ManageIQ/manageiq-appliance_console

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lib/manageiq/appliance_console/utilities.rb

Summary

Maintainability
B
5 hrs
Test Coverage
D
64%

Method disk_usage has a Cognitive Complexity of 25 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    def self.disk_usage(file = nil)
      file_arg = file
      file_arg = "-l" if file.nil? || file == ""

      unless file_arg == "-l" || File.exist?(file)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/manageiq/appliance_console/utilities.rb - About 3 hrs to fix

Cognitive Complexity

Cognitive Complexity is a measure of how difficult a unit of code is to intuitively understand. Unlike Cyclomatic Complexity, which determines how difficult your code will be to test, Cognitive Complexity tells you how difficult your code will be to read and comprehend.

A method's cognitive complexity is based on a few simple rules:

  • Code is not considered more complex when it uses shorthand that the language provides for collapsing multiple statements into one
  • Code is considered more complex for each "break in the linear flow of the code"
  • Code is considered more complex when "flow breaking structures are nested"

Further reading

Cyclomatic complexity for disk_usage is too high. [15/11]
Open

    def self.disk_usage(file = nil)
      file_arg = file
      file_arg = "-l" if file.nil? || file == ""

      unless file_arg == "-l" || File.exist?(file)

Checks that the cyclomatic complexity of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The cyclomatic complexity is the number of linearly independent paths through a method. The algorithm counts decision points and adds one.

An if statement (or unless or ?:) increases the complexity by one. An else branch does not, since it doesn't add a decision point. The && operator (or keyword and) can be converted to a nested if statement, and ||/or is shorthand for a sequence of ifs, so they also add one. Loops can be said to have an exit condition, so they add one. Blocks that are calls to builtin iteration methods (e.g. `ary.map{...}) also add one, others are ignored.

def each_child_node(*types)               # count begins: 1
  unless block_given?                     # unless: +1
    return to_enum(__method__, *types)

  children.each do |child|                # each{}: +1
    next unless child.is_a?(Node)         # unless: +1

    yield child if types.empty? ||        # if: +1, ||: +1
                   types.include?(child.type)
  end

  self
end                                       # total: 6

Method disk_usage has 34 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    def self.disk_usage(file = nil)
      file_arg = file
      file_arg = "-l" if file.nil? || file == ""

      unless file_arg == "-l" || File.exist?(file)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/manageiq/appliance_console/utilities.rb - About 1 hr to fix

Method db_region has a Cognitive Complexity of 7 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    def self.db_region
      result = AwesomeSpawn.run(
        "bin/rails runner",
        :params => ["puts ApplicationRecord.my_region_number"],
        :chdir  => ManageIQ::ApplianceConsole::RAILS_ROOT
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/manageiq/appliance_console/utilities.rb - About 35 mins to fix

Cognitive Complexity

Cognitive Complexity is a measure of how difficult a unit of code is to intuitively understand. Unlike Cyclomatic Complexity, which determines how difficult your code will be to test, Cognitive Complexity tells you how difficult your code will be to read and comprehend.

A method's cognitive complexity is based on a few simple rules:

  • Code is not considered more complex when it uses shorthand that the language provides for collapsing multiple statements into one
  • Code is considered more complex for each "break in the linear flow of the code"
  • Code is considered more complex when "flow breaking structures are nested"

Further reading

Use match? instead of =~ when MatchData is not used.
Open

        next unless total =~ /[0-9]+/

In Ruby 2.4, String#match?, Regexp#match? and Symbol#match? have been added. The methods are faster than match. Because the methods avoid creating a MatchData object or saving backref. So, when MatchData is not used, use match? instead of match.

Example:

# bad
def foo
  if x =~ /re/
    do_something
  end
end

# bad
def foo
  if x.match(/re/)
    do_something
  end
end

# bad
def foo
  if /re/ === x
    do_something
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if x.match?(/re/)
    do_something
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if x =~ /re/
    do_something(Regexp.last_match)
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if x.match(/re/)
    do_something($~)
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if /re/ === x
    do_something($~)
  end
end

Use match? instead of =~ when MatchData is not used.
Open

        next unless total =~ /[0-9]+/

In Ruby 2.4, String#match?, Regexp#match? and Symbol#match? have been added. The methods are faster than match. Because the methods avoid creating a MatchData object or saving backref. So, when MatchData is not used, use match? instead of match.

Example:

# bad
def foo
  if x =~ /re/
    do_something
  end
end

# bad
def foo
  if x.match(/re/)
    do_something
  end
end

# bad
def foo
  if /re/ === x
    do_something
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if x.match?(/re/)
    do_something
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if x =~ /re/
    do_something(Regexp.last_match)
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if x.match(/re/)
    do_something($~)
  end
end

# good
def foo
  if /re/ === x
    do_something($~)
  end
end

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