blob: 59ece06f18f8e1d55a3ff613c14535bbaaf7b075 [file] [log] [blame]
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--
Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
distributed with this work for additional information
regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.
-->
<!DOCTYPE api-answers PUBLIC "-//NetBeans//DTD Arch Answers//EN" "../nbbuild/antsrc/org/netbeans/nbbuild/Arch.dtd" [
<!ENTITY api-questions SYSTEM "../nbbuild/antsrc/org/netbeans/nbbuild/Arch-api-questions.xml">
]>
<api-answers
question-version="1.23"
author="jjancura@netbeans.org"
>
&api-questions;
<!-- architecture ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: arch-what
<question id="arch-what">
What is this project good for?
<hint>
Please provide here few lines describing the the project,
what problem it should solve, provide links to documentation,
specifications, etc.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="arch-what">
The debuggerjpda module supports debugging of Java applications.
<api name="JPDADebuggerAPI" type="export" category="official" url="http://debuggercore.netbeans.org/docs/api/index.html" group="java"/>
See <a href="http://debugger.netbeans.org/">debugger.netbeans.org</a> and
<a href="http://debuggercore.netbeans.org/">debuggercore.netbeans.org</a>
for more information.
</answer>
<!--
<question id="arch-overall" when="init">
Describe the overall architecture.
<hint>
What will be API for
<a href="http://openide.netbeans.org/tutorial/api-design.html#design.apiandspi">
clients and what support API</a>?
What parts will be pluggable?
How will plug-ins be registered? Please use <code>&lt;api type="export"/&gt;</code>
to describe your general APIs.
If possible please provide
simple diagrams.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="arch-overall">
See <a href="http://debuggercore.netbeans.org/docs/api/ProgrammersGuide.html">Programmers Guide</a>.
</answer>
<!--
<question id="arch-usecases" when="init">
Describe the main <a href="http://openide.netbeans.org/tutorial/api-design.html#usecase">
use cases</a> of the new API. Who will use it at
what circumstances and what will be the typical code to write
to use the module.
</question>
-->
<answer id="arch-usecases">
See <a href="http://debuggercore.netbeans.org/docs/api/UseCases.html">Usecases</a>.
</answer>
<!--
<question id="arch-time" when="init">
What are the time estimates of the work?
<hint>
Please express your estimates of how long the design, implementation,
stabilization are likely to last. How many people will be needed to
implement this and what is the expected milestone the work should be
ready.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="arch-time">
See <a href="http://debuggercore.netbeans.org/plans/NB40Plan.html">Integration Plan</a>.
</answer>
<!--
<question id="arch-quality" when="init">
How the <a href="http://www.netbeans.org/community/guidelines/q-evangelism.html">quality</a>
of your code will be tested and
how future regressions are going to be prevented?
<hint>
What kind of testing
you want to use? What/how much area of functionality
should be covered by the tests?
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="arch-quality">
We plan to use standard unit testing to prevent future regressions.
We would like to test 100% of our APIs.
</answer>
<!-- dependencies ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: dep-jre
<question id="dep-jre">
Which version of JRE you need (1.2, 1.3, 1.4, etc.)?
<hint>
It is expected that if your module runs on 1.x that it will run
on 1.x+1 if no, state that please. Also describe here cases where
you run different code on different versions of JRE and why.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="dep-jre">
Needs at least JRE 1.4.
</answer>
<!-- Question: dep-jrejdk
<question id="dep-jrejdk">
Do you require JDK or is JRE enough?
</question>
-->
<answer id="dep-jrejdk">
Need JDK (dt.jar, tools.jar).
</answer>
<!-- Question: dep-nb
<question id="dep-nb">
What other NetBeans projects this one depends on?
<hint>
If you want, describe such projects as imported API using
the <code>&lt;api name="identification" type="import or export" category="stable" url="where is the description" /&gt;</code>
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="dep-nb">
<api name="OpenAPIs" type="import" category="official" url="http://openide.netbeans.org" group="java"/>
<api name="DebuggerCoreAPI" type="import" category="official" url="http://debuggercore.netbeans.org/docs/api/index.html" group="java"/>
<api name="JavaHierarchyAPI" type="import" category="official" url="http://www.netbeans.org/download/dev/javadoc/JavaHierarchyAPI/index.html" group="java"/>
<api name="JavaAPI" type="import" category="official" url="http://www.netbeans.org/download/dev/javadoc/JavaHierarchyAPI/index.html" group="java"/>
<api name="ExecutionAPI" url="http://www.netbeans.org/download/dev/javadoc/ExecutionAPI/org/openide/execution/doc-files/api.html"
type="import" category="official" group="java"
/>
<api name="OpenAPIs" type="import" category="official" url="http://openide.netbeans.org" group="java"/>
</answer>
<!-- Question: dep-non-nb
<question id="dep-non-nb">
What other non-NetBeans projects this one depends on?
<hint>
Some non-NetBeans projects are packaged as NetBeans modules
(see <a href="http://libs.netbeans.org">libraries</a>) and
it is prefered to use this approach when more modules may
depend on such third-party library.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="dep-non-nb">
No other dependency.
</answer>
<!-- Question: dep-platform
<question id="dep-platform">
On which platforms your module run? Any? Does it run in the same
way?
<hint>
If your module is using JNI or deals with special differences of
OSes like filesystems, etc. please describe here what they are.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="dep-platform">
The module is 100% pure Java and runs on any platform.
</answer>
<!-- deploy ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: deploy-jar
<question id="deploy-jar">
Do you deploy just module JAR file(s) or some other files?
<hint>
If your module consist just from one module JAR file, just confirm that.
If it uses more than one JAR, describe where there are located, how
they refer to each other.
If it consist of module JAR(s) and other files, please describe
what is their purpose, why other files are necessary. Please
make sure that installation/deinstallation leaves the system
in state as it was before installation.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="deploy-jar">
Just module JAR.
</answer>
<!-- Question: deploy-nbm
<question id="deploy-nbm">
Can you deploy NBM via AutoUpdate center?
<hint>
If not why?
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="deploy-nbm">
Yes.
</answer>
<!-- Question: deploy-packages
<question id="deploy-packages">
Are packages of your module made inaccessible by not declaring them
public?
<hint>
NetBeans module system allows restriction of access rights to
public classes of your module from other modules. This prevents
unwanted dependencies of others on your code and should be used
whenever possible (<a href="http://www.netbeans.org/download/apis/org/openide/doc-files/upgrade.html#3.4-public-packages">
public packages
</a>).
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="deploy-packages">
Yes.
</answer>
<!-- Question: deploy-shared
<question id="deploy-shared">
Do you need to be installed in shared location or only in user directory?
<hint>
Installation location shall not matter, if it does explain why.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="deploy-shared">
Module can be installed anywhere.
</answer>
<answer id="deploy-dependencies">
Nothing.
</answer>
<!-- compatibility ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: compat-i18n
<question id="compat-i18n">
Is your module correctly internationalized?
<hint>
Correct internationalization means that it obeys instuctions
at <a href="http://www.netbeans.org/devhome/docs/i18n/index.html">
NetBeans I18N pages</a>.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="compat-i18n">
Yes.
</answer>
<!-- Question: compat-standards
<question id="compat-standards">
Does the module implements or defines any standards? Is the
implementation exact or it deviates somehow?
</question>
-->
<answer id="compat-standards">
None defined or implemented.
</answer>
<!-- Question: compat-version
<question id="compat-version">
Does your module properly coexists with earlier and future
versions? Can you correctly read settings? Will future
versions be able to read settings?
<hint>
Very helpful for reading settings is to store version number
there, so future versions can decide whether how to read/convert
the settings and older versions can ignore the new ones.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="compat-version">
Only one version of the module can be installed at a time.
The settings are shared across different versions, stored
and read by Java serialization and will be read in future as well.
</answer>
<!-- resources ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: resources-file
<question id="resources-file">
Does your module use <code>java.io.File</code> directly?
<hint>
NetBeans provide a logical wrapper over plain files called
<code>org.openide.filesystems.FileObject</code> that
provides uniform access to such resources and is the prefered
way that should be used. But of course there can be situations when
this is not suitable.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="resources-file">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: resources-layer
<question id="resources-layer">
Does your module provide own layer? Does it create some files or
folders on it? What it is trying to communicate by that and with which
component?
<hint>
NetBeans allows automatic and declarative installation of resources
by module layers. Module register files into appropriate places
and other components use that information to perform their task
(build menu, toolbar, window layout, list of templates, set of
options, etc.).
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="resources-layer">
Yes, files are created for menus, actions, shortcuts, templates, window system layout,
settings storage - these are all in standard Open
APIs.
</answer>
<!-- Question: resources-mask
<question id="resources-mask">
Does your module mask/hide/override any resource provided by another one in
module layer?
<hint>
If you mask a file provided by another module, you probably depend
on that and do not want the other module to (for example) change
the file's name. That module shall thus make that file available as an API
of some stability category.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="resources-mask">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: resources-read
<question id="resources-read">
Does your module read any resources from layers? For what purpose?
<hint>
As this is some kind of intermodule dependency, it is a kind of API.
Please describe it and clasify according to
<a href="http://openide.netbeans.org/tutorial/api-design.html#categories">
common stability categories</a>.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="resources-read">
No.
</answer>
<!-- lookup ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: lookup-lookup
<question id="lookup-lookup">
Does your module uses <code>org.openide.util.Lookup</code>
to find any components to communicate to? Which ones?
<hint>
Please describe the interfaces you are searching for, where
are defined, whether you are searching for just one or more of them,
if the order is important, etc. Also clasify the stability of such
API contract.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="lookup-lookup">
No. But we use our own private implementation of lookup pattern.
We are searching for instances of various services defined in *.spi.* packages.
The contract is described in JavaDoc.
</answer>
<!-- Question: lookup-register
<question id="lookup-register">
Do you register anything into the lookup for other to find?
<hint>
Do you register using layer file or using <code>META-INF/services</code>?
Who is supposed to find your component?
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="lookup-register">
We use our private namespace <code>META-INF/debugger</code> for registration.
The contract is described in JavaDoc.
</answer>
<!-- Question: lookup-remove
<question id="lookup-remove">
Are removing entries of other modules from the lookup?
<hint>
Why? Of course, that is possible, but it can be dangerous. Is the module
your are masking resource from aware of what you are doing?
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="lookup-remove">
</answer>
<!-- execution ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: exec-property
<question id="exec-property">
Is execution of your code influenced by any environment of
system (<code>System.getProperty</code>) property?
<hint>
If there is a property that can change the behaviour of your
code, somebody will likely use it. You should describe what it does
and the stability category of this API. You may use
<PRE>
&lt;property name="id" category="private" &gt;
description of the property, where it is used, what it influence, etc.
&lt;/property&gt;
</PRE>
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-property">
<!-- Update also debuggerjpda/api/arch.xml/exec-property when changing this -->
<api name="SS_ACTION_STEPOUT" group="property" category="friend" type="export">
When set to Boolean.TRUE, this option is causing step out during smart-stepping
instead of step into. Thus it much faster skips code that is not selected
for debugging, but it may also skip code that should be debugged if it's
called from a source that has debugging disabled.
This is advantageous when the speed is important (e.g. in J2ME).
This property can be set through a map of properties that is passed to
JPDADebugger.attach (), like J2ME_DEBUGGER property.
</api>
<api name="netbeans.debugger.show_hidden_breakpoints" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
This system property is causing the breakpoints view to show also hidden
breakpoints.
</api>
<api name="org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.breakpoints.level" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
Logging level for informational messages about breakpoint
submission and hits. They use Level.FINE and Level.FINER levels and
are printed into the NetBeans message log.
</api>
<api name="netbeans.debugger.start" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
When this system property is set, informational messages about start of
JPDA debugger are printed into standard output (console).
</api>
<api name="netbeans.debugger.jditrace" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
This system property sets the debug mode of the debuggee virtual machine
via <code>VirtualMachine.setDebugTraceMode()</code> method. See the javadoc
of that method for the description and possible values.
</api>
<api name="org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.jdievents.level" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
Logging level for informational messages about received JDI events.
They use Level.FINE level and are printed into the NetBeans message log.
</api>
<api name="org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.step.level" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
Logging level for messages about stepping, including the smart
stepping process are printed into the NetBeans message log.
</api>
<api name="netbeans.debugger.noInvokeMethods" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
When this system property is set, methods invocation in debuggee is disabled.
</api>
<api name="org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.invokeMethod.level" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
Logging level for messages about method invocation.
They use Level.FINE level and are printed into the NetBeans message log.
</api>
<api name="org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.getValue.level" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
Logging level for messages about variables evaluation.
They use Level.FINE level and are printed into the NetBeans message log.
</api>
<api name="netbeans.debugger.viewrefresh" group="systemproperty" category="private" type="export">
When this system property is set, informational messages about the tasks
that refresh debugger views are printed into standard output (console).
The value of that property should contain 'w' for watches view, 'l' for
local variables view, 'c' for call stack view, 's' for classes view and
't' for threads view.
</api>
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-component
<question id="exec-component">
Is execution of your code influenced by (string) property
of any of your components?
<hint>
Often <code>JComponent.getClientProperty</code>, <code>Action.getValue</code>
or <code>PropertyDescriptor.getValue</code>, etc. are used to influence
a behaviour of some code. This of course forms an interface that should
be documented. Also if one depends on some interface that an object
implements (<code>component instanceof Runnable</code>) that forms an
API as well.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-component">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-classloader
<question id="exec-classloader">
Does your code uses own classloader?
<hint>
A bit unusual. Please explain why and what for.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-classloader">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-reflection
<question id="exec-reflection">
Does your code uses java.lang.reflect to execute some other code?
<hint>
This usually indicates a missing or unsufficient API in the other
part of the system. If the other side is not aware of your dependency
this contract can be easily broken.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-reflection">
VirtualMachine.canBeModified(), TypeComponent.genericSignature() and
LocalVariable.genericSignature() are called by reflection, because it's
available on JDK 1.5 and higher only.
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-privateaccess
<question id="exec-privateaccess">
Are you aware of any other part of the system calling some of
your methods by reflection?
<hint>
If so, describe the "contract" as an API. Likely private or friend one, but
still API and consider rewrite of it.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-privateaccess">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-process
<question id="exec-process">
Do you execute an external process from your module? How do you ensure
that the result is the same on different platforms? Do you parse output?
Do you depend on result code?
<hint>
If you feed an input, parse the output please declare that as an API.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-process">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-introspection
<question id="exec-introspection">
Does your module use any kind of runtime type information (<code>instanceof</code>,
work with <code>java.lang.Class</code>, etc.)?
<hint>
Check for cases when you have an object of type A and you also
expect it to (possibly) be of type B and do some special action. That
should be documented. The same applies on operations in meta-level
(Class.isInstance(...), Class.isAssignableFrom(...), etc.).
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-introspection">
debuggercore does not use introspection.
The cases when an object is tested on various types are quite common, but not documented.
</answer>
<!-- Question: exec-threading
<question id="exec-threading" when="impl">
What threading models, if any, does your module adhere to?
<hint>
If your module calls foreign APIs which have a specific threading model,
indicate how you comply with the requirements for multithreaded access
(synchronization, mutexes, etc.) applicable to those APIs.
If your module defines any APIs, or has complex internal structures
that might be used from multiple threads, declare how you protect
data against concurrent access, race conditions, deadlocks, etc.,
and whether such rules are enforced by runtime warnings, errors, assertions, etc.
Examples: a class might be non-thread-safe (like Java Collections); might
be fully thread-safe (internal locking); might require access through a mutex
(and may or may not automatically acquire that mutex on behalf of a client method);
might be able to run only in the event queue; etc.
Also describe when any events are fired: synchronously, asynchronously, etc.
Ideas: <a href="http://core.netbeans.org/proposals/threading/index.html#recommendations">Threading Recommendations</a> (in progress)
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="exec-threading">
We use standard Java features - synchronized blocks - to synchronize our code.
</answer>
<!-- format ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: format-clipboard
<question id="format-clipboard">
Which protocols your code reads/inserts when communicating with
clipboard?
</question>
-->
<answer id="format-clipboard">
<ul>
<li>custom DataFlavor type referencing own structures (for copy/cut/paste)</li>
<li>standard Open API's NodeTransfer.cookie for InstanceCookie (just for pasting):
<api name="InstanceCookie-paste" type="export" category="private" group="java"/>
</li>
</ul>
</answer>
<!-- Question: format-dnd
<question id="format-dnd">
Which protocols your code understands during drag-n-drop?
</question>
-->
<answer id="format-dnd">
None.
</answer>
<!-- Question: format-types
<question id="format-types">
Which file formats your code reads or writes on disk?
</question>
-->
<answer id="format-types">
None.
</answer>
<!-- performance ********************************************************************** -->
<!-- Question: perf-startup
<question id="perf-startup">
Does your module executes anything on startup?
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-startup">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-exit
<question id="perf-exit">
Does your module executes anything on exit?
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-exit">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-scale
<question id="perf-scale">
Which external criteria influence the performance of your
program (size of file in editor, number of files in menu,
in source directory, etc.) and how well your code scales?
Please include some estimates.
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-scale">
None.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-limit
<question id="perf-limit">
Are there any limits in number/size of elements your code
can handle?
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-limit">
No explicit limits. Technically, the available memory size is the limit...
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-mem
<question id="perf-mem">
What is the amount of memory your component occupies? Estimate
with a relaction to the number of windows, etc.
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-mem">
Rough numbers:
<ul>
<li>debuggercore with Debugger Window opened: 2MB</li>
</ul>
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-wakeup
<question id="perf-wakeup">
Is any piece of your code waking up periodically?
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-wakeup">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-progress
<question id="perf-progress">
Does your module executes some long running task?
<hint>Typically they are tasks like connecting over
network, computing huge amount of data, compilation.
Such communication should be done asynchronously (for example
using <code>RequestProcessor</code>), definitively it should
not block AWT thread.
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-progress">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-huge_dialogs
<question id="perf-huge_dialogs">
Does your module contain any dialogs or wizards with huge
amount of GUI controls like combo boxes, lists, trees, text
areas?
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-huge_dialogs">
No.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-menus
<question id="perf-menus">
Does your module use dynamically changing context menus or
context sensitive actions with complicated logic for enable/disable?
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-menus">
No. Context menu are rather stable once created. Enabling logic is simple.
</answer>
<!-- Question: perf-spi
<question id="perf-spi" when="init">
How the performance of the plugged in code will be enforced?
<hint>
If you allow foreign code to be plugged into your own module, how
do you enforce, that it will behave correctly and fast and will not
negatively influence the performance of your own module?
</hint>
</question>
-->
<answer id="perf-spi">
We are not able to enforce performance of plugged in code.
</answer>
</api-answers>