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Style guideline

We follow the Google Java Style Guide.

Auto-formatting

The build will fail if the source code is not formatted according to the google java style.

The main goal is to avoid extensive reformatting caused by different IDEs having different opinion about how things should be formatted by establishing.

Running

./gradlew spotlessApply

reformats all the files that need reformatting.

Running

./gradlew spotlessCheck

runs formatting verify task only.

Pre-commit hook

To completely delegate code style formatting to the machine, there is a pre-commit hook setup to verify formatting before committing. It can be activated with this command:

git config core.hooksPath .githooks

Editorconfig

As additional convenience for IntelliJ users, we provide .editorconfig file. IntelliJ will automatically use it to adjust its code formatting settings. It does not support all required rules, so you still have to run spotlessApply from time to time.

Additional checks

The build uses checkstyle to verify some parts of the Google Java Style Guide that cannot be handled by auto-formatting.

To run these checks locally:

./gradlew checkstyleMain checkstyleTest

Static imports

We leverage static imports for many common types of operations. However, not all static methods or constants are necessarily good candidates for a static import. The following list is a very rough guideline of what are commonly accepted static imports:

  • Test assertions (JUnit and AssertJ)
  • Mocking/stubbing in tests (with Mockito)
  • Collections helpers (such as singletonList() and Collectors.toList())
  • ByteBuddy ElementMatchers (for building instrumentation modules)
  • Immutable constants (where clearly named)
  • Singleton instances (especially where clearly named and hopefully immutable)
  • tracer() methods that expose tracer singleton instances

Some of these are enforced by checkstyle rules:

  • look for RegexpSinglelineJava in checkstyle.xml
  • use @SuppressWarnings("checkstyle:RegexpSinglelineJava") to suppress the checkstyle warning

Ordering of class contents

The following order is preferred:

  • Static fields (final before non-final)
  • Instance fields (final before non-final)
  • Constructors
  • Methods
  • Nested classes

If methods call each other, it's nice if the calling method is ordered (somewhere) above the method that it calls. So, for one example, a private method would be ordered (somewhere) below the non-private methods that use it.

In static utility classes (where all members are static), the private constructor (used to prevent construction) should be ordered after methods instead of before methods.

final keyword usage

Public classes should be declared final where possible.

Methods should only be declared final if they are in non-final public classes.

Fields should be declared final where possible.

Method parameters and local variables should never be declared final.

@Nullable annotation usage

[Note: this section is aspirational, as opposed to a reflection of the current codebase]

All parameters and fields which can be null should be annotated with @Nullable (specifically javax.annotation.Nullable, which is included by the otel.java-conventions gradle plugin as a compileOnly dependency).

There is no need to use @NonNull, as this is the default, which should be declared in a package-info.java file on the root package of each module, e.g.

@DefaultQualifier(
    value = NonNull.class,
    locations = {TypeUseLocation.FIELD, TypeUseLocation.PARAMETER, TypeUseLocation.RETURN})
package io.opentelemetry.instrumentation.api;

import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.NonNull;
import org.checkerframework.framework.qual.DefaultQualifier;

Public APIs should still defensively check for null parameters, even if the parameter is not annotated with @Nullable. Internal APIs do not need to defensively check for null parameters.

To help enforce @Nullable annotation usage, the otel.nullaway-conventions gradle plugin should be used in all modules to perform basic nullable usage validation:

plugins {
  id("otel.nullaway-conventions")
}

java.util.Optional usage

Following the reasoning from Writing a Java library with better experience (slide 12), usage of java.util.Optional is kept at a minimum in this project.

It is ok to use Optional in places where it does not leak into public API signatures.

Also, avoid Optional usage on the hot path (instrumentation code), unless the instrumented library itself uses it.

Hot path constraints

Avoid allocations whenever possible on the hot path (instrumentation code). This includes Iterator allocations from collections; note that for(SomeType t : plainJavaArray) does not allocate an iterator object. Non-allocating stream api usage on the hot path is acceptable but may not fit the surrounding code style; this is a judgement call. Note that some stream apis make it much more difficult to allocate efficiently (e.g., collect with presized sink data structures involves convoluted Supplier code, or lambdas passed to forEach might be capturing/allocating lambdas).