals(Object o) { return this == o; }
   1857 </pre>
   1858 
   1859     
   1860 <h3><a name="EQ_ALWAYS_TRUE">Eq: equals method always returns true (EQ_ALWAYS_TRUE)</a></h3>
   1861 
   1862 
   1863   <p> This class defines an equals method that always returns true. This is imaginative, but not very smart.
   1864 Plus, it means that the equals method is not symmetric.
   1865 </p>
   1866 
   1867     
   1868 <h3><a name="EQ_COMPARING_CLASS_NAMES">Eq: equals method compares class names rather than class objects (EQ_COMPARING_CLASS_NAMES)</a></h3>
   1869 
   1870 
   1871   <p> This method checks to see if two objects are the same class by checking to see if the names
   1872 of their classes are equal. You can have different classes with the same name if they are loaded by
   1873 different class loaders. Just check to see if the class objects are the same.
   1874 </p>
   1875 
   1876     
   1877 <h3><a name="EQ_DONT_DEFINE_EQUALS_FOR_ENUM">Eq: Covariant equals() method defined for enum (EQ_DONT_DEFINE_EQUALS_FOR_ENUM)</a></h3>
   1878 
   1879 
   1880   <p> This class defines an enumeration, and equality on enumerations are defined
   1881 using object identity. Defining a covariant equals method for an enumeration
   1882 value is exceptionally bad practice, since it would likely result
   1883 in having two different enumeration values that compare as equals using
   1884 the covariant enum method, and as not equal when compared normally.
   1885 Don't do it.
   1886 </p>
   1887 
   1888     
   1889 <h3><a name="EQ_OTHER_NO_OBJECT">Eq: equals() method defined that doesn't override equals(Object) (EQ_OTHER_NO_OBJECT)</a></h3>
   1890 
   1891 
   1892   <p> This class defines an <code>equals()</code>
   1893   method, that doesn't override the normal <code>equals(Object)</code> method
   1894   defined in the base <code>java.lang.Object</code> class.&nbsp; Instead, it
   1895   inherits an <code>equals(Object)</code> method from a superclass.
   1896   The class should probably define a <code>boolean equals(Object)</code> method.
   1897   </p>
   1898 
   1899     
   1900 <h3><a name="EQ_OTHER_USE_OBJECT">Eq: equals() method defined that doesn't override Object.equals(Object) (EQ_OTHER_USE_OBJECT)</a></h3>
   1901 
   1902 
   1903   <p> This class defines an <code>equals()</code>
   1904   method, that doesn't override the normal <code>equals(Object)</code> method
   1905   defined in the base <code>java.lang.Object</code> class.&nbsp;
   1906   The class should probably define a <code>boolean equals(Object)</code> method.
   1907   </p>
   1908 
   1909     
   1910 <h3><a name="EQ_OVERRIDING_EQUALS_NOT_SYMMETRIC">Eq: equals method overrides equals in superclass and may not be symmetric (EQ_OVERRIDING_EQUALS_NOT_SYMMETRIC)</a></h3>
   1911 
   1912 
   1913   <p> This class defines an equals method that overrides an equals method in a superclass. Both equals methods
   1914 methods use <code>instanceof</code> in the determination of whether two objects are equal. This is fraught with peril,
   1915 since it is important that the equals method is symmetrical (in other words, <code>a.equals(b) == b.equals(a)</code>).
   1916 If B is a subtype of A, and A's equals method checks that the argument is an instanceof A, and B's equals method
   1917 checks that the argument is an instanceof B, it is quite likely that the equivalence relation defined by these
   1918 methods is not symmetric.
   1919 </p>
   1920 
   1921     
   1922 <h3><a name="EQ_SELF_USE_OBJECT">Eq: Covariant equals() method defined, Object.equals(Object) inherited (EQ_SELF_USE_OBJECT)</a></h3>
   1923 
   1924 
   1925   <p> This class defines a covariant version of the <code>equals()</code>
   1926   method, but inherits the normal <code>equals(Object)</code> method
   1927   defined in the base <code>java.lang.Object</code> class.&nbsp;
   1928   The class should probably define a <code>boolean equals(Object)</code> method.
   1929   </p>
   1930 
   1931     
   1932 <h3><a name="FE_TEST_IF_EQUAL_TO_NOT_A_NUMBER">FE: Doomed test for equality to NaN (FE_TEST_IF_EQUAL_TO_NOT_A_NUMBER)</a></h3>
   1933 
   1934    
   1935     <p>
   1936     This code checks to see if a floating point value is equal to the special
   1937     Not A Number value (e.g., <code>if (x == Double.NaN)</code>). However,
   1938     because of the special semantics of <code>NaN</code>, no value
   1939     is equal to <code>Nan</code>, including <code>NaN</code>. Thus,
   1940     <code>x == Double.NaN</code> always evaluates to false.
   1941 
   1942     To check to see if a value contained in <code>x</code>
   1943     is the special Not A Number value, use
   1944     <code>Double.isNaN(x)</code> (or <code>Float.isNaN(x)</code> if
   1945     <code>x</code> is floating point precision).
   1946     </p>
   1947     
   1948      
   1949 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_ARGUMENT">FS: Format string placeholder incompatible with passed argument (VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_ARGUMENT)</a></h3>
   1950 
   1951 
   1952 <p>
   1953 The format string placeholder is incompatible with the corresponding
   1954 argument. For example,
   1955 <code>
   1956   System.out.println("%d\n", "hello");
   1957 </code>
   1958 <p>The %d placeholder requires a numeric argument, but a string value is
   1959 passed instead.
   1960 A runtime exception will occur when
   1961 this statement is executed.
   1962 </p>
   1963 
   1964      
   1965 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION">FS: The type of a supplied argument doesn't match format specifier (VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION)</a></h3>
   1966 
   1967 
   1968 <p>
   1969 One of the arguments is uncompatible with the corresponding format string specifier.
   1970 As a result, this will generate a runtime exception when executed.
   1971 For example, <code>String.format("%d", "1")</code> will generate an exception, since
   1972 the String "1" is incompatible with the format specifier %d.
   1973 </p>
   1974 
   1975      
   1976 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_EXPECTED_MESSAGE_FORMAT_SUPPLIED">FS: MessageFormat supplied where printf style format expected (VA_FORMAT_STRING_EXPECTED_MESSAGE_FORMAT_SUPPLIED)</a></h3>
   1977 
   1978 
   1979 <p>
   1980 A method is called that expects a Java printf format string and a list of arguments.
   1981 However, the format string doesn't contain any format specifiers (e.g., %s) but
   1982 does contain message format elements (e.g., {0}).  It is likely
   1983 that the code is supplying a MessageFormat string when a printf-style format string
   1984 is required. At runtime, all of the arguments will be ignored
   1985 and the format string will be returned exactly as provided without any formatting.
   1986 </p>
   1987 
   1988      
   1989 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS_PASSED">FS: More arguments are passed than are actually used in the format string (VA_FORMAT_STRING_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS_PASSED)</a></h3>
   1990 
   1991 
   1992 <p>
   1993 A format-string method with a variable number of arguments is called,
   1994 but more arguments are passed than are actually used by the format string.
   1995 This won't cause a runtime exception, but the code may be silently omitting
   1996 information that was intended to be included in the formatted string.
   1997 </p>
   1998 
   1999      
   2000 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_ILLEGAL">FS: Illegal format string (VA_FORMAT_STRING_ILLEGAL)</a></h3>
   2001 
   2002 
   2003 <p>
   2004 The format string is syntactically invalid,
   2005 and a runtime exception will occur when
   2006 this statement is executed.
   2007 </p>
   2008 
   2009      
   2010 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_MISSING_ARGUMENT">FS: Format string references missing argument (VA_FORMAT_STRING_MISSING_ARGUMENT)</a></h3>
   2011 
   2012 
   2013 <p>
   2014 Not enough arguments are passed to satisfy a placeholder in the format string.
   2015 A runtime exception will occur when
   2016 this statement is executed.
   2017 </p>
   2018 
   2019      
   2020 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_NO_PREVIOUS_ARGUMENT">FS: No previous argument for format string (VA_FORMAT_STRING_NO_PREVIOUS_ARGUMENT)</a></h3>
   2021 
   2022 
   2023 <p>
   2024 The format string specifies a relative index to request that the argument for the previous format specifier
   2025 be reused. However, there is no previous argument.
   2026 For example,
   2027 </p>
   2028 <p><code>formatter.format("%&lt;s %s", "a", "b")</code>
   2029 </p>
   2030 <p>would throw a MissingFormatArgumentException when executed.
   2031 </p>
   2032 
   2033      
   2034 <h3><a name="GC_UNRELATED_TYPES">GC: No relationship between generic parameter and method argument (GC_UNRELATED_TYPES)</a></h3>
   2035 
   2036      
   2037      <p> This call to a generic collection method contains an argument
   2038      with an incompatible class from that of the collection's parameter
   2039     (i.e., the type of the argument is neither a supertype nor a subtype
   2040         of the corresponding generic type argument).
   2041      Therefore, it is unlikely that the collection contains any objects
   2042     that are equal to the method argument used here.
   2043     Most likely, the wrong value is being passed to the method.</p>
   2044     <p>In general, instances of two unrelated classes are not equal.
   2045     For example, if the <code>Foo</code> and <code>Bar</code> classes
   2046     are not related by subtyping, then an instance of <code>Foo</code>
   2047         should not be equal to an instance of <code>Bar</code>.
   2048     Among other issues, doing so will likely result in an equals method
   2049     that is not symmetrical. For example, if you define the <code>Foo</code> class
   2050     so that a <code>Foo</code> can be equal to a <code>String</code>,
   2051     your equals method isn't symmetrical since a <code>String</code> can only be equal
   2052     to a <code>String</code>.
   2053     </p>
   2054     <p>In rare cases, people do define nonsymmetrical equals methods and still manage to make
   2055     their code work. Although none of the APIs document or guarantee it, it is typically
   2056     the case that if you check if a <code>Collection&lt;String&gt;</code> contains
   2057     a <code>Foo</code>, the equals method of argument (e.g., the equals method of the
   2058     <code>Foo</code> class) used to perform the equality checks.
   2059     </p>
   2060      
   2061     
   2062 <h3><a name="HE_SIGNATURE_DECLARES_HASHING_OF_UNHASHABLE_CLASS">HE: Signature declares use of unhashable class in hashed construct (HE_SIGNATURE_DECLARES_HASHING_OF_UNHASHABLE_CLASS)</a></h3>
   2063 
   2064 
   2065   <p> A method, field or class declares a generic signature where a non-hashable class
   2066 is used in context where a hashable class is required.
   2067 A class that declares an equals method but inherits a hashCode() method
   2068 from Object is unhashable, since it doesn't fulfill the requirement that
   2069 equal objects have equal hashCodes.
   2070 </p>
   2071 
   2072     
   2073 <h3><a name="HE_USE_OF_UNHASHABLE_CLASS">HE: Use of class without a hashCode() method in a hashed data structure (HE_USE_OF_UNHASHABLE_CLASS)</a></h3>
   2074 
   2075 
   2076   <p> A class defines an equals(Object)  method but not a hashCode() method,
   2077 and thus doesn't fulfill the requirement that equal objects have equal hashCodes.
   2078 An instance of this class is used in a hash data structure, making the need to
   2079 fix this problem of highest importance.
   2080 
   2081     
   2082 <h3><a name="ICAST_INT_2_LONG_AS_INSTANT">ICAST: int value converted to long and used as absolute time (ICAST_INT_2_LONG_AS_INSTANT)</a></h3>
   2083 
   2084 
   2085 <p>
   2086 This code converts a 32-bit int value to a 64-bit long value, and then
   2087 passes that value for a method parameter that requires an absolute time value.
   2088 An absolute time value is the number
   2089 of milliseconds since the standard base time known as "the epoch", namely January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT.
   2090 For example, the following method, intended to convert seconds since the epoc into a Date, is badly
   2091 broken:</p>
   2092 <pre>
   2093 Date getDate(int seconds) { return new Date(seconds * 1000); }
   2094 </pre>
   2095 <p>The multiplication is done using 32-bit arithmetic, and then converted to a 64-bit value.
   2096 When a 32-bit value is converted to 64-bits and used to express an absolute time
   2097 value, only dates in December 1969 and January 1970 can be represented.</p>
   2098 
   2099 <p>Correct implementations for the above method are:</p>
   2100 
   2101 <pre>
   2102 // Fails for dates after 2037
   2103 Date getDate(int seconds) { return new Date(seconds * 1000L); }
   2104 
   2105 // better, works for all dates
   2106 Date getDate(long seconds) { return new Date(seconds * 1000); }
   2107 </pre>
   2108 
   2109     
   2110 <h3><a name="ICAST_INT_CAST_TO_DOUBLE_PASSED_TO_CEIL">ICAST: Integral value cast to double and then passed to Math.ceil (ICAST_INT_CAST_TO_DOUBLE_PASSED_TO_CEIL)</a></h3>
   2111 
   2112 
   2113 <p>
   2114 This code converts an integral value (e.g., int or long)
   2115 to a double precision
   2116 floating point number and then
   2117 passing the result to the Math.ceil() function, which rounds a double to
   2118 the next higher integer value. This operation should always be a no-op,
   2119 since the converting an integer to a double should give a number with no fractional part.
   2120 It is likely that the operation that generated the value to be passed
   2121 to Math.ceil was intended to be performed using double precision
   2122 floating point arithmetic.
   2123 </p>
   2124 
   2125 
   2126     
   2127 <h3><a name="ICAST_INT_CAST_TO_FLOAT_PASSED_TO_ROUND">ICAST: int value cast to float and then passed to Math.round (ICAST_INT_CAST_TO_FLOAT_PASSED_TO_ROUND)</a></h3>
   2128 
   2129 
   2130 <p>
   2131 This code converts an int value to a float precision
   2132 floating point number and then
   2133 passing the result to the Math.round() function, which returns the int/long closest
   2134 to the argument. This operation should always be a no-op,
   2135 since the converting an integer to a float should give a number with no fractional part.
   2136 It is likely that the operation that generated the value to be passed
   2137 to Math.round was intended to be performed using
   2138 floating point arithmetic.
   2139 </p>
   2140 
   2141 
   2142     
   2143 <h3><a name="IJU_ASSERT_METHOD_INVOKED_FROM_RUN_METHOD">IJU: JUnit assertion in run method will not be noticed by JUnit (IJU_ASSERT_METHOD_INVOKED_FROM_RUN_METHOD)</a></h3>
   2144 
   2145 
   2146 <p> A JUnit assertion is performed in a run method. Failed JUnit assertions
   2147 just result in exceptions being thrown.
   2148 Thus, if this exception occurs in a thread other than the thread that invokes
   2149 the test method, the exception will terminate the thread but not result
   2150 in the test failing.
   2151 </p>
   2152 
   2153     
   2154 <h3><a name="IJU_BAD_SUITE_METHOD">IJU: TestCase declares a bad suite method  (IJU_BAD_SUITE_METHOD)</a></h3>
   2155 
   2156 
   2157 <p> Class is a JUnit TestCase and defines a suite() method.
   2158 However, the suite method needs to be declared as either</p>
   2159 <pre>public static junit.framework.Test suite()</pre>
   2160 or
   2161 <pre>public static junit.framework.TestSuite suite()</pre>
   2162 
   2163     
   2164 <h3><a name="IJU_NO_TESTS">IJU: TestCase has no tests (IJU_NO_TESTS)</a></h3>
   2165 
   2166 
   2167 <p> Class is a JUnit TestCase but has not implemented any test methods</p>
   2168 
   2169     
   2170 <h3><a name="IJU_SETUP_NO_SUPER">IJU: TestCase defines setUp that doesn't call super.setUp() (IJU_SETUP_NO_SUPER)</a></h3>
   2171 
   2172 
   2173 <p> Class is a JUnit TestCase and implements the setUp method. The setUp method should call
   2174 super.setUp(), but doesn't.</p>
   2175 
   2176     
   2177 <h3><a name="IJU_SUITE_NOT_STATIC">IJU: TestCase implements a non-static suite method  (IJU_SUITE_NOT_STATIC)</a></h3>
   2178 
   2179 
   2180 <p> Class is a JUnit TestCase and implements the suite() method.
   2181  The suite method should be declared as being static, but isn't.</p>
   2182 
   2183     
   2184 <h3><a name="IJU_TEARDOWN_NO_SUPER">IJU: TestCase defines tearDown that doesn't call super.tearDown() (IJU_TEARDOWN_NO_SUPER)</a></h3>
   2185 
   2186 
   2187 <p> Class is a JUnit TestCase and implements the tearDown method. The tearDown method should call
   2188 super.tearDown(), but doesn't.</p>
   2189 
   2190     
   2191 <h3><a name="IL_CONTAINER_ADDED_TO_ITSELF">IL: A collection is added to itself (IL_CONTAINER_ADDED_TO_ITSELF)</a></h3>
   2192 
   2193 
   2194 <p>A collection is added to itself. As a result, computing the hashCode of this
   2195 set will throw a StackOverflowException.
   2196 </p>
   2197 
   2198     
   2199 <h3><a name="IL_INFINITE_LOOP">IL: An apparent infinite loop (IL_INFINITE_LOOP)</a></h3>
   2200 
   2201 
   2202 <p>This loop doesn't seem to have a way to terminate (other than by perhaps
   2203 throwing an exception).</p>
   2204 
   2205     
   2206 <h3><a name="IL_INFINITE_RECURSIVE_LOOP">IL: An apparent infinite recursive loop (IL_INFINITE_RECURSIVE_LOOP)</a></h3>
   2207 
   2208 
   2209 <p>This method unconditionally invokes itself. This would seem to indicate
   2210 an infinite recursive loop that will result in a stack overflow.</p>
   2211 
   2212     
   2213 <h3><a name="IM_MULTIPLYING_RESULT_OF_IREM">IM: Integer multiply of result of integer remainder (IM_MULTIPLYING_RESULT_OF_IREM)</a></h3>
   2214 
   2215 
   2216 <p>
   2217 The code multiplies the result of an integer remaining by an integer constant.
   2218 Be sure you don't have your operator precedence confused. For example
   2219 i % 60 * 1000 is (i % 60) * 1000, not i % (60 * 1000).
   2220 </p>
   2221 
   2222     
   2223 <h3><a name="INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_INT_VALUE">INT: Bad comparison of int value with long constant (INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_INT_VALUE)</a></h3>
   2224 
   2225 
   2226 <p> This code compares an int value with a long constant that is outside
   2227 the range of values that can be represented as an int value.
   2228 This comparison is vacuous and possibily to be incorrect.
   2229 </p>
   2230 
   2231     
   2232 <h3><a name="INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_NONNEGATIVE_VALUE">INT: Bad comparison of nonnegative value with negative constant (INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_NONNEGATIVE_VALUE)</a></h3>
   2233 
   2234 
   2235 <p> This code compares a value that is guaranteed to be non-negative with a negative constant.
   2236 </p>
   2237 
   2238     
   2239 <h3><a name="INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_SIGNED_BYTE">INT: Bad comparison of signed byte (INT_BAD_COMPARISON_WITH_SIGNED_BYTE)</a></h3>
   2240 
   2241 
   2242 <p> Signed bytes can only have a value in the range -128 to 127. Comparing
   2243 a signed byte with a value outside that range is vacuous and likely to be incorrect.
   2244 To convert a signed byte <code>b</code> to an unsigned value in the range 0..255,
   2245 use <code>0xff &amp; b</code>
   2246 </p>
   2247 
   2248     
   2249 <h3><a name="IO_APPENDING_TO_OBJECT_OUTPUT_STREAM">IO: Doomed attempt to append to an object output stream (IO_APPENDING_TO_OBJECT_OUTPUT_STREAM)</a></h3>
   2250 
   2251       
   2252       <p>
   2253      This code opens a file in append mode and then wraps the result in an object output stream.
   2254      This won't allow you to append to an existing object output stream stored in a file. If you want to be
   2255      able to append to an object output stream, you need to keep the object output stream open.
   2256       </p>
   2257       <p>The only situation in which opening a file in append mode and the writing an object output stream
   2258       could work is if on reading the file you plan to open it in random access mode and seek to the byte offset
   2259       where the append started.
   2260       </p>
   2261 
   2262       <p>
   2263       TODO: example.
   2264       </p>
   2265       
   2266     
   2267 <h3><a name="IP_PARAMETER_IS_DEAD_BUT_OVERWRITTEN">IP: A parameter is dead upon entry to a method but overwritten (IP_PARAMETER_IS_DEAD_BUT_OVERWRITTEN)</a></h3>
   2268 
   2269 
   2270 <p>
   2271 The initial value of this parameter is ignored, and the parameter
   2272 is overwritten here. This often indicates a mistaken belief that
   2273 the write to the parameter will be conveyed back to
   2274 the caller.
   2275 </p>
   2276 
   2277     
   2278 <h3><a name="MF_CLASS_MASKS_FIELD">MF: Class defines field that masks a superclass field (MF_CLASS_MASKS_FIELD)</a></h3>
   2279 
   2280 
   2281 <p> This class defines a field with the same name as a visible
   2282 instance field in a superclass.  This is confusing, and
   2283 may indicate an error if methods update or access one of
   2284 the fields when they wanted the other.</p>
   2285 
   2286     
   2287 <h3><a name="MF_METHOD_MASKS_FIELD">MF: Method defines a variable that obscures a field (MF_METHOD_MASKS_FIELD)</a></h3>
   2288 
   2289 
   2290 <p> This method defines a local variable with the same name as a field
   2291 in this class or a superclass.  This may cause the method to
   2292 read an uninitialized value from the field, leave the field uninitialized,
   2293 or both.</p>
   2294 
   2295     
   2296 <h3><a name="NP_ALWAYS_NULL">NP: Null pointer dereference (NP_ALWAYS_NULL)</a></h3>
   2297 
   2298 
   2299 <p> A null pointer is dereferenced here.&nbsp; This will lead to a
   2300 <code>NullPointerException</code> when the code is executed.</p>
   2301 
   2302     
   2303 <h3><a name="NP_ALWAYS_NULL_EXCEPTION">NP: Null pointer dereference in method on exception path (NP_ALWAYS_NULL_EXCEPTION)</a></h3>
   2304 
   2305 
   2306 <p> A pointer which is null on an exception path is dereferenced here.&nbsp;
   2307 This will lead to a <code>NullPointerException</code> when the code is executed.&nbsp;
   2308 Note that because FindBugs currently does not prune infeasible exception paths,
   2309 this may be a false warning.</p>
   2310 
   2311 <p> Also note that FindBugs considers the default case of a switch statement to
   2312 be an exception path, since the default case is often infeasible.</p>
   2313 
   2314     
   2315 <h3><a name="NP_ARGUMENT_MIGHT_BE_NULL">NP: Method does not check for null argument (NP_ARGUMENT_MIGHT_BE_NULL)</a></h3>
   2316 
   2317       
   2318       <p>
   2319     A parameter to this method has been identified as a value that should
   2320     always be checked to see whether or not it is null, but it is being dereferenced
   2321     without a preceding null check.
   2322       </p>
   2323       
   2324    
   2325 <h3><a name="NP_CLOSING_NULL">NP: close() invoked on a value that is always null (NP_CLOSING_NULL)</a></h3>
   2326 
   2327 
   2328 <p> close() is being invoked on a value that is always null. If this statement is executed,
   2329 a null pointer exception will occur. But the big risk here you never close
   2330 something that should be closed.
   2331 
   2332     
   2333 <h3><a name="NP_GUARANTEED_DEREF">NP: Null value is guaranteed to be dereferenced (NP_GUARANTEED_DEREF)</a></h3>
   2334 
   2335           
   2336               <p>
   2337               There is a statement or branch that if executed guarantees that
   2338               a value is null at this point, and that
   2339               value that is guaranteed to be dereferenced
   2340               (except on forward paths involving runtime exceptions).
   2341               </p>
   2342         <p>Note that a check such as
   2343             <code>if (x == null) throw new NullPointerException();</code>
   2344             is treated as a dereference of <code>x</code>.
   2345           
   2346       
   2347 <h3><a name="NP_GUARANTEED_DEREF_ON_EXCEPTION_PATH">NP: Value is null and guaranteed to be dereferenced on exception path (NP_GUARANTEED_DEREF_ON_EXCEPTION_PATH)</a></h3>
   2348 
   2349           
   2350               <p>
   2351               There is a statement or branch on an exception path
   2352                 that if executed guarantees that
   2353               a value is null at this point, and that
   2354               value that is guaranteed to be dereferenced
   2355               (except on forward paths involving runtime exceptions).
   2356               </p>
   2357           
   2358       
   2359 <h3><a name="NP_NONNULL_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED_IN_CONSTRUCTOR">NP: Nonnull field is not initialized (NP_NONNULL_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED_IN_CONSTRUCTOR)</a></h3>
   2360 
   2361        
   2362        <p> The field is marked as nonnull, but isn't written to by the constructor.
   2363     The field might be initialized elsewhere during constructor, or might always
   2364     be initialized before use.
   2365        </p>
   2366        
   2367        
   2368 <h3><a name="NP_NONNULL_PARAM_VIOLATION">NP: Method call passes null to a nonnull parameter  (NP_NONNULL_PARAM_VIOLATION)</a></h3>
   2369 
   2370       
   2371       <p>
   2372       This method passes a null value as the parameter of a method which
   2373     must be nonnull. Either this parameter has been explicitly marked
   2374     as @Nonnull, or analysis has determined that this parameter is
   2375     always dereferenced.
   2376       </p>
   2377       
   2378    
   2379 <h3><a name="NP_NONNULL_RETURN_VIOLATION">NP: Method may return null, but is declared @NonNull (NP_NONNULL_RETURN_VIOLATION)</a></h3>
   2380 
   2381       
   2382       <p>
   2383       This method may return a null value, but the method (or a superclass method
   2384       which it overrides) is declared to return @NonNull.
   2385       </p>
   2386       
   2387    
   2388 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_INSTANCEOF">NP: A known null value is checked to see if it is an instance of a type (NP_NULL_INSTANCEOF)</a></h3>
   2389 
   2390 
   2391 <p>
   2392 This instanceof test will always return false, since the value being checked is guaranteed to be null.
   2393 Although this is safe, make sure it isn't
   2394 an indication of some misunderstanding or some other logic error.
   2395 </p>
   2396 
   2397     
   2398 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH">NP: Possible null pointer dereference (NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH)</a></h3>
   2399 
   2400 
   2401 <p> There is a branch of statement that, <em>if executed,</em>  guarantees that
   2402 a null value will be dereferenced, which
   2403 would generate a <code>NullPointerException</code> when the code is executed.
   2404 Of course, the problem might be that the branch or statement is infeasible and that
   2405 the null pointer exception can't ever be executed; deciding that is beyond the ability of FindBugs.
   2406 </p>
   2407 
   2408     
   2409 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_EXCEPTION">NP: Possible null pointer dereference in method on exception path (NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_EXCEPTION)</a></h3>
   2410 
   2411 
   2412 <p> A reference value which is null on some exception control path is
   2413 dereferenced here.&nbsp; This may lead to a <code>NullPointerException</code>
   2414 when the code is executed.&nbsp;
   2415 Note that because FindBugs currently does not prune infeasible exception paths,
   2416 this may be a false warning.</p>
   2417 
   2418 <p> Also note that FindBugs considers the default case of a switch statement to
   2419 be an exception path, since the default case is often infeasible.</p>
   2420 
   2421     
   2422 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF">NP: Method call passes null for nonnull parameter (NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF)</a></h3>
   2423 
   2424       
   2425       <p>
   2426       This method call passes a null value for a nonnull method parameter.
   2427     Either the parameter is annotated as a parameter that should
   2428     always be nonnull, or analysis has shown that it will always be
   2429     dereferenced.
   2430       </p>
   2431       
   2432    
   2433 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF_ALL_TARGETS_DANGEROUS">NP: Method call passes null for nonnull parameter (NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF_ALL_TARGETS_DANGEROUS)</a></h3>
   2434 
   2435       
   2436       <p>
   2437       A possibly-null value is passed at a call site where all known
   2438       target methods require the parameter to be nonnull.
   2439     Either the parameter is annotated as a parameter that should
   2440     always be nonnull, or analysis has shown that it will always be
   2441     dereferenced.
   2442       </p>
   2443       
   2444    
   2445 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF_NONVIRTUAL">NP: Non-virtual method call passes null for nonnull parameter (NP_NULL_PARAM_DEREF_NONVIRTUAL)</a></h3>
   2446 
   2447       
   2448       <p>
   2449       A possibly-null value is passed to a nonnull method parameter.
   2450     Either the parameter is annotated as a parameter that should
   2451     always be nonnull, or analysis has shown that it will always be
   2452     dereferenced.
   2453       </p>
   2454       
   2455    
   2456 <h3><a name="NP_STORE_INTO_NONNULL_FIELD">NP: Store of null value into field annotated NonNull (NP_STORE_INTO_NONNULL_FIELD)</a></h3>
   2457 
   2458       
   2459 <p> A value that could be null is stored into a field that has been annotated as NonNull. </p>
   2460 
   2461     
   2462 <h3><a name="NP_UNWRITTEN_FIELD">NP: Read of unwritten field (NP_UNWRITTEN_FIELD)</a></h3>
   2463 
   2464 
   2465   <p> The program is dereferencing a field that does not seem to ever have a non-null value written to it.
   2466 Unless the field is initialized via some mechanism not seen by the analysis,
   2467 dereferencing this value will generate a null pointer exception.
   2468 </p>
   2469 
   2470     
   2471 <h3><a name="NM_BAD_EQUAL">Nm: Class defines equal(Object); should it be equals(Object)? (NM_BAD_EQUAL)</a></h3>
   2472 
   2473 
   2474 <p> This class defines a method <code>equal(Object)</code>.&nbsp; This method does
   2475 not override the <code>equals(Object)</code> method in <code>java.lang.Object</code>,
   2476 which is probably what was intended.</p>
   2477 
   2478     
   2479 <h3><a name="NM_LCASE_HASHCODE">Nm: Class defines hashcode(); should it be hashCode()? (NM_LCASE_HASHCODE)</a></h3>
   2480 
   2481 
   2482   <p> This class defines a method called <code>hashcode()</code>.&nbsp; This method
   2483   does not override the <code>hashCode()</code> method in <code>java.lang.Object</code>,
   2484   which is probably what was intended.</p>
   2485 
   2486     
   2487 <h3><a name="NM_LCASE_TOSTRING">Nm: Class defines tostring(); should it be toString()? (NM_LCASE_TOSTRING)</a></h3>
   2488 
   2489 
   2490   <p> This class defines a method called <code>tostring()</code>.&nbsp; This method
   2491   does not override the <code>toString()</code> method in <code>java.lang.Object</code>,
   2492   which is probably what was intended.</p>
   2493 
   2494     
   2495 <h3><a name="NM_METHOD_CONSTRUCTOR_CONFUSION">Nm: Apparent method/constructor confusion (NM_METHOD_CONSTRUCTOR_CONFUSION)</a></h3>
   2496 
   2497 
   2498   <p> This regular method has the same name as the class it is defined in. It is likely that this was intended to be a constructor.
   2499       If it was intended to be a constructor, remove the declaration of a void return value.
   2500     If you had accidently defined this method, realized the mistake, defined a proper constructor
   2501     but can't get rid of this method due to backwards compatibility, deprecate the method.
   2502 </p>
   2503 
   2504     
   2505 <h3><a name="NM_VERY_CONFUSING">Nm: Very confusing method names (NM_VERY_CONFUSING)</a></h3>
   2506 
   2507 
   2508   <p> The referenced methods have names that differ only by capitalization.
   2509 This is very confusing because if the capitalization were
   2510 identical then one of the methods would override the other.
   2511 </p>
   2512 
   2513     
   2514 <h3><a name="NM_WRONG_PACKAGE">Nm: Method doesn't override method in superclass due to wrong package for parameter (NM_WRONG_PACKAGE)</a></h3>
   2515 
   2516 
   2517   <p> The method in the subclass doesn't override a similar method in a superclass because the type of a parameter doesn't exactly match
   2518 the type of the corresponding parameter in the superclass. For example, if you have:</p>
   2519 
   2520 <blockquote>
   2521 <pre>
   2522 import alpha.Foo;
   2523 public class A {
   2524   public int f(Foo x) { return 17; }
   2525 }
   2526 ----
   2527 import beta.Foo;
   2528 public class B extends A {
   2529   public int f(Foo x) { return 42; }
   2530 }
   2531 </pre>
   2532 </blockquote>
   2533 
   2534 <p>The <code>f(Foo)</code> method defined in class <code>B</code> doesn't
   2535 override the
   2536 <code>f(Foo)</code> method defined in class <code>A</code>, because the argument
   2537 types are <code>Foo</code>'s from different packages.
   2538 </p>
   2539 
   2540     
   2541 <h3><a name="QBA_QUESTIONABLE_BOOLEAN_ASSIGNMENT">QBA: Method assigns boolean literal in boolean expression (QBA_QUESTIONABLE_BOOLEAN_ASSIGNMENT)</a></h3>
   2542 
   2543       
   2544       <p>
   2545       This method assigns a literal boolean value (true or false) to a boolean variable inside
   2546       an if or while expression. Most probably this was supposed to be a boolean comparison using
   2547       ==, not an assignment using =.
   2548       </p>
   2549       
   2550     
   2551 <h3><a name="RC_REF_COMPARISON">RC: Suspicious reference comparison (RC_REF_COMPARISON)</a></h3>
   2552 
   2553 
   2554 <p> This method compares two reference values using the == or != operator,
   2555 where the correct way to compare instances of this type is generally
   2556 with the equals() method.
   2557 It is possible to create distinct instances that are equal but do not compare as == since
   2558 they are different objects.
   2559 Examples of classes which should generally
   2560 not be compared by reference are java.lang.Integer, java.lang.Float, etc.</p>
   2561 
   2562     
   2563 <h3><a name="RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_WOULD_HAVE_BEEN_A_NPE">RCN: Nullcheck of value previously dereferenced (RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_WOULD_HAVE_BEEN_A_NPE)</a></h3>
   2564 
   2565 
   2566 <p> A value is checked here to see whether it is null, but this value can't
   2567 be null because it was previously dereferenced and if it were null a null pointer
   2568 exception would have occurred at the earlier dereference.
   2569 Essentially, this code and the previous dereference
   2570 disagree as to whether this value is allowed to be null. Either the check is redundant
   2571 or the previous dereference is erroneous.</p>
   2572 
   2573     
   2574 <h3><a name="RE_BAD_SYNTAX_FOR_REGULAR_EXPRESSION">RE: Invalid syntax for regular expression (RE_BAD_SYNTAX_FOR_REGULAR_EXPRESSION)</a></h3>
   2575 
   2576 
   2577 <p>
   2578 The code here uses a regular expression that is invalid according to the syntax
   2579 for regular expressions. This statement will throw a PatternSyntaxException when
   2580 executed.
   2581 </p>
   2582 
   2583     
   2584 <h3><a name="RE_CANT_USE_FILE_SEPARATOR_AS_REGULAR_EXPRESSION">RE: File.separator used for regular expression (RE_CANT_USE_FILE_SEPARATOR_AS_REGULAR_EXPRESSION)</a></h3>
   2585 
   2586 
   2587 <p>
   2588 The code here uses <code>File.separator</code>
   2589 where a regular expression is required. This will fail on Windows
   2590 platforms, where the <code>File.separator</code> is a backslash, which is interpreted in a
   2591 regular expression as an escape character. Amoung other options, you can just use
   2592 <code>File.separatorChar=='\\' ? "\\\\" : File.separator</code> instead of
   2593 <code>File.separator</code>
   2594 
   2595 </p>
   2596 
   2597     
   2598 <h3><a name="RE_POSSIBLE_UNINTENDED_PATTERN">RE: "." or "|" used for regular expression (RE_POSSIBLE_UNINTENDED_PATTERN)</a></h3>
   2599 
   2600 
   2601 <p>
   2602 A String function is being invoked and "." or "|" is being passed
   2603 to a parameter that takes a regular expression as an argument. Is this what you intended?
   2604 For example
   2605 <li>s.replaceAll(".", "/") will return a String in which <em>every</em> character has been replaced by a '/' character
   2606 <li>s.split(".") <em>always</em> returns a zero length array of String
   2607 <li>"ab|cd".replaceAll("|", "/") will return "/a/b/|/c/d/"
   2608 <li>"ab|cd".split("|") will return array with six (!) elements: [, a, b, |, c, d]
   2609 </p>
   2610 
   2611     
   2612 <h3><a name="RV_01_TO_INT">RV: Random value from 0 to 1 is coerced to the integer 0 (RV_01_TO_INT)</a></h3>
   2613 
   2614 
   2615   <p>A random value from 0 to 1 is being coerced to the integer value 0. You probably
   2616 want to multiple the random value by something else before coercing it to an integer, or use the <code>Random.nextInt(n)</code> method.
   2617 </p>
   2618 
   2619     
   2620 <h3><a name="RV_ABSOLUTE_VALUE_OF_HASHCODE">RV: Bad attempt to compute absolute value of signed 32-bit hashcode  (RV_ABSOLUTE_VALUE_OF_HASHCODE)</a></h3>
   2621 
   2622 
   2623 <p> This code generates a hashcode and then computes
   2624 the absolute value of that hashcode.  If the hashcode
   2625 is <code>Integer.MIN_VALUE</code>, then the result will be negative as well (since
   2626 <code>Math.abs(Integer.MIN_VALUE) == Integer.MIN_VALUE</code>).
   2627 </p>
   2628 <p>One out of 2^32 strings have a hashCode of Integer.MIN_VALUE,
   2629 including "polygenelubricants" "GydZG_" and ""DESIGNING WORKHOUSES".
   2630 </p>
   2631 
   2632     
   2633 <h3><a name="RV_ABSOLUTE_VALUE_OF_RANDOM_INT">RV: Bad attempt to compute absolute value of signed random integer (RV_ABSOLUTE_VALUE_OF_RANDOM_INT)</a></h3>
   2634 
   2635 
   2636 <p> This code generates a random signed integer and then computes
   2637 the absolute value of that random integer.  If the number returned by the random number
   2638 generator is <code>Integer.MIN_VALUE</code>, then the result will be negative as well (since
   2639 <code>Math.abs(Integer.MIN_VALUE) == Integer.MIN_VALUE</code>). (Same problem arised for long values as well).
   2640 </p>
   2641 
   2642     
   2643 <h3><a name="RV_CHECK_COMPARETO_FOR_SPECIFIC_RETURN_VALUE">RV: Code checks for specific values returned by compareTo (RV_CHECK_COMPARETO_FOR_SPECIFIC_RETURN_VALUE)</a></h3>
   2644 
   2645 
   2646    <p> This code invoked a compareTo or compare method, and checks to see if the return value is a specific value,
   2647 such as 1 or -1. When invoking these methods, you should only check the sign of the result, not for any specific
   2648 non-zero value. While many or most compareTo and compare methods only return -1, 0 or 1, some of them
   2649 will return other values.
   2650 
   2651     
   2652 <h3><a name="RV_EXCEPTION_NOT_THROWN">RV: Exception created and dropped rather than thrown (RV_EXCEPTION_NOT_THROWN)</a></h3>
   2653 
   2654 
   2655    <p> This code creates an exception (or error) object, but doesn't do anything with it. For example,
   2656 something like </p>
   2657 <blockquote>
   2658 <pre>
   2659 if (x &lt; 0)
   2660   new IllegalArgumentException("x must be nonnegative");
   2661 </pre>
   2662 </blockquote>
   2663 <p>It was probably the intent of the programmer to throw the created exception:</p>
   2664 <blockquote>
   2665 <pre>
   2666 if (x &lt; 0)
   2667   throw new IllegalArgumentException("x must be nonnegative");
   2668 </pre>
   2669 </blockquote>
   2670 
   2671     
   2672 <h3><a name="RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED">RV: Method ignores return value (RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED)</a></h3>
   2673 
   2674 
   2675    <p> The return value of this method should be checked. One common
   2676 cause of this warning is to invoke a method on an immutable object,
   2677 thinking that it updates the object. For example, in the following code
   2678 fragment,</p>
   2679 <blockquote>
   2680 <pre>
   2681 String dateString = getHeaderField(name);
   2682 dateString.trim();
   2683 </pre>
   2684 </blockquote>
   2685 <p>the programmer seems to be thinking that the trim() method will update
   2686 the String referenced by dateString. But since Strings are immutable, the trim()
   2687 function returns a new String value, which is being ignored here. The code
   2688 should be corrected to: </p>
   2689 <blockquote>
   2690 <pre>
   2691 String dateString = getHeaderField(name);
   2692 dateString = dateString.trim();
   2693 </pre>
   2694 </blockquote>
   2695 
   2696     
   2697 <h3><a name="RpC_REPEATED_CONDITIONAL_TEST">RpC: Repeated conditional tests (RpC_REPEATED_CONDITIONAL_TEST)</a></h3>
   2698 
   2699 
   2700 <p>The code contains a conditional test is performed twice, one right after the other
   2701 (e.g., <code>x == 0 || x == 0</code>). Perhaps the second occurrence is intended to be something else
   2702 (e.g., <code>x == 0 || y == 0</code>).
   2703 </p>
   2704 
   2705     
   2706 <h3><a name="SA_FIELD_SELF_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Self assignment of field (SA_FIELD_SELF_ASSIGNMENT)</a></h3>
   2707 
   2708 
   2709 <p> This method contains a self assignment of a field; e.g.
   2710 </p>
   2711 <pre>
   2712   int x;
   2713   public void foo() {
   2714     x = x;
   2715   }
   2716 </pre>
   2717 <p>Such assignments are useless, and may indicate a logic error or typo.</p>
   2718 
   2719     
   2720 <h3><a name="SA_FIELD_SELF_COMPARISON">SA: Self comparison of field with itself (SA_FIELD_SELF_COMPARISON)</a></h3>
   2721 
   2722 
   2723 <p> This method compares a field with itself, and may indicate a typo or
   2724 a logic error.  Make sure that you are comparing the right things.
   2725 </p>
   2726 
   2727     
   2728 <h3><a name="SA_FIELD_SELF_COMPUTATION">SA: Nonsensical self computation involving a field (e.g., x & x) (SA_FIELD_SELF_COMPUTATION)</a></h3>
   2729 
   2730 
   2731 <p> This method performs a nonsensical computation of a field with another
   2732 reference to the same field (e.g., x&x or x-x). Because of the nature
   2733 of the computation, this operation doesn't seem to make sense,
   2734 and may indicate a typo or
   2735 a logic error.  Double check the computation.
   2736 </p>
   2737 
   2738     
   2739 <h3><a name="SA_LOCAL_SELF_ASSIGNMENT_INSTEAD_OF_FIELD">SA: Self assignment of local rather than assignment to field (SA_LOCAL_SELF_ASSIGNMENT_INSTEAD_OF_FIELD)</a></h3>
   2740 
   2741 
   2742 <p> This method contains a self assignment of a local variable, and there
   2743 is a field with an identical name.
   2744 assignment appears to have been ; e.g.</p>
   2745 <pre>
   2746   int foo;
   2747   public void setFoo(int foo) {
   2748     foo = foo;
   2749   }
   2750 </pre>
   2751 <p>The assignment is useless. Did you mean to assign to the field instead?</p>
   2752 
   2753     
   2754 <h3><a name="SA_LOCAL_SELF_COMPARISON">SA: Self comparison of value with itself (SA_LOCAL_SELF_COMPARISON)</a></h3>
   2755 
   2756 
   2757 <p> This method compares a local variable with itself, and may indicate a typo or
   2758 a logic error.  Make sure that you are comparing the right things.
   2759 </p>
   2760 
   2761     
   2762 <h3><a name="SA_LOCAL_SELF_COMPUTATION">SA: Nonsensical self computation involving a variable (e.g., x & x) (SA_LOCAL_SELF_COMPUTATION)</a></h3>
   2763 
   2764 
   2765 <p> This method performs a nonsensical computation of a local variable with another
   2766 reference to the same variable (e.g., x&x or x-x). Because of the nature
   2767 of the computation, this operation doesn't seem to make sense,
   2768 and may indicate a typo or
   2769 a logic error.  Double check the computation.
   2770 </p>
   2771 
   2772     
   2773 <h3><a name="SF_DEAD_STORE_DUE_TO_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH">SF: Dead store due to switch statement fall through (SF_DEAD_STORE_DUE_TO_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH)</a></h3>
   2774 
   2775 
   2776   <p> A value stored in the previous switch case is overwritten here due to a switch fall through. It is likely that
   2777     you forgot to put a break or return at the end of the previous case.
   2778 </p>
   2779 
   2780     
   2781 <h3><a name="SF_DEAD_STORE_DUE_TO_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH_TO_THROW">SF: Dead store due to switch statement fall through to throw (SF_DEAD_STORE_DUE_TO_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH_TO_THROW)</a></h3>
   2782 
   2783 
   2784   <p> A value stored in the previous switch case is ignored here due to a switch fall through to a place where
   2785     an exception is thrown. It is likely that
   2786     you forgot to put a break or return at the end of the previous case.
   2787 </p>
   2788 
   2789     
   2790 <h3><a name="SIC_THREADLOCAL_DEADLY_EMBRACE">SIC: Deadly embrace of non-static inner class and thread local (SIC_THREADLOCAL_DEADLY_EMBRACE)</a></h3>
   2791 
   2792 
   2793   <p> This class is an inner class, but should probably be a static inner class.
   2794   As it is, there is a serious danger of a deadly embrace between the inner class
   2795   and the thread local in the outer class. Because the inner class isn't static,
   2796   it retains a reference to the outer class.
   2797   If the thread local contains a reference to an instance of the inner
   2798   class, the inner and outer instance will both be reachable
   2799   and not eligible for garbage collection.
   2800 </p>
   2801 
   2802     
   2803 <h3><a name="SIO_SUPERFLUOUS_INSTANCEOF">SIO: Unnecessary type check done using instanceof operator (SIO_SUPERFLUOUS_INSTANCEOF)</a></h3>
   2804 
   2805 
   2806 <p> Type check performed using the instanceof operator where it can be statically determined whether the object
   2807 is of the type requested. </p>
   2808 
   2809     
   2810 <h3><a name="SQL_BAD_PREPARED_STATEMENT_ACCESS">SQL: Method attempts to access a prepared statement parameter with index 0 (SQL_BAD_PREPARED_STATEMENT_ACCESS)</a></h3>
   2811 
   2812 
   2813 <p> A call to a setXXX method of a prepared statement was made where the
   2814 parameter index is 0. As parameter indexes start at index 1, this is always a mistake.</p>
   2815 
   2816     
   2817 <h3><a name="SQL_BAD_RESULTSET_ACCESS">SQL: Method attempts to access a result set field with index 0 (SQL_BAD_RESULTSET_ACCESS)</a></h3>
   2818 
   2819 
   2820 <p> A call to getXXX or updateXXX methods of a result set was made where the
   2821 field index is 0. As ResultSet fields start at index 1, this is always a mistake.</p>
   2822 
   2823     
   2824 <h3><a name="STI_INTERRUPTED_ON_CURRENTTHREAD">STI: Unneeded use of currentThread() call, to call interrupted()  (STI_INTERRUPTED_ON_CURRENTTHREAD)</a></h3>
   2825 
   2826 
   2827 <p>
   2828 This method invokes the Thread.currentThread() call, just to call the interrupted() method. As interrupted() is a
   2829 static method, is more simple and clear to use Thread.interrupted().
   2830 </p>
   2831 
   2832     
   2833 <h3><a name="STI_INTERRUPTED_ON_UNKNOWNTHREAD">STI: Static Thread.interrupted() method invoked on thread instance (STI_INTERRUPTED_ON_UNKNOWNTHREAD)</a></h3>
   2834 
   2835 
   2836 <p>
   2837 This method invokes the Thread.interrupted() method on a Thread object that appears to be a Thread object that is
   2838 not the current thread. As the interrupted() method is static, the interrupted method will be called on a different
   2839 object than the one the author intended.
   2840 </p>
   2841 
   2842     
   2843 <h3><a name="SE_METHOD_MUST_BE_PRIVATE">Se: Method must be private in order for serialization to work (SE_METHOD_MUST_BE_PRIVATE)</a></h3>
   2844 
   2845 
   2846   <p> This class implements the <code>Serializable</code> interface, and defines a method
   2847   for custom serialization/deserialization. But since that method isn't declared private,
   2848   it will be silently ignored by the serialization/deserialization API.</p>
   2849 
   2850     
   2851 <h3><a name="SE_READ_RESOLVE_IS_STATIC">Se: The readResolve method must not be declared as a static method.   (SE_READ_RESOLVE_IS_STATIC)</a></h3>
   2852 
   2853 
   2854   <p> In order for the readResolve method to be recognized by the serialization
   2855 mechanism, it must not be declared as a static method.
   2856 </p>
   2857 
   2858     
   2859 <h3><a name="TQ_ALWAYS_VALUE_USED_WHERE_NEVER_REQUIRED">TQ: Value annotated as carrying a type qualifier used where a value that must not carry that qualifier is required (TQ_ALWAYS_VALUE_USED_WHERE_NEVER_REQUIRED)</a></h3>
   2860 
   2861       
   2862         <p>
   2863         A value specified as carrying a type qualifier annotation is
   2864         consumed in a location or locations requiring that the value not
   2865         carry that annotation.
   2866         </p>
   2867 
   2868         <p>
   2869         More precisely, a value annotated with a type qualifier specifying when=ALWAYS
   2870         is guaranteed to reach a use or uses where the same type qualifier specifies when=NEVER.
   2871         </p>
   2872 
   2873         <p>
   2874         For example, say that @NonNegative is a nickname for
   2875         the type qualifier annotation @Negative(when=When.NEVER).
   2876         The following code will generate this warning because
   2877         the return statement requires a @NonNegative value,
   2878         but receives one that is marked as @Negative.
   2879         </p>
   2880         <blockquote>
   2881 <pre>
   2882 public @NonNegative Integer example(@Negative Integer value) {
   2883     return value;
   2884 }
   2885 </pre>
   2886         </blockquote>
   2887       
   2888     
   2889 <h3><a name="TQ_COMPARING_VALUES_WITH_INCOMPATIBLE_TYPE_QUALIFIERS">TQ: Comparing values with incompatible type qualifiers (TQ_COMPARING_VALUES_WITH_INCOMPATIBLE_TYPE_QUALIFIERS)</a></h3>
   2890 
   2891       
   2892         <p>
   2893         A value specified as carrying a type qualifier annotation is
   2894         compared with a value that doesn't ever carry that qualifier.
   2895         </p>
   2896 
   2897         <p>
   2898         More precisely, a value annotated with a type qualifier specifying when=ALWAYS
   2899         is compared with a value that where the same type qualifier specifies when=NEVER.
   2900         </p>
   2901 
   2902         <p>
   2903         For example, say that @NonNegative is a nickname for
   2904         the type qualifier annotation @Negative(when=When.NEVER).
   2905         The following code will generate this warning because
   2906         the return statement requires a @NonNegative value,
   2907         but receives one that is marked as @Negative.
   2908         </p>
   2909         <blockquote>
   2910 <pre>
   2911 public boolean example(@Negative Integer value1, @NonNegative Integer value2) {
   2912     return value1.equals(value2);
   2913 }
   2914 </pre>
   2915         </blockquote>
   2916       
   2917     
   2918 <h3><a name="TQ_MAYBE_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_ALWAYS_SINK">TQ: Value that might not carry a type qualifier is always used in a way requires that type qualifier (TQ_MAYBE_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_ALWAYS_SINK)</a></h3>
   2919 
   2920       
   2921       <p>
   2922       A value that is annotated as possibility not being an instance of
   2923     the values denoted by the type qualifier, and the value is guaranteed to be used
   2924     in a way that requires values denoted by that type qualifier.
   2925       </p>
   2926       
   2927     
   2928 <h3><a name="TQ_MAYBE_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_NEVER_SINK">TQ: Value that might carry a type qualifier is always used in a way prohibits it from having that type qualifier (TQ_MAYBE_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_NEVER_SINK)</a></h3>
   2929 
   2930       
   2931       <p>
   2932       A value that is annotated as possibility being an instance of
   2933     the values denoted by the type qualifier, and the value is guaranteed to be used
   2934     in a way that prohibits values denoted by that type qualifier.
   2935       </p>
   2936       
   2937     
   2938 <h3><a name="TQ_NEVER_VALUE_USED_WHERE_ALWAYS_REQUIRED">TQ: Value annotated as never carrying a type qualifier used where value carrying that qualifier is required (TQ_NEVER_VALUE_USED_WHERE_ALWAYS_REQUIRED)</a></h3>
   2939 
   2940       
   2941         <p>
   2942         A value specified as not carrying a type qualifier annotation is guaranteed
   2943         to be consumed in a location or locations requiring that the value does
   2944         carry that annotation.
   2945         </p>
   2946 
   2947         <p>
   2948         More precisely, a value annotated with a type qualifier specifying when=NEVER
   2949         is guaranteed to reach a use or uses where the same type qualifier specifies when=ALWAYS.
   2950         </p>
   2951 
   2952         <p>
   2953         TODO: example
   2954         </p>
   2955       
   2956     
   2957 <h3><a name="TQ_UNKNOWN_VALUE_USED_WHERE_ALWAYS_STRICTLY_REQUIRED">TQ: Value without a type qualifier used where a value is required to have that qualifier (TQ_UNKNOWN_VALUE_USED_WHERE_ALWAYS_STRICTLY_REQUIRED)</a></h3>
   2958 
   2959       
   2960         <p>
   2961         A value is being used in a way that requires the value be annotation with a type qualifier.
   2962     The type qualifier is strict, so the tool rejects any values that do not have
   2963     the appropriate annotation.
   2964         </p>
   2965 
   2966         <p>
   2967         To coerce a value to have a strict annotation, define an identity function where the return value is annotated
   2968     with the strict annotation.
   2969     This is the only way to turn a non-annotated value into a value with a strict type qualifier annotation.
   2970         </p>
   2971 
   2972       
   2973     
   2974 <h3><a name="UMAC_UNCALLABLE_METHOD_OF_ANONYMOUS_CLASS">UMAC: Uncallable method defined in anonymous class (UMAC_UNCALLABLE_METHOD_OF_ANONYMOUS_CLASS)</a></h3>
   2975 
   2976 
   2977 <p> This anonymous class defined a method that is not directly invoked and does not override
   2978 a method in a superclass. Since methods in other classes cannot directly invoke methods
   2979 declared in an anonymous class, it seems that this method is uncallable. The method
   2980 might simply be dead code, but it is also possible that the method is intended to
   2981 override a method declared in a superclass, and due to an typo or other error the method does not,
   2982 in fact, override the method it is intended to.
   2983 </p>
   2984 
   2985 
   2986 <h3><a name="UR_UNINIT_READ">UR: Uninitialized read of field in constructor (UR_UNINIT_READ)</a></h3>
   2987 
   2988 
   2989   <p> This constructor reads a field which has not yet been assigned a value.&nbsp;
   2990   This is often caused when the programmer mistakenly uses the field instead
   2991   of one of the constructor's parameters.</p>
   2992 
   2993     
   2994 <h3><a name="UR_UNINIT_READ_CALLED_FROM_SUPER_CONSTRUCTOR">UR: Uninitialized read of field method called from constructor of superclass (UR_UNINIT_READ_CALLED_FROM_SUPER_CONSTRUCTOR)</a></h3>
   2995 
   2996 
   2997   <p> This method is invoked in the constructor of of the superclass. At this point,
   2998     the fields of the class have not yet initialized.</p>
   2999 <p>To make this more concrete, consider the following classes:</p>
   3000 <pre>abstract class A {
   3001   int hashCode;
   3002   abstract Object getValue();
   3003   A() {
   3004     hashCode = getValue().hashCode();
   3005     }
   3006   }
   3007 class B extends A {
   3008   Object value;
   3009   B(Object v) {
   3010     this.value = v;
   3011     }
   3012   Object getValue() {
   3013     return value;
   3014   }
   3015   }</pre>
   3016 <p>When a <code>B</code> is constructed,
   3017 the constructor for the <code>A</code> class is invoked
   3018 <em>before</em> the constructor for <code>B</code> sets <code>value</code>.
   3019 Thus, when the constructor for <code>A</code> invokes <code>getValue</code>,
   3020 an uninitialized value is read for <code>value</code>
   3021 </p>
   3022 
   3023     
   3024 <h3><a name="DMI_INVOKING_TOSTRING_ON_ANONYMOUS_ARRAY">USELESS_STRING: Invocation of toString on an unnamed array (DMI_INVOKING_TOSTRING_ON_ANONYMOUS_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   3025 
   3026 
   3027 <p>
   3028 The code invokes toString on an (anonymous) array.  Calling toString on an array generates a fairly useless result
   3029 such as [C@16f0472. Consider using Arrays.toString to convert the array into a readable
   3030 String that gives the contents of the array. See Programming Puzzlers, chapter 3, puzzle 12.
   3031 </p>
   3032 
   3033     
   3034 <h3><a name="DMI_INVOKING_TOSTRING_ON_ARRAY">USELESS_STRING: Invocation of toString on an array (DMI_INVOKING_TOSTRING_ON_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   3035 
   3036 
   3037 <p>
   3038 The code invokes toString on an array, which will generate a fairly useless result
   3039 such as [C@16f0472. Consider using Arrays.toString to convert the array into a readable
   3040 String that gives the contents of the array. See Programming Puzzlers, chapter 3, puzzle 12.
   3041 </p>
   3042 
   3043     
   3044 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION_FROM_ARRAY">USELESS_STRING: Array formatted in useless way using format string (VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION_FROM_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   3045 
   3046 
   3047 <p>
   3048 One of the arguments being formatted with a format string is an array. This will be formatted
   3049 using a fairly useless format, such as [I@304282, which doesn't actually show the contents
   3050 of the array.
   3051 Consider wrapping the array using <code>Arrays.asList(...)</code> before handling it off to a formatted.
   3052 </p>
   3053 
   3054      
   3055 <h3><a name="UWF_NULL_FIELD">UwF: Field only ever set to null (UWF_NULL_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3056 
   3057 
   3058   <p> All writes to this field are of the constant value null, and thus
   3059 all reads of the field will return null.
   3060 Check for errors, or remove it if it is useless.</p>
   3061 
   3062     
   3063 <h3><a name="UWF_UNWRITTEN_FIELD">UwF: Unwritten field (UWF_UNWRITTEN_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3064 
   3065 
   3066   <p> This field is never written.&nbsp; All reads of it will return the default
   3067 value. Check for errors (should it have been initialized?), or remove it if it is useless.</p>
   3068 
   3069     
   3070 <h3><a name="VA_PRIMITIVE_ARRAY_PASSED_TO_OBJECT_VARARG">VA: Primitive array passed to function expecting a variable number of object arguments (VA_PRIMITIVE_ARRAY_PASSED_TO_OBJECT_VARARG)</a></h3>
   3071 
   3072 
   3073 <p>
   3074 This code passes a primitive array to a function that takes a variable number of object arguments.
   3075 This creates an array of length one to hold the primitive array and passes it to the function.
   3076 </p>
   3077 
   3078     
   3079 <h3><a name="LG_LOST_LOGGER_DUE_TO_WEAK_REFERENCE">LG: Potential lost logger changes due to weak reference in OpenJDK (LG_LOST_LOGGER_DUE_TO_WEAK_REFERENCE)</a></h3>
   3080 
   3081           
   3082 <p>OpenJDK introduces a potential incompatibility.
   3083  In particular, the java.util.logging.Logger behavior has
   3084   changed. Instead of using strong references, it now uses weak references
   3085   internally. That's a reasonable change, but unfortunately some code relies on
   3086   the old behavior - when changing logger configuration, it simply drops the
   3087   logger reference. That means that the garbage collector is free to reclaim
   3088   that memory, which means that the logger configuration is lost. For example,
   3089 consider:
   3090 </p>
   3091 
   3092 <pre>public static void initLogging() throws Exception {
   3093  Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("edu.umd.cs");
   3094  logger.addHandler(new FileHandler()); // call to change logger configuration
   3095  logger.setUseParentHandlers(false); // another call to change logger configuration
   3096 }</pre>
   3097 
   3098 <p>The logger reference is lost at the end of the method (it doesn't
   3099 escape the method), so if you have a garbage collection cycle just
   3100 after the call to initLogging, the logger configuration is lost
   3101 (because Logger only keeps weak references).</p>
   3102 
   3103 <pre>public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
   3104  initLogging(); // adds a file handler to the logger
   3105  System.gc(); // logger configuration lost
   3106  Logger.getLogger("edu.umd.cs").info("Some message"); // this isn't logged to the file as expected
   3107 }</pre>
   3108 <p><em>Ulf Ochsenfahrt and Eric Fellheimer</em></p>
   3109           
   3110       
   3111 <h3><a name="OBL_UNSATISFIED_OBLIGATION">OBL: Method may fail to clean up stream or resource (OBL_UNSATISFIED_OBLIGATION)</a></h3>
   3112 
   3113           
   3114           <p>
   3115           This method may fail to clean up (close, dispose of) a stream,
   3116           database object, or other
   3117           resource requiring an explicit cleanup operation.
   3118           </p>
   3119 
   3120           <p>
   3121           In general, if a method opens a stream or other resource,
   3122           the method should use a try/finally block to ensure that
   3123           the stream or resource is cleaned up before the method
   3124           returns.
   3125           </p>
   3126 
   3127           <p>
   3128           This bug pattern is essentially the same as the
   3129           OS_OPEN_STREAM and ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE
   3130           bug patterns, but is based on a different
   3131           (and hopefully better) static analysis technique.
   3132           We are interested is getting feedback about the
   3133           usefulness of this bug pattern.
   3134           To send feedback, either:
   3135           </p>
   3136           <ul>
   3137             <li>send email to findbugs (a] cs.umd.edu</li>
   3138             <li>file a bug report: <a href="http://findbugs.sourceforge.net/reportingBugs.html">http://findbugs.sourceforge.net/reportingBugs.html</a></li>
   3139           </ul>
   3140 
   3141           <p>
   3142           In particular,
   3143           the false-positive suppression heuristics for this
   3144           bug pattern have not been extensively tuned, so
   3145           reports about false positives are helpful to us.
   3146           </p>
   3147 
   3148           <p>
   3149           See Weimer and Necula, <i>Finding and Preventing Run-Time Error Handling Mistakes</i>, for
   3150           a description of the analysis technique.
   3151           </p>
   3152           
   3153       
   3154 <h3><a name="OBL_UNSATISFIED_OBLIGATION_EXCEPTION_EDGE">OBL: Method may fail to clean up stream or resource on checked exception (OBL_UNSATISFIED_OBLIGATION_EXCEPTION_EDGE)</a></h3>
   3155 
   3156           
   3157           <p>
   3158           This method may fail to clean up (close, dispose of) a stream,
   3159           database object, or other
   3160           resource requiring an explicit cleanup operation.
   3161           </p>
   3162 
   3163           <p>
   3164           In general, if a method opens a stream or other resource,
   3165           the method should use a try/finally block to ensure that
   3166           the stream or resource is cleaned up before the method
   3167           returns.
   3168           </p>
   3169 
   3170           <p>
   3171           This bug pattern is essentially the same as the
   3172           OS_OPEN_STREAM and ODR_OPEN_DATABASE_RESOURCE
   3173           bug patterns, but is based on a different
   3174           (and hopefully better) static analysis technique.
   3175           We are interested is getting feedback about the
   3176           usefulness of this bug pattern.
   3177           To send feedback, either:
   3178           </p>
   3179           <ul>
   3180             <li>send email to findbugs (a] cs.umd.edu</li>
   3181             <li>file a bug report: <a href="http://findbugs.sourceforge.net/reportingBugs.html">http://findbugs.sourceforge.net/reportingBugs.html</a></li>
   3182           </ul>
   3183 
   3184           <p>
   3185           In particular,
   3186           the false-positive suppression heuristics for this
   3187           bug pattern have not been extensively tuned, so
   3188           reports about false positives are helpful to us.
   3189           </p>
   3190 
   3191           <p>
   3192           See Weimer and Necula, <i>Finding and Preventing Run-Time Error Handling Mistakes</i>, for
   3193           a description of the analysis technique.
   3194           </p>
   3195           
   3196       
   3197 <h3><a name="DM_CONVERT_CASE">Dm: Consider using Locale parameterized version of invoked method (DM_CONVERT_CASE)</a></h3>
   3198 
   3199 
   3200   <p> A String is being converted to upper or lowercase, using the platform's default encoding. This may
   3201       result in improper conversions when used with international characters. Use the </p>
   3202       <ul>
   3203     <li>String.toUpperCase( Locale l )</li>
   3204     <li>String.toLowerCase( Locale l )</li>
   3205     </ul>
   3206       <p>versions instead.</p>
   3207 
   3208     
   3209 <h3><a name="DM_DEFAULT_ENCODING">Dm: Reliance on default encoding (DM_DEFAULT_ENCODING)</a></h3>
   3210 
   3211 
   3212 <p> Found a call to a method which will perform a byte to String (or String to byte) conversion, and will assume that the default platform encoding is suitable. This will cause the application behaviour to vary between platforms. Use an alternative API and specify a charset name or Charset object explicitly.  </p>
   3213 
   3214       
   3215 <h3><a name="DP_CREATE_CLASSLOADER_INSIDE_DO_PRIVILEGED">DP: Classloaders should only be created inside doPrivileged block (DP_CREATE_CLASSLOADER_INSIDE_DO_PRIVILEGED)</a></h3>
   3216 
   3217 
   3218   <p> This code creates a classloader,  which needs permission if a security manage is installed.
   3219   If this code might be invoked by code that does not
   3220   have security permissions, then the classloader creation needs to occur inside a doPrivileged block.</p>
   3221 
   3222     
   3223 <h3><a name="DP_DO_INSIDE_DO_PRIVILEGED">DP: Method invoked that should be only be invoked inside a doPrivileged block (DP_DO_INSIDE_DO_PRIVILEGED)</a></h3>
   3224 
   3225 
   3226   <p> This code invokes a method that requires a security permission check.
   3227   If this code will be granted security permissions, but might be invoked by code that does not
   3228   have security permissions, then the invocation needs to occur inside a doPrivileged block.</p>
   3229 
   3230     
   3231 <h3><a name="EI_EXPOSE_REP">EI: May expose internal representation by returning reference to mutable object (EI_EXPOSE_REP)</a></h3>
   3232 
   3233 
   3234   <p> Returning a reference to a mutable object value stored in one of the object's fields
   3235   exposes the internal representation of the object.&nbsp;
   3236    If instances
   3237    are accessed by untrusted code, and unchecked changes to
   3238    the mutable object would compromise security or other
   3239    important properties, you will need to do something different.
   3240   Returning a new copy of the object is better approach in many situations.</p>
   3241 
   3242     
   3243 <h3><a name="EI_EXPOSE_REP2">EI2: May expose internal representation by incorporating reference to mutable object (EI_EXPOSE_REP2)</a></h3>
   3244 
   3245 
   3246   <p> This code stores a reference to an externally mutable object into the
   3247   internal representation of the object.&nbsp;
   3248    If instances
   3249    are accessed by untrusted code, and unchecked changes to
   3250    the mutable object would compromise security or other
   3251    important properties, you will need to do something different.
   3252   Storing a copy of the object is better approach in many situations.</p>
   3253 
   3254     
   3255 <h3><a name="FI_PUBLIC_SHOULD_BE_PROTECTED">FI: Finalizer should be protected, not public (FI_PUBLIC_SHOULD_BE_PROTECTED)</a></h3>
   3256 
   3257 
   3258   <p> A class's <code>finalize()</code> method should have protected access,
   3259    not public.</p>
   3260 
   3261     
   3262 <h3><a name="EI_EXPOSE_STATIC_REP2">MS: May expose internal static state by storing a mutable object into a static field (EI_EXPOSE_STATIC_REP2)</a></h3>
   3263 
   3264 
   3265   <p> This code stores a reference to an externally mutable object into a static
   3266    field.
   3267    If unchecked changes to
   3268    the mutable object would compromise security or other
   3269    important properties, you will need to do something different.
   3270   Storing a copy of the object is better approach in many situations.</p>
   3271 
   3272     
   3273 <h3><a name="MS_CANNOT_BE_FINAL">MS: Field isn't final and can't be protected from malicious code (MS_CANNOT_BE_FINAL)</a></h3>
   3274 
   3275 
   3276   <p>
   3277  A mutable static field could be changed by malicious code or
   3278         by accident from another package.
   3279    Unfortunately, the way the field is used doesn't allow
   3280    any easy fix to this problem.</p>
   3281 
   3282     
   3283 <h3><a name="MS_EXPOSE_REP">MS: Public static method may expose internal representation by returning array (MS_EXPOSE_REP)</a></h3>
   3284 
   3285 
   3286   <p> A public static method returns a reference to
   3287    an array that is part of the static state of the class.
   3288    Any code that calls this method can freely modify
   3289    the underlying array.
   3290    One fix is to return a copy of the array.</p>
   3291 
   3292     
   3293 <h3><a name="MS_FINAL_PKGPROTECT">MS: Field should be both final and package protected (MS_FINAL_PKGPROTECT)</a></h3>
   3294 
   3295 
   3296  <p>
   3297    A mutable static field could be changed by malicious code or
   3298         by accident from another package.
   3299         The field could be made package protected and/or made final
   3300    to avoid
   3301         this vulnerability.</p>
   3302 
   3303     
   3304 <h3><a name="MS_MUTABLE_ARRAY">MS: Field is a mutable array (MS_MUTABLE_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   3305 
   3306 
   3307 <p> A final static field references an array
   3308    and can be accessed by malicious code or
   3309         by accident from another package.
   3310    This code can freely modify the contents of the array.</p>
   3311 
   3312     
   3313 <h3><a name="MS_MUTABLE_HASHTABLE">MS: Field is a mutable Hashtable (MS_MUTABLE_HASHTABLE)</a></h3>
   3314 
   3315 
   3316  <p>A final static field references a Hashtable
   3317    and can be accessed by malicious code or
   3318         by accident from another package.
   3319    This code can freely modify the contents of the Hashtable.</p>
   3320 
   3321     
   3322 <h3><a name="MS_OOI_PKGPROTECT">MS: Field should be moved out of an interface and made package protected (MS_OOI_PKGPROTECT)</a></h3>
   3323 
   3324 
   3325 <p>
   3326  A final static field that is
   3327 defined in an interface references a mutable
   3328    object such as an array or hashtable.
   3329    This mutable object could
   3330    be changed by malicious code or
   3331         by accident from another package.
   3332    To solve this, the field needs to be moved to a class
   3333    and made package protected
   3334    to avoid
   3335         this vulnerability.</p>
   3336 
   3337     
   3338 <h3><a name="MS_PKGPROTECT">MS: Field should be package protected (MS_PKGPROTECT)</a></h3>
   3339 
   3340 
   3341   <p> A mutable static field could be changed by malicious code or
   3342    by accident.
   3343    The field could be made package protected to avoid
   3344    this vulnerability.</p>
   3345 
   3346     
   3347 <h3><a name="MS_SHOULD_BE_FINAL">MS: Field isn't final but should be (MS_SHOULD_BE_FINAL)</a></h3>
   3348 
   3349 
   3350    <p>
   3351 This static field public but not final, and
   3352 could be changed by malicious code or
   3353         by accident from another package.
   3354         The field could be made final to avoid
   3355         this vulnerability.</p>
   3356 
   3357     
   3358 <h3><a name="MS_SHOULD_BE_REFACTORED_TO_BE_FINAL">MS: Field isn't final but should be refactored to be so (MS_SHOULD_BE_REFACTORED_TO_BE_FINAL)</a></h3>
   3359 
   3360 
   3361    <p>
   3362 This static field public but not final, and
   3363 could be changed by malicious code or
   3364 by accident from another package.
   3365 The field could be made final to avoid
   3366 this vulnerability. However, the static initializer contains more than one write
   3367 to the field, so doing so will require some refactoring.
   3368 </p>
   3369 
   3370     
   3371 <h3><a name="AT_OPERATION_SEQUENCE_ON_CONCURRENT_ABSTRACTION">AT: Sequence of calls to concurrent abstraction may not be atomic (AT_OPERATION_SEQUENCE_ON_CONCURRENT_ABSTRACTION)</a></h3>
   3372 
   3373           
   3374         <p>This code contains a sequence of calls to a concurrent  abstraction
   3375             (such as a concurrent hash map).
   3376             These calls will not be executed atomically.
   3377           
   3378       
   3379 <h3><a name="DC_DOUBLECHECK">DC: Possible double check of field (DC_DOUBLECHECK)</a></h3>
   3380 
   3381 
   3382   <p> This method may contain an instance of double-checked locking.&nbsp;
   3383   This idiom is not correct according to the semantics of the Java memory
   3384   model.&nbsp; For more information, see the web page
   3385   <a href="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~pugh/java/memoryModel/DoubleCheckedLocking.html"
   3386   >http://www.cs.umd.edu/~pugh/java/memoryModel/DoubleCheckedLocking.html</a>.</p>
   3387 
   3388     
   3389 <h3><a name="DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_BOOLEAN">DL: Synchronization on Boolean (DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_BOOLEAN)</a></h3>
   3390 
   3391       
   3392   <p> The code synchronizes on a boxed primitive constant, such as an Boolean.</p>
   3393 <pre>
   3394 private static Boolean inited = Boolean.FALSE;
   3395 ...
   3396   synchronized(inited) {
   3397     if (!inited) {
   3398        init();
   3399        inited = Boolean.TRUE;
   3400        }
   3401      }
   3402 ...
   3403 </pre>
   3404 <p>Since there normally exist only two Boolean objects, this code could be synchronizing on the same object as other, unrelated code, leading to unresponsiveness
   3405 and possible deadlock</p>
   3406 <p>See CERT <a href="https://www.securecoding.cert.org/confluence/display/java/CON08-J.+Do+not+synchronize+on+objects+that+may+be+reused">CON08-J. Do not synchronize on objects that may be reused</a> for more information.</p>
   3407 
   3408     
   3409 <h3><a name="DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_BOXED_PRIMITIVE">DL: Synchronization on boxed primitive (DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_BOXED_PRIMITIVE)</a></h3>
   3410 
   3411       
   3412   <p> The code synchronizes on a boxed primitive constant, such as an Integer.</p>
   3413 <pre>
   3414 private static Integer count = 0;
   3415 ...
   3416   synchronized(count) {
   3417      count++;
   3418      }
   3419 ...
   3420 </pre>
   3421 <p>Since Integer objects can be cached and shared,
   3422 this code could be synchronizing on the same object as other, unrelated code, leading to unresponsiveness
   3423 and possible deadlock</p>
   3424 <p>See CERT <a href="https://www.securecoding.cert.org/confluence/display/java/CON08-J.+Do+not+synchronize+on+objects+that+may+be+reused">CON08-J. Do not synchronize on objects that may be reused</a> for more information.</p>
   3425 
   3426     
   3427 <h3><a name="DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_SHARED_CONSTANT">DL: Synchronization on interned String  (DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_SHARED_CONSTANT)</a></h3>
   3428 
   3429 
   3430   <p> The code synchronizes on interned String.</p>
   3431 <pre>
   3432 private static String LOCK = "LOCK";
   3433 ...
   3434   synchronized(LOCK) { ...}
   3435 ...
   3436 </pre>
   3437 <p>Constant Strings are interned and shared across all other classes loaded by the JVM. Thus, this could
   3438 is locking on something that other code might also be locking. This could result in very strange and hard to diagnose
   3439 blocking and deadlock behavior. See <a href="http://www.javalobby.org/java/forums/t96352.html">http://www.javalobby.org/java/forums/t96352.html</a> and <a href="http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/JETTY-352">http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/JETTY-352</a>.
   3440 </p>
   3441 <p>See CERT <a href="https://www.securecoding.cert.org/confluence/display/java/CON08-J.+Do+not+synchronize+on+objects+that+may+be+reused">CON08-J. Do not synchronize on objects that may be reused</a> for more information.</p>
   3442 
   3443     
   3444 <h3><a name="DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_UNSHARED_BOXED_PRIMITIVE">DL: Synchronization on boxed primitive values (DL_SYNCHRONIZATION_ON_UNSHARED_BOXED_PRIMITIVE)</a></h3>
   3445 
   3446       
   3447   <p> The code synchronizes on an apparently unshared boxed primitive,
   3448 such as an Integer.</p>
   3449 <pre>
   3450 private static final Integer fileLock = new Integer(1);
   3451 ...
   3452   synchronized(fileLock) {
   3453      .. do something ..
   3454      }
   3455 ...
   3456 </pre>
   3457 <p>It would be much better, in this code, to redeclare fileLock as</p>
   3458 <pre>
   3459 private static final Object fileLock = new Object();
   3460 </pre>
   3461 <p>
   3462 The existing code might be OK, but it is confusing and a
   3463 future refactoring, such as the "Remove Boxing" refactoring in IntelliJ,
   3464 might replace this with the use of an interned Integer object shared
   3465 throughout the JVM, leading to very confusing behavior and potential deadlock.
   3466 </p>
   3467 
   3468     
   3469 <h3><a name="DM_MONITOR_WAIT_ON_CONDITION">Dm: Monitor wait() called on Condition (DM_MONITOR_WAIT_ON_CONDITION)</a></h3>
   3470 
   3471       
   3472       <p>
   3473       This method calls <code>wait()</code> on a
   3474       <code>java.util.concurrent.locks.Condition</code> object.&nbsp;
   3475       Waiting for a <code>Condition</code> should be done using one of the <code>await()</code>
   3476       methods defined by the <code>Condition</code> interface.
   3477       </p>
   3478       
   3479    
   3480 <h3><a name="DM_USELESS_THREAD">Dm: A thread was created using the default empty run method (DM_USELESS_THREAD)</a></h3>
   3481 
   3482 
   3483   <p>This method creates a thread without specifying a run method either by deriving from the Thread class, or
   3484   by passing a Runnable object. This thread, then, does nothing but waste time.
   3485 </p>
   3486 
   3487     
   3488 <h3><a name="ESync_EMPTY_SYNC">ESync: Empty synchronized block (ESync_EMPTY_SYNC)</a></h3>
   3489 
   3490 
   3491   <p> The code contains an empty synchronized block:</p>
   3492 <pre>
   3493 synchronized() {}
   3494 </pre>
   3495 <p>Empty synchronized blocks are far more subtle and hard to use correctly
   3496 than most people recognize, and empty synchronized blocks
   3497 are almost never a better solution
   3498 than less contrived solutions.
   3499 </p>
   3500 
   3501     
   3502 <h3><a name="IS2_INCONSISTENT_SYNC">IS: Inconsistent synchronization (IS2_INCONSISTENT_SYNC)</a></h3>
   3503 
   3504 
   3505   <p> The fields of this class appear to be accessed inconsistently with respect
   3506   to synchronization.&nbsp; This bug report indicates that the bug pattern detector
   3507   judged that
   3508   </p>
   3509   <ul>
   3510   <li> The class contains a mix of locked and unlocked accesses,</li>
   3511   <li> The class is <b>not</b> annotated as javax.annotation.concurrent.NotThreadSafe,</li>
   3512   <li> At least one locked access was performed by one of the class's own methods, and</li>
   3513   <li> The number of unsynchronized field accesses (reads and writes) was no more than
   3514        one third of all accesses, with writes being weighed twice as high as reads</li>
   3515   </ul>
   3516 
   3517   <p> A typical bug matching this bug pattern is forgetting to synchronize
   3518   one of the methods in a class that is intended to be thread-safe.</p>
   3519 
   3520   <p> You can select the nodes labeled "Unsynchronized access" to show the
   3521   code locations where the detector believed that a field was accessed
   3522   without synchronization.</p>
   3523 
   3524   <p> Note that there are various sources of inaccuracy in this detector;
   3525   for example, the detector cannot statically detect all situations in which
   3526   a lock is held.&nbsp; Also, even when the detector is accurate in
   3527   distinguishing locked vs. unlocked accesses, the code in question may still
   3528   be correct.</p>
   3529 
   3530 
   3531     
   3532 <h3><a name="IS_FIELD_NOT_GUARDED">IS: Field not guarded against concurrent access (IS_FIELD_NOT_GUARDED)</a></h3>
   3533 
   3534 
   3535   <p> This field is annotated with net.jcip.annotations.GuardedBy or javax.annotation.concurrent.GuardedBy,
   3536 but can be accessed in a way that seems to violate those annotations.</p>
   3537 
   3538 
   3539 <h3><a name="JLM_JSR166_LOCK_MONITORENTER">JLM: Synchronization performed on Lock (JLM_JSR166_LOCK_MONITORENTER)</a></h3>
   3540 
   3541 
   3542 <p> This method performs synchronization an object that implements
   3543 java.util.concurrent.locks.Lock. Such an object is locked/unlocked
   3544 using
   3545 <code>acquire()</code>/<code>release()</code> rather
   3546 than using the <code>synchronized (...)</code> construct.
   3547 </p>
   3548 
   3549 
   3550 <h3><a name="JLM_JSR166_UTILCONCURRENT_MONITORENTER">JLM: Synchronization performed on util.concurrent instance (JLM_JSR166_UTILCONCURRENT_MONITORENTER)</a></h3>
   3551 
   3552 
   3553 <p> This method performs synchronization an object that is an instance of
   3554 a class from the java.util.concurrent package (or its subclasses). Instances
   3555 of these classes have their own concurrency control mechanisms that are orthogonal to
   3556 the synchronization provided by the Java keyword <code>synchronized</code>. For example,
   3557 synchronizing on an <code>AtomicBoolean</code> will not prevent other threads
   3558 from modifying the  <code>AtomicBoolean</code>.</p>
   3559 <p>Such code may be correct, but should be carefully reviewed and documented,
   3560 and may confuse people who have to maintain the code at a later date.
   3561 </p>
   3562 
   3563 
   3564 <h3><a name="JML_JSR166_CALLING_WAIT_RATHER_THAN_AWAIT">JLM: Using monitor style wait methods on util.concurrent abstraction (JML_JSR166_CALLING_WAIT_RATHER_THAN_AWAIT)</a></h3>
   3565 
   3566 
   3567 <p> This method calls
   3568 <code>wait()</code>,
   3569 <code>notify()</code> or
   3570 <code>notifyAll()()</code>
   3571 on an object that also provides an
   3572 <code>await()</code>,
   3573 <code>signal()</code>,
   3574 <code>signalAll()</code> method (such as util.concurrent Condition objects).
   3575 This probably isn't what you want, and even if you do want it, you should consider changing
   3576 your design, as other developers will find it exceptionally confusing.
   3577 </p>
   3578 
   3579 
   3580 <h3><a name="LI_LAZY_INIT_STATIC">LI: Incorrect lazy initialization of static field (LI_LAZY_INIT_STATIC)</a></h3>
   3581 
   3582 
   3583 <p> This method contains an unsynchronized lazy initialization of a non-volatile static field.
   3584 Because the compiler or processor may reorder instructions,
   3585 threads are not guaranteed to see a completely initialized object,
   3586 <em>if the method can be called by multiple threads</em>.
   3587 You can make the field volatile to correct the problem.
   3588 For more information, see the
   3589 <a href="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~pugh/java/memoryModel/">Java Memory Model web site</a>.
   3590 </p>
   3591 
   3592     
   3593 <h3><a name="LI_LAZY_INIT_UPDATE_STATIC">LI: Incorrect lazy initialization and update of static field (LI_LAZY_INIT_UPDATE_STATIC)</a></h3>
   3594 
   3595 
   3596 <p> This method contains an unsynchronized lazy initialization of a static field.
   3597 After the field is set, the object stored into that location is further updated or accessed.
   3598 The setting of the field is visible to other threads as soon as it is set. If the
   3599 futher accesses in the method that set the field serve to initialize the object, then
   3600 you have a <em>very serious</em> multithreading bug, unless something else prevents
   3601 any other thread from accessing the stored object until it is fully initialized.
   3602 </p>
   3603 <p>Even if you feel confident that the method is never called by multiple
   3604 threads, it might be better to not set the static field until the value
   3605 you are setting it to is fully populated/initialized.
   3606 
   3607     
   3608 <h3><a name="ML_SYNC_ON_FIELD_TO_GUARD_CHANGING_THAT_FIELD">ML: Synchronization on field in futile attempt to guard that field (ML_SYNC_ON_FIELD_TO_GUARD_CHANGING_THAT_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3609 
   3610 
   3611   <p> This method synchronizes on a field in what appears to be an attempt
   3612 to guard against simultaneous updates to that field. But guarding a field
   3613 gets a lock on the referenced object, not on the field. This may not
   3614 provide the mutual exclusion you need, and other threads might
   3615 be obtaining locks on the referenced objects (for other purposes). An example
   3616 of this pattern would be:</p>
   3617 <pre>
   3618 private Long myNtfSeqNbrCounter = new Long(0);
   3619 private Long getNotificationSequenceNumber() {
   3620      Long result = null;
   3621      synchronized(myNtfSeqNbrCounter) {
   3622          result = new Long(myNtfSeqNbrCounter.longValue() + 1);
   3623          myNtfSeqNbrCounter = new Long(result.longValue());
   3624      }
   3625      return result;
   3626  }
   3627 </pre>
   3628 
   3629     
   3630 <h3><a name="ML_SYNC_ON_UPDATED_FIELD">ML: Method synchronizes on an updated field (ML_SYNC_ON_UPDATED_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3631 
   3632 
   3633   <p> This method synchronizes on an object
   3634    referenced from a mutable field.
   3635    This is unlikely to have useful semantics, since different
   3636 threads may be synchronizing on different objects.</p>
   3637 
   3638     
   3639 <h3><a name="MSF_MUTABLE_SERVLET_FIELD">MSF: Mutable servlet field (MSF_MUTABLE_SERVLET_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3640 
   3641 
   3642 <p>A web server generally only creates one instance of servlet or jsp class (i.e., treats
   3643 the class as a Singleton),
   3644 and will
   3645 have multiple threads invoke methods on that instance to service multiple
   3646 simultaneous requests.
   3647 Thus, having a mutable instance field generally creates race conditions.
   3648 
   3649     
   3650 <h3><a name="MWN_MISMATCHED_NOTIFY">MWN: Mismatched notify() (MWN_MISMATCHED_NOTIFY)</a></h3>
   3651 
   3652 
   3653 <p> This method calls Object.notify() or Object.notifyAll() without obviously holding a lock
   3654 on the object.&nbsp;  Calling notify() or notifyAll() without a lock held will result in
   3655 an <code>IllegalMonitorStateException</code> being thrown.</p>
   3656 
   3657     
   3658 <h3><a name="MWN_MISMATCHED_WAIT">MWN: Mismatched wait() (MWN_MISMATCHED_WAIT)</a></h3>
   3659 
   3660 
   3661 <p> This method calls Object.wait() without obviously holding a lock
   3662 on the object.&nbsp;  Calling wait() without a lock held will result in
   3663 an <code>IllegalMonitorStateException</code> being thrown.</p>
   3664 
   3665     
   3666 <h3><a name="NN_NAKED_NOTIFY">NN: Naked notify (NN_NAKED_NOTIFY)</a></h3>
   3667 
   3668 
   3669   <p> A call to <code>notify()</code> or <code>notifyAll()</code>
   3670   was made without any (apparent) accompanying
   3671   modification to mutable object state.&nbsp; In general, calling a notify
   3672   method on a monitor is done because some condition another thread is
   3673   waiting for has become true.&nbsp; However, for the condition to be meaningful,
   3674   it must involve a heap object that is visible to both threads.</p>
   3675 
   3676   <p> This bug does not necessarily indicate an error, since the change to
   3677   mutable object state may have taken place in a method which then called
   3678   the method containing the notification.</p>
   3679 
   3680     
   3681 <h3><a name="NP_SYNC_AND_NULL_CHECK_FIELD">NP: Synchronize and null check on the same field. (NP_SYNC_AND_NULL_CHECK_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3682 
   3683 
   3684 <p>Since the field is synchronized on, it seems not likely to be null.
   3685 If it is null and then synchronized on a NullPointerException will be
   3686 thrown and the check would be pointless. Better to synchronize on
   3687 another field.</p>
   3688 
   3689 
   3690      
   3691 <h3><a name="NO_NOTIFY_NOT_NOTIFYALL">No: Using notify() rather than notifyAll() (NO_NOTIFY_NOT_NOTIFYALL)</a></h3>
   3692 
   3693 
   3694   <p> This method calls <code>notify()</code> rather than <code>notifyAll()</code>.&nbsp;
   3695   Java monitors are often used for multiple conditions.&nbsp; Calling <code>notify()</code>
   3696   only wakes up one thread, meaning that the thread woken up might not be the
   3697   one waiting for the condition that the caller just satisfied.</p>
   3698 
   3699     
   3700 <h3><a name="RS_READOBJECT_SYNC">RS: Class's readObject() method is synchronized (RS_READOBJECT_SYNC)</a></h3>
   3701 
   3702 
   3703   <p> This serializable class defines a <code>readObject()</code> which is
   3704   synchronized.&nbsp; By definition, an object created by deserialization
   3705   is only reachable by one thread, and thus there is no need for
   3706   <code>readObject()</code> to be synchronized.&nbsp; If the <code>readObject()</code>
   3707   method itself is causing the object to become visible to another thread,
   3708   that is an example of very dubious coding style.</p>
   3709 
   3710     
   3711 <h3><a name="RV_RETURN_VALUE_OF_PUTIFABSENT_IGNORED">RV: Return value of putIfAbsent ignored, value passed to putIfAbsent reused (RV_RETURN_VALUE_OF_PUTIFABSENT_IGNORED)</a></h3>
   3712 
   3713           
   3714         The <code>putIfAbsent</code> method is typically used to ensure that a
   3715         single value is associated with a given key (the first value for which put
   3716         if absent succeeds).
   3717         If you ignore the return value and retain a reference to the value passed in,
   3718         you run the risk of retaining a value that is not the one that is associated with the key in the map.
   3719         If it matters which one you use and you use the one that isn't stored in the map,
   3720         your program will behave incorrectly.
   3721           
   3722       
   3723 <h3><a name="RU_INVOKE_RUN">Ru: Invokes run on a thread (did you mean to start it instead?) (RU_INVOKE_RUN)</a></h3>
   3724 
   3725 
   3726   <p> This method explicitly invokes <code>run()</code> on an object.&nbsp;
   3727   In general, classes implement the <code>Runnable</code> interface because
   3728   they are going to have their <code>run()</code> method invoked in a new thread,
   3729   in which case <code>Thread.start()</code> is the right method to call.</p>
   3730 
   3731     
   3732 <h3><a name="SC_START_IN_CTOR">SC: Constructor invokes Thread.start() (SC_START_IN_CTOR)</a></h3>
   3733 
   3734 
   3735   <p> The constructor starts a thread. This is likely to be wrong if
   3736    the class is ever extended/subclassed, since the thread will be started
   3737    before the subclass constructor is started.</p>
   3738 
   3739     
   3740 <h3><a name="SP_SPIN_ON_FIELD">SP: Method spins on field (SP_SPIN_ON_FIELD)</a></h3>
   3741 
   3742 
   3743   <p> This method spins in a loop which reads a field.&nbsp; The compiler
   3744   may legally hoist the read out of the loop, turning the code into an
   3745   infinite loop.&nbsp; The class should be changed so it uses proper
   3746   synchronization (including wait and notify calls).</p>
   3747 
   3748     
   3749 <h3><a name="STCAL_INVOKE_ON_STATIC_CALENDAR_INSTANCE">STCAL: Call to static Calendar (STCAL_INVOKE_ON_STATIC_CALENDAR_INSTANCE)</a></h3>
   3750 
   3751 
   3752 <p>Even though the JavaDoc does not contain a hint about it, Calendars are inherently unsafe for multihtreaded use.
   3753 The detector has found a call to an instance of Calendar that has been obtained via a static
   3754 field. This looks suspicous.</p>
   3755 <p>For more information on this see <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6231579">Sun Bug #6231579</a>
   3756 and <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6178997">Sun Bug #6178997</a>.</p>
   3757 
   3758 
   3759 <h3><a name="STCAL_INVOKE_ON_STATIC_DATE_FORMAT_INSTANCE">STCAL: Call to static DateFormat (STCAL_INVOKE_ON_STATIC_DATE_FORMAT_INSTANCE)</a></h3>
   3760 
   3761 
   3762 <p>As the JavaDoc states, DateFormats are inherently unsafe for multithreaded use.
   3763 The detector has found a call to an instance of DateFormat that has been obtained via a static
   3764 field. This looks suspicous.</p>
   3765 <p>For more information on this see <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6231579">Sun Bug #6231579</a>
   3766 and <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6178997">Sun Bug #6178997</a>.</p>
   3767 
   3768 
   3769 <h3><a name="STCAL_STATIC_CALENDAR_INSTANCE">STCAL: Static Calendar field (STCAL_STATIC_CALENDAR_INSTANCE)</a></h3>
   3770 
   3771 
   3772 <p>Even though the JavaDoc does not contain a hint about it, Calendars are inherently unsafe for multihtreaded use.
   3773 Sharing a single instance across thread boundaries without proper synchronization will result in erratic behavior of the
   3774 application. Under 1.4 problems seem to surface less often than under Java 5 where you will probably see
   3775 random ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsExceptions or IndexOutOfBoundsExceptions in sun.util.calendar.BaseCalendar.getCalendarDateFromFixedDate().</p>
   3776 <p>You may also experience serialization problems.</p>
   3777 <p>Using an instance field is recommended.</p>
   3778 <p>For more information on this see <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6231579">Sun Bug #6231579</a>
   3779 and <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6178997">Sun Bug #6178997</a>.</p>
   3780 
   3781 
   3782 <h3><a name="STCAL_STATIC_SIMPLE_DATE_FORMAT_INSTANCE">STCAL: Static DateFormat (STCAL_STATIC_SIMPLE_DATE_FORMAT_INSTANCE)</a></h3>
   3783 
   3784 
   3785 <p>As the JavaDoc states, DateFormats are inherently unsafe for multithreaded use.
   3786 Sharing a single instance across thread boundaries without proper synchronization will result in erratic behavior of the
   3787 application.</p>
   3788 <p>You may also experience serialization problems.</p>
   3789 <p>Using an instance field is recommended.</p>
   3790 <p>For more information on this see <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6231579">Sun Bug #6231579</a>
   3791 and <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6178997">Sun Bug #6178997</a>.</p>
   3792 
   3793 
   3794 <h3><a name="SWL_SLEEP_WITH_LOCK_HELD">SWL: Method calls Thread.sleep() with a lock held (SWL_SLEEP_WITH_LOCK_HELD)</a></h3>
   3795 
   3796       
   3797       <p>
   3798       This method calls Thread.sleep() with a lock held.  This may result
   3799       in very poor performance and scalability, or a deadlock, since other threads may
   3800       be waiting to acquire the lock.  It is a much better idea to call
   3801       wait() on the lock, which releases the lock and allows other threads
   3802       to run.
   3803       </p>
   3804       
   3805    
   3806 <h3><a name="TLW_TWO_LOCK_WAIT">TLW: Wait with two locks held (TLW_TWO_LOCK_WAIT)</a></h3>
   3807 
   3808 
   3809   <p> Waiting on a monitor while two locks are held may cause
   3810   deadlock.
   3811    &nbsp;
   3812    Performing a wait only releases the lock on the object
   3813    being waited on, not any other locks.
   3814    &nbsp;
   3815 This not necessarily a bug, but is worth examining
   3816   closely.</p>
   3817 
   3818     
   3819 <h3><a name="UG_SYNC_SET_UNSYNC_GET">UG: Unsynchronized get method, synchronized set method (UG_SYNC_SET_UNSYNC_GET)</a></h3>
   3820 
   3821 
   3822   <p> This class contains similarly-named get and set
   3823   methods where the set method is synchronized and the get method is not.&nbsp;
   3824   This may result in incorrect behavior at runtime, as callers of the get
   3825   method will not necessarily see a consistent state for the object.&nbsp;
   3826   The get method should be made synchronized.</p>
   3827 
   3828     
   3829 <h3><a name="UL_UNRELEASED_LOCK">UL: Method does not release lock on all paths (UL_UNRELEASED_LOCK)</a></h3>
   3830 
   3831 
   3832 <p> This method acquires a JSR-166 (<code>java.util.concurrent</code>) lock,
   3833 but does not release it on all paths out of the method.  In general, the correct idiom
   3834 for using a JSR-166 lock is:
   3835 </p>
   3836 <pre>
   3837     Lock l = ...;
   3838     l.lock();
   3839     try {
   3840         // do something
   3841     } finally {
   3842         l.unlock();
   3843     }
   3844 </pre>
   3845 
   3846     
   3847 <h3><a name="UL_UNRELEASED_LOCK_EXCEPTION_PATH">UL: Method does not release lock on all exception paths (UL_UNRELEASED_LOCK_EXCEPTION_PATH)</a></h3>
   3848 
   3849 
   3850 <p> This method acquires a JSR-166 (<code>java.util.concurrent</code>) lock,
   3851 but does not release it on all exception paths out of the method.  In general, the correct idiom
   3852 for using a JSR-166 lock is:
   3853 </p>
   3854 <pre>
   3855     Lock l = ...;
   3856     l.lock();
   3857     try {
   3858         // do something
   3859     } finally {
   3860         l.unlock();
   3861     }
   3862 </pre>
   3863 
   3864     
   3865 <h3><a name="UW_UNCOND_WAIT">UW: Unconditional wait (UW_UNCOND_WAIT)</a></h3>
   3866 
   3867 
   3868   <p> This method contains a call to <code>java.lang.Object.wait()</code> which
   3869   is not guarded by conditional control flow.&nbsp; The code should
   3870     verify that condition it intends to wait for is not already satisfied
   3871     before calling wait; any previous notifications will be ignored.
   3872   </p>
   3873 
   3874     
   3875 <h3><a name="VO_VOLATILE_INCREMENT">VO: An increment to a volatile field isn't atomic (VO_VOLATILE_INCREMENT)</a></h3>
   3876 
   3877 
   3878 <p>This code increments a volatile field. Increments of volatile fields aren't
   3879 atomic. If more than one thread is incrementing the field at the same time,
   3880 increments could be lost.
   3881 </p>
   3882 
   3883     
   3884 <h3><a name="VO_VOLATILE_REFERENCE_TO_ARRAY">VO: A volatile reference to an array doesn't treat the array elements as volatile (VO_VOLATILE_REFERENCE_TO_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   3885 
   3886 
   3887 <p>This declares a volatile reference to an array, which might not be what
   3888 you want. With a volatile reference to an array, reads and writes of
   3889 the reference to the array are treated as volatile, but the array elements
   3890 are non-volatile. To get volatile array elements, you will need to use
   3891 one of the atomic array classes in java.util.concurrent (provided
   3892 in Java 5.0).</p>
   3893 
   3894     
   3895 <h3><a name="WL_USING_GETCLASS_RATHER_THAN_CLASS_LITERAL">WL: Synchronization on getClass rather than class literal (WL_USING_GETCLASS_RATHER_THAN_CLASS_LITERAL)</a></h3>
   3896 
   3897       
   3898       <p>
   3899      This instance method synchronizes on <code>this.getClass()</code>. If this class is subclassed,
   3900      subclasses will synchronize on the class object for the subclass, which isn't likely what was intended.
   3901      For example, consider this code from java.awt.Label:</p>
   3902      <pre>
   3903      private static final String base = "label";
   3904      private static int nameCounter = 0;
   3905      String constructComponentName() {
   3906         synchronized (getClass()) {
   3907             return base + nameCounter++;
   3908         }
   3909      }
   3910      </pre>
   3911      <p>Subclasses of <code>Label</code> won't synchronize on the same subclass, giving rise to a datarace.
   3912      Instead, this code should be synchronizing on <code>Label.class</code></p>
   3913       <pre>
   3914      private static final String base = "label";
   3915      private static int nameCounter = 0;
   3916      String constructComponentName() {
   3917         synchronized (Label.class) {
   3918             return base + nameCounter++;
   3919         }
   3920      }
   3921      </pre>
   3922       <p>Bug pattern contributed by Jason Mehrens</p>
   3923       
   3924     
   3925 <h3><a name="WS_WRITEOBJECT_SYNC">WS: Class's writeObject() method is synchronized but nothing else is (WS_WRITEOBJECT_SYNC)</a></h3>
   3926 
   3927 
   3928   <p> This class has a <code>writeObject()</code> method which is synchronized;
   3929   however, no other method of the class is synchronized.</p>
   3930 
   3931     
   3932 <h3><a name="WA_AWAIT_NOT_IN_LOOP">Wa: Condition.await() not in loop  (WA_AWAIT_NOT_IN_LOOP)</a></h3>
   3933 
   3934 
   3935   <p> This method contains a call to <code>java.util.concurrent.await()</code>
   3936    (or variants)
   3937   which is not in a loop.&nbsp; If the object is used for multiple conditions,
   3938   the condition the caller intended to wait for might not be the one
   3939   that actually occurred.</p>
   3940 
   3941     
   3942 <h3><a name="WA_NOT_IN_LOOP">Wa: Wait not in loop  (WA_NOT_IN_LOOP)</a></h3>
   3943 
   3944 
   3945   <p> This method contains a call to <code>java.lang.Object.wait()</code>
   3946   which is not in a loop.&nbsp; If the monitor is used for multiple conditions,
   3947   the condition the caller intended to wait for might not be the one
   3948   that actually occurred.</p>
   3949 
   3950     
   3951 <h3><a name="BX_BOXING_IMMEDIATELY_UNBOXED">Bx: Primitive value is boxed and then immediately unboxed (BX_BOXING_IMMEDIATELY_UNBOXED)</a></h3>
   3952 
   3953 
   3954   <p>A primitive is boxed, and then immediately unboxed. This probably is due to a manual
   3955     boxing in a place where an unboxed value is required, thus forcing the compiler
   3956 to immediately undo the work of the boxing.
   3957 </p>
   3958 
   3959     
   3960 <h3><a name="BX_BOXING_IMMEDIATELY_UNBOXED_TO_PERFORM_COERCION">Bx: Primitive value is boxed then unboxed to perform primitive coercion (BX_BOXING_IMMEDIATELY_UNBOXED_TO_PERFORM_COERCION)</a></h3>
   3961 
   3962 
   3963   <p>A primitive boxed value constructed and then immediately converted into a different primitive type
   3964 (e.g., <code>new Double(d).intValue()</code>). Just perform direct primitive coercion (e.g., <code>(int) d</code>).</p>
   3965 
   3966     
   3967 <h3><a name="BX_UNBOXING_IMMEDIATELY_REBOXED">Bx: Boxed value is unboxed and then immediately reboxed (BX_UNBOXING_IMMEDIATELY_REBOXED)</a></h3>
   3968 
   3969 
   3970   <p>A boxed value is unboxed and then immediately reboxed.
   3971 </p>
   3972 
   3973     
   3974 <h3><a name="DM_BOXED_PRIMITIVE_FOR_PARSING">Bx: Boxing/unboxing to parse a primitive (DM_BOXED_PRIMITIVE_FOR_PARSING)</a></h3>
   3975 
   3976 
   3977   <p>A boxed primitive is created from a String, just to extract the unboxed primitive value.
   3978   It is more efficient to just call the static parseXXX method.</p>
   3979 
   3980     
   3981 <h3><a name="DM_BOXED_PRIMITIVE_TOSTRING">Bx: Method allocates a boxed primitive just to call toString (DM_BOXED_PRIMITIVE_TOSTRING)</a></h3>
   3982 
   3983 
   3984   <p>A boxed primitive is allocated just to call toString(). It is more effective to just use the static
   3985   form of toString which takes the primitive value. So,</p>
   3986   <table>
   3987      <tr><th>Replace...</th><th>With this...</th></tr>
   3988      <tr><td>new Integer(1).toString()</td><td>Integer.toString(1)</td></tr>
   3989      <tr><td>new Long(1).toString()</td><td>Long.toString(1)</td></tr>
   3990      <tr><td>new Float(1.0).toString()</td><td>Float.toString(1.0)</td></tr>
   3991      <tr><td>new Double(1.0).toString()</td><td>Double.toString(1.0)</td></tr>
   3992      <tr><td>new Byte(1).toString()</td><td>Byte.toString(1)</td></tr>
   3993      <tr><td>new Short(1).toString()</td><td>Short.toString(1)</td></tr>
   3994      <tr><td>new Boolean(true).toString()</td><td>Boolean.toString(true)</td></tr>
   3995   </table>
   3996 
   3997     
   3998 <h3><a name="DM_FP_NUMBER_CTOR">Bx: Method invokes inefficient floating-point Number constructor; use static valueOf instead (DM_FP_NUMBER_CTOR)</a></h3>
   3999 
   4000       
   4001       <p>
   4002       Using <code>new Double(double)</code> is guaranteed to always result in a new object whereas
   4003       <code>Double.valueOf(double)</code> allows caching of values to be done by the compiler, class library, or JVM.
   4004       Using of cached values avoids object allocation and the code will be faster.
   4005       </p>
   4006       <p>
   4007       Unless the class must be compatible with JVMs predating Java 1.5,
   4008       use either autoboxing or the <code>valueOf()</code> method when creating instances of <code>Double</code> and <code>Float</code>.
   4009       </p>
   4010       
   4011     
   4012 <h3><a name="DM_NUMBER_CTOR">Bx: Method invokes inefficient Number constructor; use static valueOf instead (DM_NUMBER_CTOR)</a></h3>
   4013 
   4014       
   4015       <p>
   4016       Using <code>new Integer(int)</code> is guaranteed to always result in a new object whereas
   4017       <code>Integer.valueOf(int)</code> allows caching of values to be done by the compiler, class library, or JVM.
   4018       Using of cached values avoids object allocation and the code will be faster.
   4019       </p>
   4020       <p>
   4021       Values between -128 and 127 are guaranteed to have corresponding cached instances
   4022       and using <code>valueOf</code> is approximately 3.5 times faster than using constructor.
   4023       For values outside the constant range the performance of both styles is the same.
   4024       </p>
   4025       <p>
   4026       Unless the class must be compatible with JVMs predating Java 1.5,
   4027       use either autoboxing or the <code>valueOf()</code> method when creating instances of
   4028       <code>Long</code>, <code>Integer</code>, <code>Short</code>, <code>Character</code>, and <code>Byte</code>.
   4029       </p>
   4030       
   4031     
   4032 <h3><a name="DMI_BLOCKING_METHODS_ON_URL">Dm: The equals and hashCode methods of URL are blocking (DMI_BLOCKING_METHODS_ON_URL)</a></h3>
   4033 
   4034 
   4035   <p> The equals and hashCode
   4036 method of URL perform domain name resolution, this can result in a big performance hit.
   4037 See <a href="http://michaelscharf.blogspot.com/2006/11/javaneturlequals-and-hashcode-make.html">http://michaelscharf.blogspot.com/2006/11/javaneturlequals-and-hashcode-make.html</a> for more information.
   4038 Consider using <code>java.net.URI</code> instead.
   4039    </p>
   4040 
   4041     
   4042 <h3><a name="DMI_COLLECTION_OF_URLS">Dm: Maps and sets of URLs can be performance hogs (DMI_COLLECTION_OF_URLS)</a></h3>
   4043 
   4044 
   4045   <p> This method or field is or uses a Map or Set of URLs. Since both the equals and hashCode
   4046 method of URL perform domain name resolution, this can result in a big performance hit.
   4047 See <a href="http://michaelscharf.blogspot.com/2006/11/javaneturlequals-and-hashcode-make.html">http://michaelscharf.blogspot.com/2006/11/javaneturlequals-and-hashcode-make.html</a> for more information.
   4048 Consider using <code>java.net.URI</code> instead.
   4049    </p>
   4050 
   4051     
   4052 <h3><a name="DM_BOOLEAN_CTOR">Dm: Method invokes inefficient Boolean constructor; use Boolean.valueOf(...) instead (DM_BOOLEAN_CTOR)</a></h3>
   4053 
   4054 
   4055   <p> Creating new instances of <code>java.lang.Boolean</code> wastes
   4056   memory, since <code>Boolean</code> objects are immutable and there are
   4057   only two useful values of this type.&nbsp; Use the <code>Boolean.valueOf()</code>
   4058   method (or Java 1.5 autoboxing) to create <code>Boolean</code> objects instead.</p>
   4059 
   4060     
   4061 <h3><a name="DM_GC">Dm: Explicit garbage collection; extremely dubious except in benchmarking code (DM_GC)</a></h3>
   4062 
   4063 
   4064   <p> Code explicitly invokes garbage collection.
   4065   Except for specific use in benchmarking, this is very dubious.</p>
   4066   <p>In the past, situations where people have explicitly invoked
   4067   the garbage collector in routines such as close or finalize methods
   4068   has led to huge performance black holes. Garbage collection
   4069    can be expensive. Any situation that forces hundreds or thousands
   4070    of garbage collections will bring the machine to a crawl.</p>
   4071 
   4072     
   4073 <h3><a name="DM_NEW_FOR_GETCLASS">Dm: Method allocates an object, only to get the class object (DM_NEW_FOR_GETCLASS)</a></h3>
   4074 
   4075 
   4076   <p>This method allocates an object just to call getClass() on it, in order to
   4077   retrieve the Class object for it. It is simpler to just access the .class property of the class.</p>
   4078 
   4079     
   4080 <h3><a name="DM_NEXTINT_VIA_NEXTDOUBLE">Dm: Use the nextInt method of Random rather than nextDouble to generate a random integer (DM_NEXTINT_VIA_NEXTDOUBLE)</a></h3>
   4081 
   4082 
   4083   <p>If <code>r</code> is a <code>java.util.Random</code>, you can generate a random number from <code>0</code> to <code>n-1</code>
   4084 using <code>r.nextInt(n)</code>, rather than using <code>(int)(r.nextDouble() * n)</code>.
   4085 </p>
   4086 <p>The argument to nextInt must be positive. If, for example, you want to generate a random
   4087 value from -99 to 0, use <code>-r.nextInt(100)</code>.
   4088 </p>
   4089 
   4090     
   4091 <h3><a name="DM_STRING_CTOR">Dm: Method invokes inefficient new String(String) constructor (DM_STRING_CTOR)</a></h3>
   4092 
   4093 
   4094   <p> Using the <code>java.lang.String(String)</code> constructor wastes memory
   4095   because the object so constructed will be functionally indistinguishable
   4096   from the <code>String</code> passed as a parameter.&nbsp; Just use the
   4097   argument <code>String</code> directly.</p>
   4098 
   4099     
   4100 <h3><a name="DM_STRING_TOSTRING">Dm: Method invokes toString() method on a String (DM_STRING_TOSTRING)</a></h3>
   4101 
   4102 
   4103   <p> Calling <code>String.toString()</code> is just a redundant operation.
   4104   Just use the String.</p>
   4105 
   4106     
   4107 <h3><a name="DM_STRING_VOID_CTOR">Dm: Method invokes inefficient new String() constructor (DM_STRING_VOID_CTOR)</a></h3>
   4108 
   4109 
   4110   <p> Creating a new <code>java.lang.String</code> object using the
   4111   no-argument constructor wastes memory because the object so created will
   4112   be functionally indistinguishable from the empty string constant
   4113   <code>""</code>.&nbsp; Java guarantees that identical string constants
   4114   will be represented by the same <code>String</code> object.&nbsp; Therefore,
   4115   you should just use the empty string constant directly.</p>
   4116 
   4117     
   4118 <h3><a name="HSC_HUGE_SHARED_STRING_CONSTANT">HSC: Huge string constants is duplicated across multiple class files (HSC_HUGE_SHARED_STRING_CONSTANT)</a></h3>
   4119 
   4120       
   4121       <p>
   4122     A large String constant is duplicated across multiple class files.
   4123     This is likely because a final field is initialized to a String constant, and the Java language
   4124     mandates that all references to a final field from other classes be inlined into
   4125 that classfile. See <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6447475">JDK bug 6447475</a>
   4126     for a description of an occurrence of this bug in the JDK and how resolving it reduced
   4127     the size of the JDK by 1 megabyte.
   4128 </p>
   4129       
   4130    
   4131 <h3><a name="ITA_INEFFICIENT_TO_ARRAY">ITA: Method uses toArray() with zero-length array argument (ITA_INEFFICIENT_TO_ARRAY)</a></h3>
   4132 
   4133 
   4134 <p> This method uses the toArray() method of a collection derived class, and passes
   4135 in a zero-length prototype array argument.  It is more efficient to use
   4136 <code>myCollection.toArray(new Foo[myCollection.size()])</code>
   4137 If the array passed in is big enough to store all of the
   4138 elements of the collection, then it is populated and returned
   4139 directly. This avoids the need to create a second array
   4140 (by reflection) to return as the result.</p>
   4141 
   4142     
   4143 <h3><a name="SBSC_USE_STRINGBUFFER_CONCATENATION">SBSC: Method concatenates strings using + in a loop (SBSC_USE_STRINGBUFFER_CONCATENATION)</a></h3>
   4144 
   4145 
   4146 <p> The method seems to be building a String using concatenation in a loop.
   4147 In each iteration, the String is converted to a StringBuffer/StringBuilder,
   4148    appended to, and converted back to a String.
   4149    This can lead to a cost quadratic in the number of iterations,
   4150    as the growing string is recopied in each iteration. </p>
   4151 
   4152 <p>Better performance can be obtained by using
   4153 a StringBuffer (or StringBuilder in Java 1.5) explicitly.</p>
   4154 
   4155 <p> For example:</p>
   4156 <pre>
   4157   // This is bad
   4158   String s = "";
   4159   for (int i = 0; i &lt; field.length; ++i) {
   4160     s = s + field[i];
   4161   }
   4162 
   4163   // This is better
   4164   StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer();
   4165   for (int i = 0; i &lt; field.length; ++i) {
   4166     buf.append(field[i]);
   4167   }
   4168   String s = buf.toString();
   4169 </pre>
   4170 
   4171     
   4172 <h3><a name="SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC">SIC: Should be a static inner class (SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC)</a></h3>
   4173 
   4174 
   4175   <p> This class is an inner class, but does not use its embedded reference
   4176   to the object which created it.&nbsp; This reference makes the instances
   4177   of the class larger, and may keep the reference to the creator object
   4178   alive longer than necessary.&nbsp; If possible, the class should be
   4179    made static.
   4180 </p>
   4181 
   4182     
   4183 <h3><a name="SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC_ANON">SIC: Could be refactored into a named static inner class (SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC_ANON)</a></h3>
   4184 
   4185 
   4186   <p> This class is an inner class, but does not use its embedded reference
   4187   to the object which created it.&nbsp; This reference makes the instances
   4188   of the class larger, and may keep the reference to the creator object
   4189   alive longer than necessary.&nbsp; If possible, the class should be
   4190   made into a <em>static</em> inner class. Since anonymous inner
   4191 classes cannot be marked as static, doing this will require refactoring
   4192 the inner class so that it is a named inner class.</p>
   4193 
   4194     
   4195 <h3><a name="SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC_NEEDS_THIS">SIC: Could be refactored into a static inner class (SIC_INNER_SHOULD_BE_STATIC_NEEDS_THIS)</a></h3>
   4196 
   4197 
   4198   <p> This class is an inner class, but does not use its embedded reference
   4199   to the object which created it except during construction of the
   4200 inner object.&nbsp; This reference makes the instances
   4201   of the class larger, and may keep the reference to the creator object
   4202   alive longer than necessary.&nbsp; If possible, the class should be
   4203   made into a <em>static</em> inner class. Since the reference to the
   4204    outer object is required during construction of the inner instance,
   4205    the inner class will need to be refactored so as to
   4206    pass a reference to the outer instance to the constructor
   4207    for the inner class.</p>
   4208 
   4209     
   4210 <h3><a name="SS_SHOULD_BE_STATIC">SS: Unread field: should this field be static? (SS_SHOULD_BE_STATIC)</a></h3>
   4211 
   4212 
   4213   <p> This class contains an instance final field that
   4214    is initialized to a compile-time static value.
   4215    Consider making the field static.</p>
   4216 
   4217     
   4218 <h3><a name="UM_UNNECESSARY_MATH">UM: Method calls static Math class method on a constant value (UM_UNNECESSARY_MATH)</a></h3>
   4219 
   4220 
   4221 <p> This method uses a static method from java.lang.Math on a constant value. This method's
   4222 result in this case, can be determined statically, and is faster and sometimes more accurate to
   4223 just use the constant. Methods detected are:
   4224 </p>
   4225 <table>
   4226 <tr>
   4227    <th>Method</th> <th>Parameter</th>
   4228 </tr>
   4229 <tr>
   4230    <td>abs</td> <td>-any-</td>
   4231 </tr>
   4232 <tr>
   4233    <td>acos</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4234 </tr>
   4235 <tr>
   4236    <td>asin</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4237 </tr>
   4238 <tr>
   4239    <td>atan</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4240 </tr>
   4241 <tr>
   4242    <td>atan2</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4243 </tr>
   4244 <tr>
   4245    <td>cbrt</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4246 </tr>
   4247 <tr>
   4248    <td>ceil</td> <td>-any-</td>
   4249 </tr>
   4250 <tr>
   4251    <td>cos</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4252 </tr>
   4253 <tr>
   4254    <td>cosh</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4255 </tr>
   4256 <tr>
   4257    <td>exp</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4258 </tr>
   4259 <tr>
   4260    <td>expm1</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4261 </tr>
   4262 <tr>
   4263    <td>floor</td> <td>-any-</td>
   4264 </tr>
   4265 <tr>
   4266    <td>log</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4267 </tr>
   4268 <tr>
   4269    <td>log10</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4270 </tr>
   4271 <tr>
   4272    <td>rint</td> <td>-any-</td>
   4273 </tr>
   4274 <tr>
   4275    <td>round</td> <td>-any-</td>
   4276 </tr>
   4277 <tr>
   4278    <td>sin</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4279 </tr>
   4280 <tr>
   4281    <td>sinh</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4282 </tr>
   4283 <tr>
   4284    <td>sqrt</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4285 </tr>
   4286 <tr>
   4287    <td>tan</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4288 </tr>
   4289 <tr>
   4290    <td>tanh</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4291 </tr>
   4292 <tr>
   4293    <td>toDegrees</td> <td>0.0 or 1.0</td>
   4294 </tr>
   4295 <tr>
   4296    <td>toRadians</td> <td>0.0</td>
   4297 </tr>
   4298 </table>
   4299 
   4300     
   4301 <h3><a name="UPM_UNCALLED_PRIVATE_METHOD">UPM: Private method is never called (UPM_UNCALLED_PRIVATE_METHOD)</a></h3>
   4302 
   4303 
   4304 <p> This private method is never called. Although it is
   4305 possible that the method will be invoked through reflection,
   4306 it is more likely that the method is never used, and should be
   4307 removed.
   4308 </p>
   4309 
   4310 
   4311 <h3><a name="URF_UNREAD_FIELD">UrF: Unread field (URF_UNREAD_FIELD)</a></h3>
   4312 
   4313 
   4314   <p> This field is never read.&nbsp; Consider removing it from the class.</p>
   4315 
   4316     
   4317 <h3><a name="UUF_UNUSED_FIELD">UuF: Unused field (UUF_UNUSED_FIELD)</a></h3>
   4318 
   4319 
   4320   <p> This field is never used.&nbsp; Consider removing it from the class.</p>
   4321 
   4322     
   4323 <h3><a name="WMI_WRONG_MAP_ITERATOR">WMI: Inefficient use of keySet iterator instead of entrySet iterator (WMI_WRONG_MAP_ITERATOR)</a></h3>
   4324 
   4325 
   4326 <p> This method accesses the value of a Map entry, using a key that was retrieved from
   4327 a keySet iterator. It is more efficient to use an iterator on the entrySet of the map, to avoid the
   4328 Map.get(key) lookup.</p>
   4329 
   4330         
   4331 <h3><a name="DMI_CONSTANT_DB_PASSWORD">Dm: Hardcoded constant database password (DMI_CONSTANT_DB_PASSWORD)</a></h3>
   4332 
   4333       
   4334     <p>This code creates a database connect using a hardcoded, constant password. Anyone with access to either the source code or the compiled code can
   4335     easily learn the password.
   4336 </p>
   4337 
   4338 
   4339     
   4340 <h3><a name="DMI_EMPTY_DB_PASSWORD">Dm: Empty database password (DMI_EMPTY_DB_PASSWORD)</a></h3>
   4341 
   4342       
   4343     <p>This code creates a database connect using a blank or empty password. This indicates that the database is not protected by a password.
   4344 </p>
   4345 
   4346 
   4347     
   4348 <h3><a name="HRS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_COOKIE">HRS: HTTP cookie formed from untrusted input (HRS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_COOKIE)</a></h3>
   4349 
   4350       
   4351     <p>This code constructs an HTTP Cookie using an untrusted HTTP parameter. If this cookie is added to an HTTP response, it will allow a HTTP response splitting
   4352 vulnerability. See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_response_splitting">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_response_splitting</a>
   4353 for more information.</p>
   4354 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of HTTP response splitting.
   4355 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more
   4356 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about HTTP response splitting, you should seriously
   4357 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4358 </p>
   4359 
   4360 
   4361     
   4362 <h3><a name="HRS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_HTTP_HEADER">HRS: HTTP Response splitting vulnerability (HRS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_HTTP_HEADER)</a></h3>
   4363 
   4364             
   4365     <p>This code directly writes an HTTP parameter to an HTTP header, which allows for a HTTP response splitting
   4366 vulnerability. See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_response_splitting">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_response_splitting</a>
   4367 for more information.</p>
   4368 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of HTTP response splitting.
   4369 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more
   4370 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about HTTP response splitting, you should seriously
   4371 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4372 </p>
   4373 
   4374 
   4375         
   4376 <h3><a name="PT_ABSOLUTE_PATH_TRAVERSAL">PT: Absolute path traversal in servlet (PT_ABSOLUTE_PATH_TRAVERSAL)</a></h3>
   4377 
   4378 
   4379     <p>The software uses an HTTP request parameter to construct a pathname that should be within a restricted directory,
   4380 but it does not properly neutralize absolute path sequences such as "/abs/path" that can resolve to a location that is outside of that directory.
   4381 
   4382 See <a href="http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/36.html">http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/36.html</a>
   4383 for more information.</p>
   4384 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of absolute path traversal.
   4385 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more
   4386 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about absolute path traversal, you should seriously
   4387 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4388 </p>
   4389 
   4390 
   4391     
   4392 <h3><a name="PT_RELATIVE_PATH_TRAVERSAL">PT: Relative path traversal in servlet (PT_RELATIVE_PATH_TRAVERSAL)</a></h3>
   4393 
   4394 
   4395     <p>The software uses an HTTP request parameter to construct a pathname that should be within a restricted directory, but it does not properly neutralize sequences such as ".." that can resolve to a location that is outside of that directory.
   4396 
   4397 See <a href="http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/23.html">http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/23.html</a>
   4398 for more information.</p>
   4399 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of relative path traversal.
   4400 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more
   4401 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about relative path traversal, you should seriously
   4402 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4403 </p>
   4404 
   4405 
   4406     
   4407 <h3><a name="SQL_NONCONSTANT_STRING_PASSED_TO_EXECUTE">SQL: Nonconstant string passed to execute method on an SQL statement (SQL_NONCONSTANT_STRING_PASSED_TO_EXECUTE)</a></h3>
   4408 
   4409 
   4410   <p>The method invokes the execute method on an SQL statement with a String that seems
   4411 to be dynamically generated. Consider using
   4412 a prepared statement instead. It is more efficient and less vulnerable to
   4413 SQL injection attacks.
   4414 </p>
   4415 
   4416     
   4417 <h3><a name="SQL_PREPARED_STATEMENT_GENERATED_FROM_NONCONSTANT_STRING">SQL: A prepared statement is generated from a nonconstant String (SQL_PREPARED_STATEMENT_GENERATED_FROM_NONCONSTANT_STRING)</a></h3>
   4418 
   4419 
   4420   <p>The code creates an SQL prepared statement from a nonconstant String.
   4421 If unchecked, tainted data from a user is used in building this String, SQL injection could
   4422 be used to make the prepared statement do something unexpected and undesirable.
   4423 </p>
   4424 
   4425     
   4426 <h3><a name="XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_JSP_WRITER">XSS: JSP reflected cross site scripting vulnerability (XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_JSP_WRITER)</a></h3>
   4427 
   4428 
   4429     <p>This code directly writes an HTTP parameter to JSP output, which allows for a cross site scripting
   4430 vulnerability. See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting</a>
   4431 for more information.</p>
   4432 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of cross site scripting.
   4433 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more cross site scripting
   4434 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about cross site scripting, you should seriously
   4435 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4436 </p>
   4437 
   4438     
   4439 <h3><a name="XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_SEND_ERROR">XSS: Servlet reflected cross site scripting vulnerability in error page (XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_SEND_ERROR)</a></h3>
   4440 
   4441 
   4442     <p>This code directly writes an HTTP parameter to a Server error page (using HttpServletResponse.sendError). Echoing this untrusted input allows
   4443 for a reflected cross site scripting
   4444 vulnerability. See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting</a>
   4445 for more information.</p>
   4446 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of cross site scripting.
   4447 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more cross site scripting
   4448 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about cross site scripting, you should seriously
   4449 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4450 </p>
   4451 
   4452 
   4453     
   4454 <h3><a name="XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_SERVLET_WRITER">XSS: Servlet reflected cross site scripting vulnerability (XSS_REQUEST_PARAMETER_TO_SERVLET_WRITER)</a></h3>
   4455 
   4456 
   4457     <p>This code directly writes an HTTP parameter to Servlet output, which allows for a reflected cross site scripting
   4458 vulnerability. See <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting</a>
   4459 for more information.</p>
   4460 <p>FindBugs looks only for the most blatant, obvious cases of cross site scripting.
   4461 If FindBugs found <em>any</em>, you <em>almost certainly</em> have more cross site scripting
   4462 vulnerabilities that FindBugs doesn't report. If you are concerned about cross site scripting, you should seriously
   4463 consider using a commercial static analysis or pen-testing tool.
   4464 </p>
   4465 
   4466 
   4467     
   4468 <h3><a name="BC_BAD_CAST_TO_ABSTRACT_COLLECTION">BC: Questionable cast to abstract collection  (BC_BAD_CAST_TO_ABSTRACT_COLLECTION)</a></h3>
   4469 
   4470 
   4471 <p>
   4472 This code casts a Collection to an abstract collection
   4473 (such as <code>List</code>, <code>Set</code>, or <code>Map</code>).
   4474 Ensure that you are guaranteed that the object is of the type
   4475 you are casting to. If all you need is to be able
   4476 to iterate through a collection, you don't need to cast it to a Set or List.
   4477 </p>
   4478 
   4479     
   4480 <h3><a name="BC_BAD_CAST_TO_CONCRETE_COLLECTION">BC: Questionable cast to concrete collection (BC_BAD_CAST_TO_CONCRETE_COLLECTION)</a></h3>
   4481 
   4482 
   4483 <p>
   4484 This code casts an abstract collection (such as a Collection, List, or Set)
   4485 to a specific concrete implementation (such as an ArrayList or HashSet).
   4486 This might not be correct, and it may make your code fragile, since
   4487 it makes it harder to switch to other concrete implementations at a future
   4488 point. Unless you have a particular reason to do so, just use the abstract
   4489 collection class.
   4490 </p>
   4491 
   4492     
   4493 <h3><a name="BC_UNCONFIRMED_CAST">BC: Unchecked/unconfirmed cast (BC_UNCONFIRMED_CAST)</a></h3>
   4494 
   4495 
   4496 <p>
   4497 This cast is unchecked, and not all instances of the type casted from can be cast to
   4498 the type it is being cast to. Check that your program logic ensures that this
   4499 cast will not fail.
   4500 </p>
   4501 
   4502     
   4503 <h3><a name="BC_UNCONFIRMED_CAST_OF_RETURN_VALUE">BC: Unchecked/unconfirmed cast of return value from method (BC_UNCONFIRMED_CAST_OF_RETURN_VALUE)</a></h3>
   4504 
   4505 
   4506 <p>
   4507 This code performs an unchecked cast of the return value of a method.
   4508 The code might be calling the method in such a way that the cast is guaranteed to be
   4509 safe, but FindBugs is unable to verify that the cast is safe.  Check that your program logic ensures that this
   4510 cast will not fail.
   4511 </p>
   4512 
   4513     
   4514 <h3><a name="BC_VACUOUS_INSTANCEOF">BC: instanceof will always return true (BC_VACUOUS_INSTANCEOF)</a></h3>
   4515 
   4516 
   4517 <p>
   4518 This instanceof test will always return true (unless the value being tested is null).
   4519 Although this is safe, make sure it isn't
   4520 an indication of some misunderstanding or some other logic error.
   4521 If you really want to test the value for being null, perhaps it would be clearer to do
   4522 better to do a null test rather than an instanceof test.
   4523 </p>
   4524 
   4525     
   4526 <h3><a name="ICAST_QUESTIONABLE_UNSIGNED_RIGHT_SHIFT">BSHIFT: Unsigned right shift cast to short/byte (ICAST_QUESTIONABLE_UNSIGNED_RIGHT_SHIFT)</a></h3>
   4527 
   4528 
   4529 <p>
   4530 The code performs an unsigned right shift, whose result is then
   4531 cast to a short or byte, which discards the upper bits of the result.
   4532 Since the upper bits are discarded, there may be no difference between
   4533 a signed and unsigned right shift (depending upon the size of the shift).
   4534 </p>
   4535 
   4536     
   4537 <h3><a name="CI_CONFUSED_INHERITANCE">CI: Class is final but declares protected field (CI_CONFUSED_INHERITANCE)</a></h3>
   4538 
   4539       
   4540       <p>
   4541       This class is declared to be final, but declares fields to be protected. Since the class
   4542       is final, it can not be derived from, and the use of protected is confusing. The access
   4543       modifier for the field should be changed to private or public to represent the true
   4544       use for the field.
   4545       </p>
   4546       
   4547     
   4548 <h3><a name="DB_DUPLICATE_BRANCHES">DB: Method uses the same code for two branches (DB_DUPLICATE_BRANCHES)</a></h3>
   4549 
   4550       
   4551       <p>
   4552       This method uses the same code to implement two branches of a conditional branch.
   4553     Check to ensure that this isn't a coding mistake.
   4554       </p>
   4555       
   4556    
   4557 <h3><a name="DB_DUPLICATE_SWITCH_CLAUSES">DB: Method uses the same code for two switch clauses (DB_DUPLICATE_SWITCH_CLAUSES)</a></h3>
   4558 
   4559       
   4560       <p>
   4561       This method uses the same code to implement two clauses of a switch statement.
   4562     This could be a case of duplicate code, but it might also indicate
   4563     a coding mistake.
   4564       </p>
   4565       
   4566    
   4567 <h3><a name="DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE">DLS: Dead store to local variable (DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE)</a></h3>
   4568 
   4569 
   4570 <p>
   4571 This instruction assigns a value to a local variable,
   4572 but the value is not read or used in any subsequent instruction.
   4573 Often, this indicates an error, because the value computed is never
   4574 used.
   4575 </p>
   4576 <p>
   4577 Note that Sun's javac compiler often generates dead stores for
   4578 final local variables.  Because FindBugs is a bytecode-based tool,
   4579 there is no easy way to eliminate these false positives.
   4580 </p>
   4581 
   4582     
   4583 <h3><a name="DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_IN_RETURN">DLS: Useless assignment in return statement (DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_IN_RETURN)</a></h3>
   4584 
   4585       
   4586 <p>
   4587 This statement assigns to a local variable in a return statement. This assignment
   4588 has effect. Please verify that this statement does the right thing.
   4589 </p>
   4590 
   4591     
   4592 <h3><a name="DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_OF_NULL">DLS: Dead store of null to local variable (DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_OF_NULL)</a></h3>
   4593 
   4594 
   4595 <p>The code stores null into a local variable, and the stored value is not
   4596 read. This store may have been introduced to assist the garbage collector, but
   4597 as of Java SE 6.0, this is no longer needed or useful.
   4598 </p>
   4599 
   4600     
   4601 <h3><a name="DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_SHADOWS_FIELD">DLS: Dead store to local variable that shadows field (DLS_DEAD_LOCAL_STORE_SHADOWS_FIELD)</a></h3>
   4602 
   4603 
   4604 <p>
   4605 This instruction assigns a value to a local variable,
   4606 but the value is not read or used in any subsequent instruction.
   4607 Often, this indicates an error, because the value computed is never
   4608 used. There is a field with the same name as the local variable. Did you
   4609 mean to assign to that variable instead?
   4610 </p>
   4611 
   4612     
   4613 <h3><a name="DMI_HARDCODED_ABSOLUTE_FILENAME">DMI: Code contains a hard coded reference to an absolute pathname (DMI_HARDCODED_ABSOLUTE_FILENAME)</a></h3>
   4614 
   4615 
   4616 <p>This code constructs a File object using a hard coded to an absolute pathname
   4617 (e.g., <code>new File("/home/dannyc/workspace/j2ee/src/share/com/sun/enterprise/deployment");</code>
   4618 </p>
   4619 
   4620     
   4621 <h3><a name="DMI_NONSERIALIZABLE_OBJECT_WRITTEN">DMI: Non serializable object written to ObjectOutput (DMI_NONSERIALIZABLE_OBJECT_WRITTEN)</a></h3>
   4622 
   4623 
   4624 <p>
   4625 This code seems to be passing a non-serializable object to the ObjectOutput.writeObject method.
   4626 If the object is, indeed, non-serializable, an error will result.
   4627 </p>
   4628 
   4629     
   4630 <h3><a name="DMI_USELESS_SUBSTRING">DMI: Invocation of substring(0), which returns the original value (DMI_USELESS_SUBSTRING)</a></h3>
   4631 
   4632 
   4633 <p>
   4634 This code invokes substring(0) on a String, which returns the original value.
   4635 </p>
   4636 
   4637     
   4638 <h3><a name="DMI_THREAD_PASSED_WHERE_RUNNABLE_EXPECTED">Dm: Thread passed where Runnable expected (DMI_THREAD_PASSED_WHERE_RUNNABLE_EXPECTED)</a></h3>
   4639 
   4640 
   4641   <p> A Thread object is passed as a parameter to a method where
   4642 a Runnable is expected. This is rather unusual, and may indicate a logic error
   4643 or cause unexpected behavior.
   4644    </p>
   4645 
   4646     
   4647 <h3><a name="EQ_DOESNT_OVERRIDE_EQUALS">Eq: Class doesn't override equals in superclass (EQ_DOESNT_OVERRIDE_EQUALS)</a></h3>
   4648 
   4649 
   4650   <p> This class extends a class that defines an equals method and adds fields, but doesn't
   4651 define an equals method itself. Thus, equality on instances of this class will
   4652 ignore the identity of the subclass and the added fields. Be sure this is what is intended,
   4653 and that you don't need to override the equals method. Even if you don't need to override
   4654 the equals method, consider overriding it anyway to document the fact
   4655 that the equals method for the subclass just return the result of
   4656 invoking super.equals(o).
   4657   </p>
   4658 
   4659     
   4660 <h3><a name="EQ_UNUSUAL">Eq: Unusual equals method  (EQ_UNUSUAL)</a></h3>
   4661 
   4662 
   4663   <p> This class doesn't do any of the patterns we recognize for checking that the type of the argument
   4664 is compatible with the type of the <code>this</code> object. There might not be anything wrong with
   4665 this code, but it is worth reviewing.
   4666 </p>
   4667 
   4668     
   4669 <h3><a name="FE_FLOATING_POINT_EQUALITY">FE: Test for floating point equality (FE_FLOATING_POINT_EQUALITY)</a></h3>
   4670 
   4671    
   4672     <p>
   4673     This operation compares two floating point values for equality.
   4674     Because floating point calculations may involve rounding,
   4675    calculated float and double values may not be accurate.
   4676     For values that must be precise, such as monetary values,
   4677    consider using a fixed-precision type such as BigDecimal.
   4678     For values that need not be precise, consider comparing for equality
   4679     within some range, for example:
   4680     <code>if ( Math.abs(x - y) &lt; .0000001 )</code>.
   4681    See the Java Language Specification, section 4.2.4.
   4682     </p>
   4683     
   4684      
   4685 <h3><a name="VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION_TO_BOOLEAN">FS: Non-Boolean argument formatted using %b format specifier (VA_FORMAT_STRING_BAD_CONVERSION_TO_BOOLEAN)</a></h3>
   4686 
   4687 
   4688 <p>
   4689 An argument not of type Boolean is being formatted with a %b format specifier. This won't throw an
   4690 exception; instead, it will print true for any nonnull value, and false for null.
   4691 This feature of format strings is strange, and may not be what you intended.
   4692 </p>
   4693 
   4694      
   4695 <h3><a name="IA_AMBIGUOUS_INVOCATION_OF_INHERITED_OR_OUTER_METHOD">IA: Potentially ambiguous invocation of either an inherited or outer method (IA_AMBIGUOUS_INVOCATION_OF_INHERITED_OR_OUTER_METHOD)</a></h3>
   4696 
   4697 
   4698   <p> 
   4699 An inner class is invoking a method that could be resolved to either a inherited method or a method defined in an outer class. 
   4700 For example, you invoke <code>foo(17)</code>, which is defined in both a superclass and in an outer method.
   4701 By the Java semantics,
   4702 it will be resolved to invoke the inherited method, but this may not be want
   4703 you intend. 
   4704 </p>
   4705 <p>If you really intend to invoke the inherited method,
   4706 invoke it by invoking the method on super (e.g., invoke super.foo(17)), and
   4707 thus it will be clear to other readers of your code and to FindBugs
   4708 that you want to invoke the inherited method, not the method in the outer class.
   4709 </p>
   4710 <p>If you call <code>this.foo(17)</code>, then the inherited method will be invoked. However, since FindBugs only looks at
   4711 classfiles, it 
   4712 can't tell the difference between an invocation of <code>this.foo(17)</code> and <code>foo(17)</code>, it will still
   4713 complain about a potential ambiguous invocation.
   4714 </p>
   4715 
   4716     
   4717 <h3><a name="IC_INIT_CIRCULARITY">IC: Initialization circularity (IC_INIT_CIRCULARITY)</a></h3>
   4718 
   4719 
   4720   <p> A circularity was detected in the static initializers of the two
   4721   classes referenced by the bug instance.&nbsp; Many kinds of unexpected
   4722   behavior may arise from such circularity.</p>
   4723 
   4724     
   4725 <h3><a name="ICAST_IDIV_CAST_TO_DOUBLE">ICAST: Integral division result cast to double or float (ICAST_IDIV_CAST_TO_DOUBLE)</a></h3>
   4726 
   4727 
   4728 <p>
   4729 This code casts the result of an integral division (e.g., int or long division)
   4730 operation to double or
   4731 float.
   4732 Doing division on integers truncates the result
   4733 to the integer value closest to zero.  The fact that the result
   4734 was cast to double suggests that this precision should have been retained.
   4735 What was probably meant was to cast one or both of the operands to
   4736 double <em>before</em> performing the division.  Here is an example:
   4737 </p>
   4738 <blockquote>
   4739 <pre>
   4740 int x = 2;
   4741 int y = 5;
   4742 // Wrong: yields result 0.0
   4743 double value1 =  x / y;
   4744 
   4745 // Right: yields result 0.4
   4746 double value2 =  x / (double) y;
   4747 </pre>
   4748 </blockquote>
   4749 
   4750     
   4751 <h3><a name="ICAST_INTEGER_MULTIPLY_CAST_TO_LONG">ICAST: Result of integer multiplication cast to long (ICAST_INTEGER_MULTIPLY_CAST_TO_LONG)</a></h3>
   4752 
   4753 
   4754 <p>
   4755 This code performs integer multiply and then converts the result to a long,
   4756 as in:</p>
   4757 <pre>
   4758     long convertDaysToMilliseconds(int days) { return 1000*3600*24*days; }
   4759 </pre>
   4760 <p>
   4761 If the multiplication is done using long arithmetic, you can avoid
   4762 the possibility that the result will overflow. For example, you
   4763 could fix the above code to:</p>
   4764 <pre>
   4765     long convertDaysToMilliseconds(int days) { return 1000L*3600*24*days; }
   4766 </pre>
   4767 or
   4768 <pre>
   4769     static final long MILLISECONDS_PER_DAY = 24L*3600*1000;
   4770     long convertDaysToMilliseconds(int days) { return days * MILLISECONDS_PER_DAY; }
   4771 </pre>
   4772 
   4773     
   4774 <h3><a name="IM_AVERAGE_COMPUTATION_COULD_OVERFLOW">IM: Computation of average could overflow (IM_AVERAGE_COMPUTATION_COULD_OVERFLOW)</a></h3>
   4775 
   4776 
   4777 <p>The code computes the average of two integers using either division or signed right shift,
   4778 and then uses the result as the index of an array.
   4779 If the values being averaged are very large, this can overflow (resulting in the computation
   4780 of a negative average).  Assuming that the result is intended to be nonnegative, you
   4781 can use an unsigned right shift instead. In other words, rather that using <code>(low+high)/2</code>,
   4782 use <code>(low+high) &gt;&gt;&gt; 1</code>
   4783 </p>
   4784 <p>This bug exists in many earlier implementations of binary search and merge sort.
   4785 Martin Buchholz <a href="http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6412541">found and fixed it</a>
   4786 in the JDK libraries, and Joshua Bloch
   4787 <a href="http://googleresearch.blogspot.com/2006/06/extra-extra-read-all-about-it-nearly.html">widely
   4788 publicized the bug pattern</a>.
   4789 </p>
   4790 
   4791     
   4792 <h3><a name="IM_BAD_CHECK_FOR_ODD">IM: Check for oddness that won't work for negative numbers  (IM_BAD_CHECK_FOR_ODD)</a></h3>
   4793 
   4794 
   4795 <p>
   4796 The code uses x % 2 == 1 to check to see if a value is odd, but this won't work
   4797 for negative numbers (e.g., (-5) % 2 == -1). If this code is intending to check
   4798 for oddness, consider using x &amp; 1 == 1, or x % 2 != 0.
   4799 </p>
   4800 
   4801     
   4802 <h3><a name="INT_BAD_REM_BY_1">INT: Integer remainder modulo 1 (INT_BAD_REM_BY_1)</a></h3>
   4803 
   4804 
   4805 <p> Any expression (exp % 1) is guaranteed to always return zero.
   4806 Did you mean (exp &amp; 1) or (exp % 2) instead?
   4807 </p>
   4808 
   4809     
   4810 <h3><a name="INT_VACUOUS_BIT_OPERATION">INT: Vacuous bit mask operation on integer value (INT_VACUOUS_BIT_OPERATION)</a></h3>
   4811 
   4812 
   4813 <p> This is an integer bit operation (and, or, or exclusive or) that doesn't do any useful work
   4814 (e.g., <code>v & 0xffffffff</code>).
   4815 
   4816 </p>
   4817 
   4818     
   4819 <h3><a name="INT_VACUOUS_COMPARISON">INT: Vacuous comparison of integer value (INT_VACUOUS_COMPARISON)</a></h3>
   4820 
   4821 
   4822 <p> There is an integer comparison that always returns
   4823 the same value (e.g., x &lt;= Integer.MAX_VALUE).
   4824 </p>
   4825 
   4826     
   4827 <h3><a name="MTIA_SUSPECT_SERVLET_INSTANCE_FIELD">MTIA: Class extends Servlet class and uses instance variables (MTIA_SUSPECT_SERVLET_INSTANCE_FIELD)</a></h3>
   4828 
   4829    
   4830     <p>
   4831     This class extends from a Servlet class, and uses an instance member variable. Since only
   4832     one instance of a Servlet class is created by the J2EE framework, and used in a
   4833     multithreaded way, this paradigm is highly discouraged and most likely problematic. Consider
   4834     only using method local variables.
   4835     </p>
   4836     
   4837       
   4838 <h3><a name="MTIA_SUSPECT_STRUTS_INSTANCE_FIELD">MTIA: Class extends Struts Action class and uses instance variables (MTIA_SUSPECT_STRUTS_INSTANCE_FIELD)</a></h3>
   4839 
   4840    
   4841     <p>
   4842     This class extends from a Struts Action class, and uses an instance member variable. Since only
   4843     one instance of a struts Action class is created by the Struts framework, and used in a
   4844     multithreaded way, this paradigm is highly discouraged and most likely problematic. Consider
   4845     only using method local variables. Only instance fields that are written outside of a monitor
   4846     are reported.
   4847     </p>
   4848     
   4849       
   4850 <h3><a name="NP_DEREFERENCE_OF_READLINE_VALUE">NP: Dereference of the result of readLine() without nullcheck (NP_DEREFERENCE_OF_READLINE_VALUE)</a></h3>
   4851 
   4852 
   4853   <p> The result of invoking readLine() is dereferenced without checking to see if the result is null. If there are no more lines of text
   4854 to read, readLine() will return null and dereferencing that will generate a null pointer exception.
   4855 </p>
   4856 
   4857     
   4858 <h3><a name="NP_IMMEDIATE_DEREFERENCE_OF_READLINE">NP: Immediate dereference of the result of readLine() (NP_IMMEDIATE_DEREFERENCE_OF_READLINE)</a></h3>
   4859 
   4860 
   4861   <p> The result of invoking readLine() is immediately dereferenced. If there are no more lines of text
   4862 to read, readLine() will return null and dereferencing that will generate a null pointer exception.
   4863 </p>
   4864 
   4865     
   4866 <h3><a name="NP_LOAD_OF_KNOWN_NULL_VALUE">NP: Load of known null value (NP_LOAD_OF_KNOWN_NULL_VALUE)</a></h3>
   4867 
   4868 
   4869   <p> The variable referenced at this point is known to be null due to an earlier
   4870    check against null. Although this is valid, it might be a mistake (perhaps you
   4871 intended to refer to a different variable, or perhaps the earlier check to see if the
   4872 variable is null should have been a check to see if it was nonnull).
   4873 </p>
   4874 
   4875     
   4876 <h3><a name="NP_METHOD_PARAMETER_TIGHTENS_ANNOTATION">NP: Method tightens nullness annotation on parameter (NP_METHOD_PARAMETER_TIGHTENS_ANNOTATION)</a></h3>
   4877 
   4878         <p>
   4879         A method should always implement the contract of a method it overrides. Thus, if a method takes a parameter
   4880 	that is marked as @Nullable, you shouldn't override that method in a subclass with a method where that parameter is @Nonnull.
   4881 	Doing so violates the contract that the method should handle a null parameter.
   4882         </p>
   4883       
   4884 <h3><a name="NP_METHOD_RETURN_RELAXING_ANNOTATION">NP: Method relaxes nullness annotation on return value (NP_METHOD_RETURN_RELAXING_ANNOTATION)</a></h3>
   4885 
   4886         <p>
   4887         A method should always implement the contract of a method it overrides. Thus, if a method takes is annotated
   4888 	as returning a @Nonnull value, 
   4889 	you shouldn't override that method in a subclass with a method annotated as returning a @Nullable or @CheckForNull value.
   4890 	Doing so violates the contract that the method shouldn't return null.
   4891         </p>
   4892       
   4893 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_FROM_RETURN_VALUE">NP: Possible null pointer dereference due to return value of called method (NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_FROM_RETURN_VALUE)</a></h3>
   4894 
   4895       
   4896 <p> The return value from a method is dereferenced without a null check,
   4897 and the return value of that method is one that should generally be checked
   4898 for null.  This may lead to a <code>NullPointerException</code> when the code is executed.
   4899 </p>
   4900       
   4901    
   4902 <h3><a name="NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_MIGHT_BE_INFEASIBLE">NP: Possible null pointer dereference on branch that might be infeasible (NP_NULL_ON_SOME_PATH_MIGHT_BE_INFEASIBLE)</a></h3>
   4903 
   4904 
   4905 <p> There is a branch of statement that, <em>if executed,</em>  guarantees that
   4906 a null value will be dereferenced, which
   4907 would generate a <code>NullPointerException</code> when the code is executed.
   4908 Of course, the problem might be that the branch or statement is infeasible and that
   4909 the null pointer exception can't ever be executed; deciding that is beyond the ability of FindBugs.
   4910 Due to the fact that this value had been previously tested for nullness,
   4911 this is a definite possibility.
   4912 </p>
   4913 
   4914     
   4915 <h3><a name="NP_PARAMETER_MUST_BE_NONNULL_BUT_MARKED_AS_NULLABLE">NP: Parameter must be nonnull but is marked as nullable (NP_PARAMETER_MUST_BE_NONNULL_BUT_MARKED_AS_NULLABLE)</a></h3>
   4916 
   4917 
   4918 <p> This parameter is always used in a way that requires it to be nonnull,
   4919 but the parameter is explicitly annotated as being Nullable. Either the use
   4920 of the parameter or the annotation is wrong.
   4921 </p>
   4922 
   4923     
   4924 <h3><a name="NP_UNWRITTEN_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">NP: Read of unwritten public or protected field (NP_UNWRITTEN_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD)</a></h3>
   4925 
   4926 
   4927   <p> The program is dereferencing a public or protected
   4928 field that does not seem to ever have a non-null value written to it.
   4929 Unless the field is initialized via some mechanism not seen by the analysis,
   4930 dereferencing this value will generate a null pointer exception.
   4931 </p>
   4932 
   4933     
   4934 <h3><a name="NS_DANGEROUS_NON_SHORT_CIRCUIT">NS: Potentially dangerous use of non-short-circuit logic (NS_DANGEROUS_NON_SHORT_CIRCUIT)</a></h3>
   4935 
   4936 
   4937   <p> This code seems to be using non-short-circuit logic (e.g., &amp;
   4938 or |)
   4939 rather than short-circuit logic (&amp;&amp; or ||). In addition,
   4940 it seem possible that, depending on the value of the left hand side, you might not
   4941 want to evaluate the right hand side (because it would have side effects, could cause an exception
   4942 or could be expensive.</p>
   4943 <p>
   4944 Non-short-circuit logic causes both sides of the expression
   4945 to be evaluated even when the result can be inferred from
   4946 knowing the left-hand side. This can be less efficient and
   4947 can result in errors if the left-hand side guards cases
   4948 when evaluating the right-hand side can generate an error.
   4949 </p>
   4950 
   4951 <p>See <a href="http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/expressions.html#15.22.2">the Java
   4952 Language Specification</a> for details
   4953 
   4954 </p>
   4955 
   4956     
   4957 <h3><a name="NS_NON_SHORT_CIRCUIT">NS: Questionable use of non-short-circuit logic (NS_NON_SHORT_CIRCUIT)</a></h3>
   4958 
   4959 
   4960   <p> This code seems to be using non-short-circuit logic (e.g., &amp;
   4961 or |)
   4962 rather than short-circuit logic (&amp;&amp; or ||).
   4963 Non-short-circuit logic causes both sides of the expression
   4964 to be evaluated even when the result can be inferred from
   4965 knowing the left-hand side. This can be less efficient and
   4966 can result in errors if the left-hand side guards cases
   4967 when evaluating the right-hand side can generate an error.
   4968 
   4969 <p>See <a href="http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/expressions.html#15.22.2">the Java
   4970 Language Specification</a> for details
   4971 
   4972 </p>
   4973 
   4974     
   4975 <h3><a name="PZLA_PREFER_ZERO_LENGTH_ARRAYS">PZLA: Consider returning a zero length array rather than null (PZLA_PREFER_ZERO_LENGTH_ARRAYS)</a></h3>
   4976 
   4977 
   4978 <p> It is often a better design to
   4979 return a length zero array rather than a null reference to indicate that there
   4980 are no results (i.e., an empty list of results).
   4981 This way, no explicit check for null is needed by clients of the method.</p>
   4982 
   4983 <p>On the other hand, using null to indicate
   4984 "there is no answer to this question" is probably appropriate.
   4985 For example, <code>File.listFiles()</code> returns an empty list
   4986 if given a directory containing no files, and returns null if the file
   4987 is not a directory.</p>
   4988 
   4989     
   4990 <h3><a name="QF_QUESTIONABLE_FOR_LOOP">QF: Complicated, subtle or wrong increment in for-loop  (QF_QUESTIONABLE_FOR_LOOP)</a></h3>
   4991 
   4992 
   4993    <p>Are you sure this for loop is incrementing the correct variable?
   4994    It appears that another variable is being initialized and checked
   4995    by the for loop.
   4996 </p>
   4997 
   4998     
   4999 <h3><a name="RCN_REDUNDANT_COMPARISON_OF_NULL_AND_NONNULL_VALUE">RCN: Redundant comparison of non-null value to null (RCN_REDUNDANT_COMPARISON_OF_NULL_AND_NONNULL_VALUE)</a></h3>
   5000 
   5001 
   5002 <p> This method contains a reference known to be non-null with another reference
   5003 known to be null.</p>
   5004 
   5005     
   5006 <h3><a name="RCN_REDUNDANT_COMPARISON_TWO_NULL_VALUES">RCN: Redundant comparison of two null values (RCN_REDUNDANT_COMPARISON_TWO_NULL_VALUES)</a></h3>
   5007 
   5008 
   5009 <p> This method contains a redundant comparison of two references known to
   5010 both be definitely null.</p>
   5011 
   5012     
   5013 <h3><a name="RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_OF_NONNULL_VALUE">RCN: Redundant nullcheck of value known to be non-null (RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_OF_NONNULL_VALUE)</a></h3>
   5014 
   5015 
   5016 <p> This method contains a redundant check of a known non-null value against
   5017 the constant null.</p>
   5018 
   5019     
   5020 <h3><a name="RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_OF_NULL_VALUE">RCN: Redundant nullcheck of value known to be null (RCN_REDUNDANT_NULLCHECK_OF_NULL_VALUE)</a></h3>
   5021 
   5022 
   5023 <p> This method contains a redundant check of a known null value against
   5024 the constant null.</p>
   5025 
   5026     
   5027 <h3><a name="REC_CATCH_EXCEPTION">REC: Exception is caught when Exception is not thrown (REC_CATCH_EXCEPTION)</a></h3>
   5028 
   5029   
   5030   <p>
   5031   This method uses a try-catch block that catches Exception objects, but Exception is not
   5032   thrown within the try block, and RuntimeException is not explicitly caught.  It is a common bug pattern to
   5033   say try { ... } catch (Exception e) { something } as a shorthand for catching a number of types of exception
   5034   each of whose catch blocks is identical, but this construct also accidentally catches RuntimeException as well,
   5035   masking potential bugs.
   5036   </p>
   5037   <p>A better approach is to either explicitly catch the specific exceptions that are thrown,
   5038   or to explicitly catch RuntimeException exception, rethrow it, and then catch all non-Runtime Exceptions, as shown below:</p>
   5039   <pre>
   5040   try {
   5041     ...
   5042   } catch (RuntimeException e) {
   5043     throw e;
   5044   } catch (Exception e) {
   5045     ... deal with all non-runtime exceptions ...
   5046   }</pre>
   5047   
   5048      
   5049 <h3><a name="RI_REDUNDANT_INTERFACES">RI: Class implements same interface as superclass (RI_REDUNDANT_INTERFACES)</a></h3>
   5050 
   5051    
   5052     <p>
   5053     This class declares that it implements an interface that is also implemented by a superclass.
   5054     This is redundant because once a superclass implements an interface, all subclasses by default also
   5055     implement this interface. It may point out that the inheritance hierarchy has changed since
   5056     this class was created, and consideration should be given to the ownership of
   5057     the interface's implementation.
   5058     </p>
   5059     
   5060      
   5061 <h3><a name="RV_CHECK_FOR_POSITIVE_INDEXOF">RV: Method checks to see if result of String.indexOf is positive (RV_CHECK_FOR_POSITIVE_INDEXOF)</a></h3>
   5062 
   5063 
   5064    <p> The method invokes String.indexOf and checks to see if the result is positive or non-positive.
   5065    It is much more typical to check to see if the result is negative or non-negative. It is
   5066    positive only if the substring checked for occurs at some place other than at the beginning of
   5067    the String.</p>
   5068 
   5069     
   5070 <h3><a name="RV_DONT_JUST_NULL_CHECK_READLINE">RV: Method discards result of readLine after checking if it is nonnull (RV_DONT_JUST_NULL_CHECK_READLINE)</a></h3>
   5071 
   5072 
   5073    <p> The value returned by readLine is discarded after checking to see if the return
   5074 value is non-null. In almost all situations, if the result is non-null, you will want
   5075 to use that non-null value. Calling readLine again will give you a different line.</p>
   5076 
   5077     
   5078 <h3><a name="RV_REM_OF_HASHCODE">RV: Remainder of hashCode could be negative (RV_REM_OF_HASHCODE)</a></h3>
   5079 
   5080 
   5081 <p> This code computes a hashCode, and then computes
   5082 the remainder of that value modulo another value. Since the hashCode
   5083 can be negative, the result of the remainder operation
   5084 can also be negative. </p>
   5085 <p> Assuming you want to ensure that the result of your computation is nonnegative,
   5086 you may need to change your code.
   5087 If you know the divisor is a power of 2,
   5088 you can use a bitwise and operator instead (i.e., instead of
   5089 using <code>x.hashCode()%n</code>, use <code>x.hashCode()&amp;(n-1)</code>.
   5090 This is probably faster than computing the remainder as well.
   5091 If you don't know that the divisor is a power of 2, take the absolute
   5092 value of the result of the remainder operation (i.e., use
   5093 <code>Math.abs(x.hashCode()%n)</code>
   5094 </p>
   5095 
   5096     
   5097 <h3><a name="RV_REM_OF_RANDOM_INT">RV: Remainder of 32-bit signed random integer (RV_REM_OF_RANDOM_INT)</a></h3>
   5098 
   5099 
   5100 <p> This code generates a random signed integer and then computes
   5101 the remainder of that value modulo another value. Since the random
   5102 number can be negative, the result of the remainder operation
   5103 can also be negative. Be sure this is intended, and strongly
   5104 consider using the Random.nextInt(int) method instead.
   5105 </p>
   5106 
   5107     
   5108 <h3><a name="RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED_INFERRED">RV: Method ignores return value, is this OK? (RV_RETURN_VALUE_IGNORED_INFERRED)</a></h3>
   5109 
   5110 
   5111 <p>This code calls a method and ignores the return value. The return value
   5112 is the same type as the type the method is invoked on, and from our analysis it looks
   5113 like the return value might be important (e.g., like ignoring the
   5114 return value of <code>String.toLowerCase()</code>).
   5115 </p>
   5116 <p>We are guessing that ignoring the return value might be a bad idea just from
   5117 a simple analysis of the body of the method. You can use a @CheckReturnValue annotation
   5118 to instruct FindBugs as to whether ignoring the return value of this method
   5119 is important or acceptable.
   5120 </p>
   5121 <p>Please investigate this closely to decide whether it is OK to ignore the return value.
   5122 </p>
   5123 
   5124     
   5125 <h3><a name="SA_FIELD_DOUBLE_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Double assignment of field (SA_FIELD_DOUBLE_ASSIGNMENT)</a></h3>
   5126 
   5127 
   5128 <p> This method contains a double assignment of a field; e.g.
   5129 </p>
   5130 <pre>
   5131   int x,y;
   5132   public void foo() {
   5133     x = x = 17;
   5134   }
   5135 </pre>
   5136 <p>Assigning to a field twice is useless, and may indicate a logic error or typo.</p>
   5137 
   5138     
   5139 <h3><a name="SA_LOCAL_DOUBLE_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Double assignment of local variable  (SA_LOCAL_DOUBLE_ASSIGNMENT)</a></h3>
   5140 
   5141 
   5142 <p> This method contains a double assignment of a local variable; e.g.
   5143 </p>
   5144 <pre>
   5145   public void foo() {
   5146     int x,y;
   5147     x = x = 17;
   5148   }
   5149 </pre>
   5150 <p>Assigning the same value to a variable twice is useless, and may indicate a logic error or typo.</p>
   5151 
   5152     
   5153 <h3><a name="SA_LOCAL_SELF_ASSIGNMENT">SA: Self assignment of local variable (SA_LOCAL_SELF_ASSIGNMENT)</a></h3>
   5154 
   5155 
   5156 <p> This method contains a self assignment of a local variable; e.g.</p>
   5157 <pre>
   5158   public void foo() {
   5159     int x = 3;
   5160     x = x;
   5161   }
   5162 </pre>
   5163 <p>
   5164 Such assignments are useless, and may indicate a logic error or typo.
   5165 </p>
   5166 
   5167     
   5168 <h3><a name="SF_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH">SF: Switch statement found where one case falls through to the next case (SF_SWITCH_FALLTHROUGH)</a></h3>
   5169 
   5170 
   5171   <p> This method contains a switch statement where one case branch will fall through to the next case.
   5172   Usually you need to end this case with a break or return.</p>
   5173 
   5174     
   5175 <h3><a name="SF_SWITCH_NO_DEFAULT">SF: Switch statement found where default case is missing (SF_SWITCH_NO_DEFAULT)</a></h3>
   5176 
   5177 
   5178   <p> This method contains a switch statement where default case is missing.
   5179   Usually you need to provide a default case.</p>
   5180   <p>Because the analysis only looks at the generated bytecode, this warning can be incorrect triggered if
   5181 the default case is at the end of the switch statement and doesn't end with a break statement.
   5182 
   5183     
   5184 <h3><a name="ST_WRITE_TO_STATIC_FROM_INSTANCE_METHOD">ST: Write to static field from instance method (ST_WRITE_TO_STATIC_FROM_INSTANCE_METHOD)</a></h3>
   5185 
   5186 
   5187   <p> This instance method writes to a static field. This is tricky to get
   5188 correct if multiple instances are being manipulated,
   5189 and generally bad practice.
   5190 </p>
   5191 
   5192     
   5193 <h3><a name="SE_PRIVATE_READ_RESOLVE_NOT_INHERITED">Se: Private readResolve method not inherited by subclasses (SE_PRIVATE_READ_RESOLVE_NOT_INHERITED)</a></h3>
   5194 
   5195 
   5196   <p> This class defines a private readResolve method. Since it is private, it won't be inherited by subclasses.
   5197 This might be intentional and OK, but should be reviewed to ensure it is what is intended.
   5198 </p>
   5199 
   5200     
   5201 <h3><a name="SE_TRANSIENT_FIELD_OF_NONSERIALIZABLE_CLASS">Se: Transient field of class that isn't Serializable.  (SE_TRANSIENT_FIELD_OF_NONSERIALIZABLE_CLASS)</a></h3>
   5202 
   5203 
   5204   <p> The field is marked as transient, but the class isn't Serializable, so marking it as transient
   5205 has absolutely no effect.
   5206 This may be leftover marking from a previous version of the code in which the class was transient, or
   5207 it may indicate a misunderstanding of how serialization works.
   5208 </p>
   5209 
   5210     
   5211 <h3><a name="TQ_EXPLICIT_UNKNOWN_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_ALWAYS_SINK">TQ: Value required to have type qualifier, but marked as unknown (TQ_EXPLICIT_UNKNOWN_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_ALWAYS_SINK)</a></h3>
   5212 
   5213       
   5214       <p>
   5215       A value is used in a way that requires it to be always be a value denoted by a type qualifier, but
   5216     there is an explicit annotation stating that it is not known where the value is required to have that type qualifier.
   5217     Either the usage or the annotation is incorrect.
   5218       </p>
   5219       
   5220     
   5221 <h3><a name="TQ_EXPLICIT_UNKNOWN_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_NEVER_SINK">TQ: Value required to not have type qualifier, but marked as unknown (TQ_EXPLICIT_UNKNOWN_SOURCE_VALUE_REACHES_NEVER_SINK)</a></h3>
   5222 
   5223       
   5224       <p>
   5225       A value is used in a way that requires it to be never be a value denoted by a type qualifier, but
   5226     there is an explicit annotation stating that it is not known where the value is prohibited from having that type qualifier.
   5227     Either the usage or the annotation is incorrect.
   5228       </p>
   5229       
   5230     
   5231 <h3><a name="UCF_USELESS_CONTROL_FLOW">UCF: Useless control flow (UCF_USELESS_CONTROL_FLOW)</a></h3>
   5232 
   5233 
   5234 <p> This method contains a useless control flow statement, where
   5235 control flow continues onto the same place regardless of whether or not
   5236 the branch is taken. For example,
   5237 this is caused by having an empty statement
   5238 block for an <code>if</code> statement:</p>
   5239 <pre>
   5240     if (argv.length == 0) {
   5241     // TODO: handle this case
   5242     }
   5243 </pre>
   5244 
   5245     
   5246 <h3><a name="UCF_USELESS_CONTROL_FLOW_NEXT_LINE">UCF: Useless control flow to next line (UCF_USELESS_CONTROL_FLOW_NEXT_LINE)</a></h3>
   5247 
   5248 
   5249 <p> This method contains a useless control flow statement in which control
   5250 flow follows to the same or following line regardless of whether or not
   5251 the branch is taken.
   5252 Often, this is caused by inadvertently using an empty statement as the
   5253 body of an <code>if</code> statement, e.g.:</p>
   5254 <pre>
   5255     if (argv.length == 1);
   5256         System.out.println("Hello, " + argv[0]);
   5257 </pre>
   5258 
   5259     
   5260 <h3><a name="URF_UNREAD_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">UrF: Unread public/protected field (URF_UNREAD_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD)</a></h3>
   5261 
   5262 
   5263   <p> This field is never read.&nbsp;
   5264 The field is public or protected, so perhaps
   5265     it is intended to be used with classes not seen as part of the analysis. If not,
   5266 consider removing it from the class.</p>
   5267 
   5268     
   5269 <h3><a name="UUF_UNUSED_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">UuF: Unused public or protected field (UUF_UNUSED_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD)</a></h3>
   5270 
   5271 
   5272   <p> This field is never used.&nbsp;
   5273 The field is public or protected, so perhaps
   5274     it is intended to be used with classes not seen as part of the analysis. If not,
   5275 consider removing it from the class.</p>
   5276 
   5277     
   5278 <h3><a name="UWF_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED_IN_CONSTRUCTOR">UwF: Field not initialized in constructor but dereferenced without null check (UWF_FIELD_NOT_INITIALIZED_IN_CONSTRUCTOR)</a></h3>
   5279 
   5280 
   5281   <p> This field is never initialized within any constructor, and is therefore could be null after
   5282 the object is constructed. Elsewhere, it is loaded and dereferenced without a null check.
   5283 This could be a either an error or a questionable design, since
   5284 it means a null pointer exception will be generated if that field is dereferenced
   5285 before being initialized.
   5286 </p>
   5287 
   5288     
   5289 <h3><a name="UWF_UNWRITTEN_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD">UwF: Unwritten public or protected field (UWF_UNWRITTEN_PUBLIC_OR_PROTECTED_FIELD)</a></h3>
   5290 
   5291 
   5292   <p> No writes were seen to this public/protected field.&nbsp; All reads of it will return the default
   5293 value. Check for errors (should it have been initialized?), or remove it if it is useless.</p>
   5294 
   5295     
   5296 <h3><a name="XFB_XML_FACTORY_BYPASS">XFB: Method directly allocates a specific implementation of xml interfaces (XFB_XML_FACTORY_BYPASS)</a></h3>
   5297 
   5298       
   5299       <p>
   5300       This method allocates a specific implementation of an xml interface. It is preferable to use
   5301       the supplied factory classes to create these objects so that the implementation can be
   5302       changed at runtime. See
   5303       </p>
   5304       <ul>
   5305          <li>javax.xml.parsers.DocumentBuilderFactory</li>
   5306          <li>javax.xml.parsers.SAXParserFactory</li>
   5307          <li>javax.xml.transform.TransformerFactory</li>
   5308          <li>org.w3c.dom.Document.create<i>XXXX</i></li>
   5309       </ul>
   5310       <p>for details.</p>
   5311       
   5312     
   5313 
   5314 
   5315 <hr> <p> 
   5316 <script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript"> 
   5317 <!---//hide script from old browsers 
   5318 document.write( "Last updated "+ document.lastModified + "." ); 
   5319 //end hiding contents ---> 
   5320 </script> 
   5321 <p> Send comments to <a class="sidebar" href="mailto:findbugs (a] cs.umd.edu">findbugs (a] cs.umd.edu</a> 
   5322 <p> 
   5323 <A href="http://sourceforge.net"><IMG src="http://sourceforge.net/sflogo.php?group_id=96405&type=5" width="210" height="62" border="0" alt="SourceForge.net Logo" /></A>
   5324 </td></tr></table>
   5325 </body></html>
   5326