alsutton/enterprisepasswordsafe

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src/main/java/com/enterprisepasswordsafe/ui/web/servlets/UpdateNodePasswordDefaults.java

Summary

Maintainability
B
6 hrs
Test Coverage
F
0%

Method doPost has a Cognitive Complexity of 16 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    @Override
    protected void doPost( final HttpServletRequest request, final HttpServletResponse response)
        throws ServletException, IOException {
        try {
            User remoteUser = SecurityUtils.getRemoteUser(request);

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

Method doPost has 36 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    @Override
    protected void doPost( final HttpServletRequest request, final HttpServletResponse response)
        throws ServletException, IOException {
        try {
            User remoteUser = SecurityUtils.getRemoteUser(request);

    Method applyPermissions has 6 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
    Open

        private void applyPermissions(final User remoteUser, final HierarchyNodeDAO hnDAO, final HierarchyNode node,
                                      final Map<String, PasswordPermission> uPerms,
                                      final Map<String, PasswordPermission> gPerms,
                                      final ChangePermissionsAction action)

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

                      } else if( name.startsWith("uperm_") ) {
                          String value = request.getParameter(name);
                          if( value != null && value.length() > 0 && !value.equals("0")) {
                              uPerms.put(name.substring(6), PasswordPermission.fromRepresentation(value));
                          }
      src/main/java/com/enterprisepasswordsafe/ui/web/servlets/UpdateNodePasswordDefaults.java on lines 58..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 62.

      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

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

                      if( name.startsWith("gperm_") ) {
                          String value = request.getParameter(name);
                          if( value != null && value.length() > 0 && !value.equals("0")) {
                              gPerms.put(name.substring(6), PasswordPermission.fromRepresentation(value));
                          }
      src/main/java/com/enterprisepasswordsafe/ui/web/servlets/UpdateNodePasswordDefaults.java on lines 63..68

      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 62.

      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

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