3

I've a huge project with many classes. I've a very specific class; let's name it SuperFoo. I need to find all calls to the method equals() with argument of type Superfoo. Hope it's clear.

So, one more time... in thousands of java files (or bytecode?) I'd like to find all calls to the method java.lang.Object.equals(Object arg) but the argument to this call must be of type SuperFoo. For example:

public void doItWith(SuperFoo foo) {
    if (otherFoo.equals(foo)){
         // do something
    }
...
}

I checked out Browse-by-query, analyzing bytecode and just Java Search in Eclipse and in my opinion none of this works.

3
  • depfind.sourceforge.net/Manual.html may help.
    – Jayan
    Jun 8, 2013 at 8:32
  • 2
    Quick and dirty answer; change the method signature and watch your IDE display all the errors. Jun 12, 2013 at 17:05
  • @GilbertLeBlanc that wont work. the compiler will call Object.equals instead
    – seteropere
    Nov 21, 2013 at 21:51

2 Answers 2

1

A programmatic approach would be to use Aspect Oriented Programming (i.e. AspectJ). You would define a pointcut to capture the method call of interest

pointcut equals(Superfoo o) = call(boolean *.equals(Object)) && args(o);

and then use advice to select each occurrence and query the joinpoint object to get the static information i.e. where it appears in your code.

before(Superfoo o) : equals(o) {
  System.out.println("An occurence at "+thisJoinPoint.getSourceLocation());
}
3
  • With compile-time weaving, is it possible to find out all of the join-points before runtime? Jun 8, 2013 at 13:21
  • 2
    There's probably a nicer way of doing it - but if you use AspectJ in Eclipse you can ask it for all the places a join-point matches.
    – selig
    Jun 8, 2013 at 13:27
  • I checked it out and this pointcut matches all calls to 'equals' method (not only with argument of type SuperFoo) :( any ideas ?
    – tomekkup
    Jun 10, 2013 at 10:52
0

So, you are trying to find out the references of

public boolean equals(Object o) 

overridden in SuperFoo. If you have access to the source code, this could be done in eclipse. If you go for Call Hierarchy, eclipse returns back all the occurrence of Object's equals() method. So, you need try the following:

Open SuperFoor. Select the equals method. Right Click. References --> Project. In the resulting search window, on the extreme right, click on the triangle. Select "references to override". That's it. The results returned initially will be filtered and it will mostly contain references of equals overridden in SuperFoo.

Hope this helps.

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