complexityReport.js
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A tool for reporting code complexity metrics in JavaScript projects.
Currently the tool reports on:
- lines of code;
- cyclomatic complexity;
- Halstead metrics;
- maintainability index.
The tool can be configured to fail
when cyclomatic complexity passes a specified threshold,
to aid its usefulness in automated environments / CI.
There are also options
for controlling how metrics are calculated
and the format of the report output.
The metrics are calculated by walking syntax trees
generated by the Esprima parser.
For people who are only interested in analysing small amounts of code
and don't want to download the tool,
there is also a web front-end available:
Installation
Local to the current project
npm install complexity-report
Globally for all projects
sudo npm install -g complexity-report
Usage
From the command line
cr [options] <file...>
Options
-o <file>
: Specify an output file for the report,
defaults to stdout
.-f <format>
: Specify an output format for the report,
defaults to plain
.-t <threshold>
: Specify the per-function complexity threshold
(beyond which, the process will fail when exiting).-s
: Silences the console output.-l
: Disregards operator ||
as a source of cyclomatic complexity.-w
: Disregards switch
statements as a source of cyclomatic complexity.-i
: Treats for
...in
loops as a source of cyclomatic complexity.-c
: Treats catch
clauses as a source of cyclomatic complexity.
Output formats
Currently there are three output formats supported:
plain
,
json
and xml
.
These are loaded with require
from the src/formats
subdirectory
and adding new formats is really easy.
Each format module must export a function format
,
which takes a report object as its only argument
and returns its string representation of the report.
See src/formats/plain.js
for an example format.
From code
Loading the library
var cr = require('complexity-report');
Calling the library
var report = cr.run(source, options);
The argument source
must be a string
containing the source code that is to be analysed.
The argument options
is an optional object
which may contain properties that modify
cyclomatic complexity calculation.
The following options are available:
logicalor
: Boolean indicating whether operator ||
should be considered a source of cyclomatic complexity,
defaults to true
.switchcase
: Boolean indicating whether switch
statements
should be considered a source of cyclomatic complexity,
defaults to true
.forin
: Boolean indicating whether for
...in
loops
should be considered a source of cyclomatic complexity,
defaults to false
.trycatch
: Boolean indicating whether catch
clauses
should be considered a source of cyclomatic complexity,
defaults to false
.
The returned report is an object
that contains properties detailing the complexity
of each function from the source code.
There is also
a maintainability index
as well as aggregate complexity metrics
for the source in its entirety.
Related projects
- Gleb Bahmutov's js-complexity-viz
is a wrapper for complexityReport.js,
which uses the Google Visualization API
to render complexity charts
for all JavaScript files in a directory tree.
Development
Roadmap
The short-term plan is
to write more output formats
and open up lots more options
for external configuration of the analysis.
I also need to spend some time
throwing more complex test cases at it,
to flush out all of the edge cases
that I'm probably not yet handling.
To this end,
it would be great to hear from people
that have run the tool
against their own codebases.
The bigger and uglier, the better!
If you spot any issues,
please raise them in the tracker.
In the longer term,
I have some vague ideas concerning
how to track trends in a codebase over time.
Visualisations is another area that could be pretty sweet to look into.
If you think there's anything else I should look at,
please raise an issue or, even better,
feel free to implement it and submit a pull request! :)
Dependencies
The build environment relies on
Node.js,
NPM,
Jake,
JSHint,
Mocha and
Chai.
Assuming that you already have Node.js and NPM set up,
you just need to run npm install
to install all of the dependencies
as listed in package.json
.
Tests
The tests are in test/complexityReport.js
. You can run them with the
command npm test
or jake test
.