Mutability Detector is designed to analyse Java classes and report on whether instances of a given class are immutable. It can be used:
- In a unit test, with an assertion like
assertImmutable(MyClass.class)
. Is your class actually immutable? What about after that change you just made? - As a FindBugs plugin. Those classes you annotated with
@Immutable
, are they actually? - At runtime. Does your API require being given immutable objects?
- From the command line. Do you want to quickly run Mutability Detector over an entire code base?
Developing classes to be immutable has several benefits. An immutable object is one which cannot be changed once it is constructed. While writing concurrent programs, using immutable objects can greatly simplify complex systems, as sharing an object across threads is much safer. There are a few rules for what makes an object immutable, and it is easy to break the rules and render the object unsafe. This could lead to subtle, hard-to-detect bugs which could lower the integrity of the system. Using an automated tool to recognise mutability where it's not intended can reduce the complexity of writing immutable classes.
Mutability Detector analyses on the strict side, very few classes are found to be perfectly immutable, for instance, java.lang.String and java.lang.Integer are not immutable because of a non-final field, and primitive array field, respectively. Mutability Detector will not be released under a 1.0 version until these cases can be correctly analysed.
If this sounds like it may be interesting or useful to you, continue reading for more information on getting started. You may also want to take a look at the Mutability Detector Blog.
To use Mutability Detector directly, either from the command line, at runtime in your application, or as part of your unit tests, grab the jar available from Maven Central. Or you can declare it in your Maven-compatible build tool, with the following coordinates:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.mutabilitydetector</groupId>
<artifactId>MutabilityDetector</artifactId>
<version>[latest version here]</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
Just add MutabilityDetector to your unit testing classpath. Adding your first assertion is as simple as:
import static org.mutabilitydetector.unittesting.MutabilityAssert.assertImmutable;
@Test public void checkMyClassIsImmutable() {
assertImmutable(MyClass.class);
}
Though it is possible (or likely) that you will have to configure the assertion to deal with any false positives that arise. See the JavaDoc on MutabilityAssert
for further information.
An example of how to run it is probably the most useful. If you want to analyse MyCodebase.jar use:
java -jar MutabilityDetector.jar -classpath path/to/MyCodebase.jar
Mutability Detector can handle jars as seen above, or directories of class files (thanks go to the authors of classpath-explorer). So if your codebase was in the filesystem as directories and .class files, and the directory MyCodebase was the root of that, you could run:
java -jar MutabilityDetector.jar -classpath path/to/MyCodebase
The output is a list of the analysed classes against the result of asking "Is immutable?", ie. IMMUTABLE
, NOT_IMMUTABLE
, EFFECTIVELY_IMMUTABLE
.
Execute java -jar MutabilityDetector.jar --help
for a complete listing of the command line options.
It is possible to use Mutability Detector at runtime. For example, consider if you have a library which requires that objects passed to it are immutable. On receiving such an object, you can ask Mutability Detector if it is actually immutable.
Check out the code snippet in this example, which shows correct usage against trunk code.
To have Mutability Detector inspect your classes during a FindBugs analysis, grab the MutabilityDetector4FindBugs jar, and configure it to be picked up by FindBugs during a normal analysis, as described here.
Mutability Detector will perform it's analysis on any classes annotated with @Immutable
.
MutabilityDetector4FindBugs is also available from Maven Central, with the following coordinates:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.mutabilitydetector</groupId>
<artifactId>MutabilityDetector4FindBugs</artifactId>
<version>[latest version here]</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>