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Roslyn Cookbook

You're reading from   Roslyn Cookbook Compiler as a Service, Code Analysis, Code Quality and more

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787286832
Length 350 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Manish Vasani Manish Vasani
Author Profile Icon Manish Vasani
Manish Vasani
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Writing Diagnostic Analyzers FREE CHAPTER 2. Consuming Diagnostic Analyzers in .NET Projects 3. Writing IDE Code Fixes, Refactorings, and Intellisense Completion Providers 4. Improving Code Maintenance of C# Code Base 5. Catch Security Vulnerabilities and Performance Issues in C# Code 6. Live Unit Testing in Visual Studio Enterprise 7. C# Interactive and Scripting 8. Contribute Simple Functionality to Roslyn C# Compiler Open Source Code 9. Design and Implement a New C# Language Feature 10. Command-Line Tools Based on Roslyn API

Creating a syntax tree analyzer to analyze the source file and report syntax issues

A syntax tree analyzer registers action callbacks to analyze the syntax/grammar for the source file and reports pure syntactic issues. For example, a missing semicolon at the end of a statement is a syntactic error, while assigning an incompatible type to a symbol with no possible type conversion is a semantic error.

In this section, we will write a syntax tree analyzer that analyzes all the statements in a source file and generates a syntax warning for any statement that is not enclosed in a block, that is curly braces { and }. For example, the following code will generate a warning for both the if statement and the System.Console.WriteLine invocation statement, but the while statement is not flagged:

void Method()
{
while (...)
if (...)
System.Console.WriteLine(value);
}

Getting ready

You will need to have created and opened an analyzer project, say CSharpAnalyzers in Visual Studio 2017. Refer to the first recipe in this chapter to create this project.

How to do it...

  1. In Solution Explorer, double-click on the Resources.resx file in CSharpAnalyzers project to open the resource file in the resource editor.
  2. Replace the existing resource strings for AnalyzerDescription, AnalyzerMessageFormat and AnalyzerTitle with new strings.
  1. Replace the Initialize method implementation with the following:
public override void Initialize(AnalysisContext context)
{
context.RegisterSyntaxTreeAction(syntaxTreeContext =>
{
// Iterate through all statements in the tree.
var root = syntaxTreeContext.Tree.GetRoot(syntaxTreeContext.CancellationToken);
foreach (var statement in root.DescendantNodes().OfType<StatementSyntax>())
{
// Skip analyzing block statements.
if (statement is BlockSyntax)
{
continue;
}

// Report issue for all statements that are nested within a statement,
// but not a block statement.
if (statement.Parent is StatementSyntax && !(statement.Parent is BlockSyntax))
{
var diagnostic = Diagnostic.Create(Rule, statement.GetFirstToken().GetLocation());
syntaxTreeContext.ReportDiagnostic(diagnostic);
}
}
});
}
  1. Click on Ctrl + F5 to start a new Visual Studio instance with the analyzer enabled.
  2. In the new Visual Studio instance, create a new C# class library with the following code:
namespace ClassLibrary
{
public class Class1
{
void Method(bool flag, int value)
{
while (flag)
if (value > 0)
System.Console.WriteLine(value);
}
}
}
  1. Verify the analyzer diagnostic is neither reported for the method block for Method nor the while statement, but is reported for the if statement and System.Console.WriteLine invocation statement:
  1. Now, add curly braces around the System.Console.WriteLine invocation statement and verify the only single warning is now reported for the if statement:

How it works...

Syntax tree analyzers register callbacks to analyze syntax of all source files in the compilation. Our analysis works by getting the roots of the syntax tree and then operating on all the descendant syntax nodes of the roots which are of type StatementSyntax. First, we note that a block statement is itself an aggregate statement, and by definition has curly braces, so we skip past these.

// Skip analyzing block statements.
if (statement is BlockSyntax)
{
continue;
}

We then perform syntactic checks for the parent of statement syntax. If the parent of the statement is also a statement, but not a block with curly braces, then we report a diagnostic on the first syntax token of the statement recommending usage of curly braces.

// Report issue for all statements that are nested within a statement,
// but not a block statement.
if (statement.Parent is StatementSyntax && !(statement.Parent is BlockSyntax))
{
var diagnostic = Diagnostic.Create(Rule, statement.GetFirstToken().GetLocation());
syntaxTreeContext.ReportDiagnostic(diagnostic);
}
SyntaxTreeAnalysisContext provided to syntax tree actions does not expose the semantic model for the source file, hence no semantic analysis can be performed within a syntax tree action.
You have been reading a chapter from
Roslyn Cookbook
Published in: Jul 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781787286832
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