bio-miga/miga

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lib/miga/daemon/base.rb

Summary

Maintainability
A
1 hr
Test Coverage
A
100%

Method has too many lines. [22/10]
Open

  def runopts(k, v = nil, force = false)
    k = k.to_sym
    unless v.nil?
      case k
      when :latency, :maxjobs, :ppn, :ppn_project, :format_version, :verbosity,
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks if the length of a method exceeds some maximum value. Comment lines can optionally be ignored. The maximum allowed length is configurable.

Assignment Branch Condition size for runopts is too high. [21.31/15]
Open

  def runopts(k, v = nil, force = false)
    k = k.to_sym
    unless v.nil?
      case k
      when :latency, :maxjobs, :ppn, :ppn_project, :format_version, :verbosity,
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks that the ABC size of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The ABC size is based on assignments, branches (method calls), and conditions. See http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?AbcMetric

Cyclomatic complexity for runopts is too high. [10/6]
Open

  def runopts(k, v = nil, force = false)
    k = k.to_sym
    unless v.nil?
      case k
      when :latency, :maxjobs, :ppn, :ppn_project, :format_version, :verbosity,
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop 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.

Perceived complexity for runopts is too high. [8/7]
Open

  def runopts(k, v = nil, force = false)
    k = k.to_sym
    unless v.nil?
      case k
      when :latency, :maxjobs, :ppn, :ppn_project, :format_version, :verbosity,
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop tries to produce a complexity score that's a measure of the complexity the reader experiences when looking at a method. For that reason it considers when nodes as something that doesn't add as much complexity as an if or a &&. Except if it's one of those special case/when constructs where there's no expression after case. Then the cop treats it as an if/elsif/elsif... and lets all the when nodes count. In contrast to the CyclomaticComplexity cop, this cop considers else nodes as adding complexity.

Example:

def my_method                   # 1
  if cond                       # 1
    case var                    # 2 (0.8 + 4 * 0.2, rounded)
    when 1 then func_one
    when 2 then func_two
    when 3 then func_three
    when 4..10 then func_other
    end
  else                          # 1
    do_something until a && b   # 2
  end                           # ===
end                             # 7 complexity points

Method runopts has a Cognitive Complexity of 12 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

  def runopts(k, v = nil, force = false)
    k = k.to_sym
    unless v.nil?
      case k
      when :latency, :maxjobs, :ppn, :ppn_project, :format_version, :verbosity,
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb - About 1 hr 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 v.zero? instead of v == 0.
Open

        if !force && v == 0 && !%i[verbosity skip_maintenance].include?(k)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks for usage of comparison operators (==, >, <) to test numbers as zero, positive, or negative. These can be replaced by their respective predicate methods. The cop can also be configured to do the reverse.

The cop disregards #nonzero? as it its value is truthy or falsey, but not true and false, and thus not always interchangeable with != 0.

The cop ignores comparisons to global variables, since they are often populated with objects which can be compared with integers, but are not themselves Interger polymorphic.

Example: EnforcedStyle: predicate (default)

# bad

foo == 0
0 > foo
bar.baz > 0

# good

foo.zero?
foo.negative?
bar.baz.positive?

Example: EnforcedStyle: comparison

# bad

foo.zero?
foo.negative?
bar.baz.positive?

# good

foo == 0
0 > foo
bar.baz > 0

Avoid the use of double negation (!!).
Open

        v = !!v
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks for uses of double negation (!!) to convert something to a boolean value. As this is both cryptic and usually redundant, it should be avoided.

Example:

# bad
!!something

# good
!something.nil?

Please, note that when something is a boolean value !!something and !something.nil? are not the same thing. As you're unlikely to write code that can accept values of any type this is rarely a problem in practice.

Missing magic comment # frozen_string_literal: true.
Open

require 'shellwords'
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop is designed to help upgrade to Ruby 3.0. It will add the comment # frozen_string_literal: true to the top of files to enable frozen string literals. Frozen string literals may be default in Ruby 3.0. The comment will be added below a shebang and encoding comment. The frozen string literal comment is only valid in Ruby 2.3+.

Example: EnforcedStyle: when_needed (default)

# The `when_needed` style will add the frozen string literal comment
# to files only when the `TargetRubyVersion` is set to 2.3+.
# bad
module Foo
  # ...
end

# good
# frozen_string_literal: true

module Foo
  # ...
end

Example: EnforcedStyle: always

# The `always` style will always add the frozen string literal comment
# to a file, regardless of the Ruby version or if `freeze` or `<<` are
# called on a string literal.
# bad
module Bar
  # ...
end

# good
# frozen_string_literal: true

module Bar
  # ...
end

Example: EnforcedStyle: never

# The `never` will enforce that the frozen string literal comment does
# not exist in a file.
# bad
# frozen_string_literal: true

module Baz
  # ...
end

# good
module Baz
  # ...
end

Avoid the use of double negation (!!).
Open

    !!runopts(:bypass_maintenance)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks for uses of double negation (!!) to convert something to a boolean value. As this is both cryptic and usually redundant, it should be avoided.

Example:

# bad
!!something

# good
!something.nil?

Please, note that when something is a boolean value !!something and !something.nil? are not the same thing. As you're unlikely to write code that can accept values of any type this is rarely a problem in practice.

Avoid the use of double negation (!!).
Open

    !!runopts(:shutdown_when_done)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks for uses of double negation (!!) to convert something to a boolean value. As this is both cryptic and usually redundant, it should be avoided.

Example:

# bad
!!something

# good
!something.nil?

Please, note that when something is a boolean value !!something and !something.nil? are not the same thing. As you're unlikely to write code that can accept values of any type this is rarely a problem in practice.

Missing top-level module documentation comment.
Open

module MiGA::Daemon::Base
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/miga/daemon/base.rb by rubocop

This cop checks for missing top-level documentation of classes and modules. Classes with no body are exempt from the check and so are namespace modules - modules that have nothing in their bodies except classes, other modules, or constant definitions.

The documentation requirement is annulled if the class or module has a "#:nodoc:" comment next to it. Likewise, "#:nodoc: all" does the same for all its children.

Example:

# bad
class Person
  # ...
end

# good
# Description/Explanation of Person class
class Person
  # ...
end

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