3scale/porta

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Identical blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

    t.bigint "account_id"
    t.bigint "system_operation_id"
    t.text "emails"
    t.boolean "dispatch", default: true
    t.datetime "created_at"
Severity: Minor
Found in db/postgres_schema.rb and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
db/schema.rb on lines 746..754

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

    create_table "connectors", :force => true do |t|
      t.integer  "page_id"
      t.integer  "page_version"
      t.integer  "connectable_id"
      t.string   "connectable_type"
Severity: Minor
Found in db/migrate/20100125103539_browser_cms_tables.rb and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
db/migrate/20120116105124_merge_connect_and_enterprise_data_models.rb on lines 34..43

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

    create_table "liquid_template_versions", :force => true do |t|
      t.integer  "liquid_template_id"
      t.integer  "version"
      t.integer  "account_id"
      t.string   "name"
db/migrate/20100125103539_browser_cms_tables.rb on lines 54..63

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

  def self.down
    remove_index :cms_sections, :provider_id
    remove_index :cms_sections, :parent_id
    remove_index :cms_files, :section_id
    remove_index :cms_files, [:provider_id, :path]
Severity: Minor
Found in db/migrate/20120928105427_adding_indexes_to_new_cms.rb and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
db/migrate/20120928105427_adding_indexes_to_new_cms.rb on lines 2..10

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

  def beginning_of(period)
    case period
    when :eternity                  then change(:year => 1970, :month => 1, :day => 1, :hour => 00, :min => 00, :sec => 00)
    when :day, :week, :month, :year, :hour, :minute then send("beginning_of_#{period}")
    else raise_invalid_period(period)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/time_hacks.rb and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
lib/time_hacks.rb on lines 34..38

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

  def end_of(period)
    case period
    when :eternity                  then change(:year => 9999, :month => 12, :day => 31, :hour => 23, :min => 59, :sec => 59)
    when :day, :week, :month, :year, :hour, :minute then send("end_of_#{period}")
    else raise_invalid_period(period)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/time_hacks.rb and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
lib/time_hacks.rb on lines 25..29

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
Open

  def self.up
    add_index :cms_sections, :provider_id
    add_index :cms_sections, :parent_id
    add_index :cms_files, :section_id
    add_index :cms_files, [:provider_id, :path]
Severity: Minor
Found in db/migrate/20120928105427_adding_indexes_to_new_cms.rb and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
db/migrate/20120928105427_adding_indexes_to_new_cms.rb on lines 13..21

Duplicated Code

Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 35.

We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

Refactorings

Further Reading

APIHitting::Client#method_missing calls 'method.to_s' 3 times
Open

      print "ERROR for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue HTTPClient::ReceiveTimeoutError
      print "TIMEOUT for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError
      print "SSL ERROR #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
Severity: Minor
Found in script/stress-test/api_hitting.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

Account::ProviderDomains#domain_not_self_domain calls 'read_attribute(:domain)' 2 times
Open

    if read_attribute(:domain) && read_attribute(:self_domain) && (read_attribute(:domain) == read_attribute(:self_domain))
Severity: Minor
Found in app/models/account/provider_domains.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

Ability declares the class variable '@@rules'
Open

  @@rules = []

  def self.define(&block)
    @@rules << block
  end
Severity: Minor
Found in app/models/ability.rb by reek

Class variables form part of the global runtime state, and as such make it easy for one part of the system to accidentally or inadvertently depend on another part of the system. So the system becomes more prone to problems where changing something over here breaks something over there. In particular, class variables can make it hard to set up tests (because the context of the test includes all global state).

For a detailed explanation, check out this article

Example

Given

class Dummy
  @@class_variable = :whatever
end

Reek would emit the following warning:

reek test.rb

test.rb -- 1 warning:
  [2]:Dummy declares the class variable @@class_variable (ClassVariable)

Getting rid of the smell

You can use class-instance variable to mitigate the problem (as also suggested in the linked article above):

class Dummy
  @class_variable = :whatever
end

Account::Billing#charge! calls 'options[:invoice]' 2 times
Open

    if options[:invoice].is_a?(Invoice) && gateway_options.include?(:order_id)== false
      gateway_options[:order_id]= options[:invoice].id
Severity: Minor
Found in app/models/account/billing.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

InvalidDataDetector#search calls 'p.settings.finance' 2 times
Open

      if p.billing_strategy && p.settings.finance.denied?
        error 'finance denied but billing strategy exists'
      end

      if p.billing_strategy.nil? && p.settings.finance.allowed?
Severity: Minor
Found in script/detect-invalid-data.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

APIHitting assumes too much for instance variable '@plans'
Open

class APIHitting
Severity: Minor
Found in script/stress-test/api_hitting.rb by reek

Classes should not assume that instance variables are set or present outside of the current class definition.

Good:

class Foo
  def initialize
    @bar = :foo
  end

  def foo?
    @bar == :foo
  end
end

Good as well:

class Foo
  def foo?
    bar == :foo
  end

  def bar
    @bar ||= :foo
  end
end

Bad:

class Foo
  def go_foo!
    @bar = :foo
  end

  def foo?
    @bar == :foo
  end
end

Example

Running Reek on:

class Dummy
  def test
    @ivar
  end
end

would report:

[1]:InstanceVariableAssumption: Dummy assumes too much for instance variable @ivar

Note that this example would trigger this smell warning as well:

class Parent
  def initialize(omg)
    @omg = omg
  end
end

class Child < Parent
  def foo
    @omg
  end
end

The way to address the smell warning is that you should create an attr_reader to use @omg in the subclass and not access @omg directly like this:

class Parent
  attr_reader :omg

  def initialize(omg)
    @omg = omg
  end
end

class Child < Parent
  def foo
    omg
  end
end

Directly accessing instance variables is considered a smell because it breaks encapsulation and makes it harder to reason about code.

If you don't want to expose those methods as public API just make them private like this:

class Parent
  def initialize(omg)
    @omg = omg
  end

  private
  attr_reader :omg
end

class Child < Parent
  def foo
    omg
  end
end

Current Support in Reek

An instance variable must:

  • be set in the constructor
  • or be accessed through a method with lazy initialization / memoization.

If not, Instance Variable Assumption will be reported.

Account::ProviderDomains#domain_not_self_domain calls 'read_attribute(:self_domain)' 2 times
Open

    if read_attribute(:domain) && read_attribute(:self_domain) && (read_attribute(:domain) == read_attribute(:self_domain))
Severity: Minor
Found in app/models/account/provider_domains.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

InvalidDataDetector#search calls 'p.id' 3 times
Open

      @current = p.id

      unless p.sections.find_by_system_name('root')
        error 'root section missing'
      end
Severity: Minor
Found in script/detect-invalid-data.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

APIHitting::Client#method_missing calls 'Time.now - start' 3 times
Open

      print "ERROR for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue HTTPClient::ReceiveTimeoutError
      print "TIMEOUT for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError
      print "SSL ERROR #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
Severity: Minor
Found in script/stress-test/api_hitting.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

ProviderClicking assumes too much for instance variable '@dashboard'
Open

class ProviderClicking

Classes should not assume that instance variables are set or present outside of the current class definition.

Good:

class Foo
  def initialize
    @bar = :foo
  end

  def foo?
    @bar == :foo
  end
end

Good as well:

class Foo
  def foo?
    bar == :foo
  end

  def bar
    @bar ||= :foo
  end
end

Bad:

class Foo
  def go_foo!
    @bar = :foo
  end

  def foo?
    @bar == :foo
  end
end

Example

Running Reek on:

class Dummy
  def test
    @ivar
  end
end

would report:

[1]:InstanceVariableAssumption: Dummy assumes too much for instance variable @ivar

Note that this example would trigger this smell warning as well:

class Parent
  def initialize(omg)
    @omg = omg
  end
end

class Child < Parent
  def foo
    @omg
  end
end

The way to address the smell warning is that you should create an attr_reader to use @omg in the subclass and not access @omg directly like this:

class Parent
  attr_reader :omg

  def initialize(omg)
    @omg = omg
  end
end

class Child < Parent
  def foo
    omg
  end
end

Directly accessing instance variables is considered a smell because it breaks encapsulation and makes it harder to reason about code.

If you don't want to expose those methods as public API just make them private like this:

class Parent
  def initialize(omg)
    @omg = omg
  end

  private
  attr_reader :omg
end

class Child < Parent
  def foo
    omg
  end
end

Current Support in Reek

An instance variable must:

  • be set in the constructor
  • or be accessed through a method with lazy initialization / memoization.

If not, Instance Variable Assumption will be reported.

APIHitting::Client#method_missing calls 'method.to_s.upcase' 3 times
Open

      print "ERROR for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue HTTPClient::ReceiveTimeoutError
      print "TIMEOUT for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError
      print "SSL ERROR #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
Severity: Minor
Found in script/stress-test/api_hitting.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

HyperMegaProfiler#count_objects manually dispatches method call
Open

        val[:names] += ", #{o.org_name}" if o.respond_to?(:org_name)
      else
        new[key] = {
          count: 1,
          size: ObjectSpace.memsize_of(o),
Severity: Minor
Found in script/hyper_mega_profiler.rb by reek

Reek reports a Manual Dispatch smell if it finds source code that manually checks whether an object responds to a method before that method is called. Manual dispatch is a type of Simulated Polymorphism which leads to code that is harder to reason about, debug, and refactor.

Example

class MyManualDispatcher
  attr_reader :foo

  def initialize(foo)
    @foo = foo
  end

  def call
    foo.bar if foo.respond_to?(:bar)
  end
end

Reek would emit the following warning:

test.rb -- 1 warning:
  [9]: MyManualDispatcher manually dispatches method call (ManualDispatch)

APIHitting::Client#method_missing calls 'Time.now' 4 times
Open

      start = Time.now
      @client.send(method, @root + url, @defaults.merge(params).to_query, &block)
    rescue HTTPClient::BadResponseError
      print "ERROR for #{method.to_s.upcase} #{url} with #{params.to_query} in #{Time.now - start} seconds\n"
    rescue HTTPClient::ReceiveTimeoutError
Severity: Minor
Found in script/stress-test/api_hitting.rb by reek

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

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