This doc maintains an outline for 'snippet' samples specific to Java. Currently, the Java canonical samples in this format are located here.
Larger sample applications should attempt to follow these guidelines as well, but some may be ignored or waived as there can be many structural differences between applications and snippets.
All samples should be written to run on both Java 8 and Java 11. Samples that don't run on Java 8
should clearly say so in their README and specifically set Java 11 in their pom
. There should be
a clear reason why Java 8 isn't supported.
This sample format is intended to help enforce some specific goals in our samples. Even if not specifically mentioned in the format, samples should make best-effort attempts in the following:
-
Copy-paste-runnable - Users should be able to copy and paste the code into their own environments and run with as few and transparent modifications as possible. Samples should be as easy for a user to run as possible.
-
Teach through code - samples should teach users both how and why specific best practices should be implemented and performed when interacting with our services.
-
Idiomatic - examples should make best attempts to remain idiomatic and encourage good practices that are specific to a language or practice.
All new samples should build and run integration tests with Maven. Gradle support is optional as we don't yet have regular testing.
Any infrastructure required to run the test (such as a GCS bucket or a Cloud SQL instance) should be passed in as an environment variable. Tests should clearly indicate which environment variables are required for the tests to pass.
Resources required outside of this infrastructure should be generated and cleaned up (even on failures) as part of the test suite. Please note that tests should run successfully in parallel, and UUIDs should be used to prevent conflicts.
Snippets should have integration tests that should verify the snippet compiles and runs successfully. Tests should only verify that the sample itself is interacting with the service correctly - it is an explicit non goal for tests to verify that API is performing correctly. Because of this, mocks for external services are strongly discouraged.
- Test Library: JUnit4
- Test Runner: Maven Failsafe plugin (Integration Tests) and Maven Surefire plugin (Unit Tests).
Most of our sample tests are Integration Tests and should be marked as such using either the Prefix or suffix IT
.
As an example, the following test code shows how we test a region tag (region tags are tools Google
uses to identify sections of the snippets to be highlighted in documentation) called region_tag
:
package com.google.example;
import org.junit.Assert;
import org.junit.Before;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
import org.junit.runners.JUnit4;
/**
* Store region_tag in test method name, camel-cased
*/
@RunWith(JUnit4.class)
public class SomeClassIT {
@Test public void regionTag_shouldPass() throws Exception { }
@Test public void regionTag_shouldFail() throws Exception {
Assert.fail("should fail");
}
}
You will note:
- underscores (
_
) are used in test method names to separate blocks ofcamelCase
text - these blocks denote region tags, which serve as unique IDs for snippets in a given repository
camelCase
blocks beginning withshould
ordoes
are not region tags - instead, they simply describe the test being run
It is also possible to use annotations to provide info for region_tag
if you need to do this,
please contact one of the repo admins.
Most samples require a GCP project and billing account. Keep the following in mind when setting up tests.
-
Environment variables
Minimize additional environment variables that need to be set to run the tests. If you do require additional environment variables, they should be added to run_tests.sh.Existing environment variables include:
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT
PROJECT_ID
-
API library
If an API needs to be enabled in the testing project, add this information to the directory's README and to the comments in the PR. If there is no README.md file, add one in your PR. -
IAM Some API's require that the service account have some additional capibilities. These should also be mentioned in both the PR and the README.
-
Cloud resources
Most Java samples create the Cloud resources that they need to run. If this is resource intensive or not possible, add instructions to the directory's README.md file to add the resource to the testing project. Tests that create cloud resources should also delete those resources when they are done testing in a way that ensures the deletion of the resource even if the test fails, such as with with afinally
block or in an@After
or@AfterClass
function. Also, resources should not used fixed names, but prefer UUID's as we have many tests that run at the same time. -
Keys and Secrets Add a note in the pull request, in order for a Java maintainer to assist you in adding keys and secrets to the testing project.
Run tests locally with commands:
- Maven:
mvn verify
- Gradle:
gradle build test
To run the functions
tests (or other tests without a parent pom.xml
), use the following command:
cd functions
find */pom.xml | xargs -I {} echo $(pwd)/{} | xargs -I {} dirname {} | xargs -I {} sh -c "cd {} && mvn clean verify"
Your build.gradle
should have the following section:
test {
useJUnit()
systemProperty 'cucumber.options', '--plugin junit:target/surefire-reports/cucumber-junit.xml'
include '**/*Test.class'
}
Samples should be in a project folder under the name of the technology the snippet represents. Additional subfolders should be used to differentiate groups of samples. Execution technologies, like Compute, Cloud Run, Dataproc, Dataflow, Functions may have subfolder's for other technologies to show using the two technologies together.
Folder and package paths should try to avoid containing unnecessary folders to allow users to more easily navigate to the snippets themselves. However, it is encouraged to use common names like "snippets" and "quickstart" to allow users to more easily discover the project contents.
For example, the the java-docs-samples/compute
folder may have the following projects:
compute/snippets
compute/quickstart
A Maven project should have a pom.xml
that is formatted and easily human readable that declares
a parent pom as shown below, and declares all dependencies needed for the project. Best attempts
should be made to minimize necessary dependencies without sacrificing the idiomatic practices.
<!--
The parent pom defines common style checks and testing strategies for our samples.
Removing or replacing it should not affect the execution of the samples in anyway.
-->
<parent>
<groupId>com.google.cloud.samples</groupId>
<artifactId>shared-configuration</artifactId>
<version>SPECIFY_LATEST_VERSION</version>
</parent>
Some frameworks such as Spring require the parent
atom to be used. If this applies to you,
contact the maintainers for guidance.
When adding a dependency to a GCP client library, the libraries-bom should be used instead of explicitly declaring the client version. See the below example:
<dependencyManagement>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>libraries-bom</artifactId>
<version>SPECIFY_LATEST_VERSION</version>
<type>pom</type>
<scope>import</scope>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
</dependencyManagement>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>google-cloud-storage</artifactId>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Use of environment variables over system properties is strongly preferred for configuration.
Any additional files required should be stored in src/test/resources
.
The README.md should contain instructions for the user to get the samples operable. Ideally, steps such as project or resource setup should be links to Cloud Documentation. This is to reduce duplicate instructions and README maintenance in the future.
Samples should generally follow the "Arrange, Act, Assert" outline to:
- Arrange - Create and configure the components for the request. Avoid nesting these components, as complex, nested builders can be hard to read.
- Act - Send the request and receive the response.
- Assert - Verify the call was successful or that the response is correct. This is often done by
printing the contents of the response to
stdout
.
Samples in this repository follow the Google Java Style Guide. This is enforced by Checkstyle and the Maven Checkstyle Plugin.
Use the google-java-format tool to automatically reformat your source code to adhere to the style guide. It is available as a command-line tool or IntelliJ plugin.
To run the Checkstyle, ErrorProne and SpotBugs plugins on an existing sample, run
mvn clean verify -DskipTests -P lint
The -DskipTests
is optional. It is useful if you want to verify that your code
builds and adheres to the style guide without waiting for tests to complete.
Samples should use package names in the following formats:
<PRODUCT>
, <PRODUCT1>.<PRODUCT2>
, <PRODUCT>.<IDEA>
is preferred; fewer levels are preferred.
Legacy samples that use com.example.<YOUR_PRODUCT>.<FOLDER>
, such as com.example.dlp.snippets
or
com.example.functions.snippets
are still accepted and do not need to migrate to the preferred system (above).
NEVER use com.google.*
for samples or snippets. Use of the default package is strongly discouraged.
Each snippet should be be contained in its own file, within a class with a name descriptive of the
snippet and a similarly named method. Region tags should start below the package
(if there is
one), but should include the class and any imports in full. Additional methods can be used if it
improves readability of the sample.
// [START product_example]
import com.example.resource;
public class exampleSnippet {
// Snippet methods ...
}
// [END product_example]
Include a short, descriptive comment detailing what action the snippet it attempting to perform. Avoid using the javadoc format, as these samples are not used to generate documentation and it can be redundant.
// This is an example snippet for showing best practices.
public static void exampleSnippet(String projectId, String filePath) {
// Snippet content ...
}
Method arguments should be limited to what is absolutely required for testing (ideally having at
most 4 arguments). In most cases, this is project specific information or the path to an external
file. For example, project specific information (such as projectId
) or a filePath
for an
external file is acceptable, while an argument for the type of a file or a specific action is not.
Any declared function arguments should include a no-arg, main method with examples for how the user can initialize the method arguments and call the entrypoint for the snippet. If the values for these variables need to be replaced by the user, be explicit that they are example values only.
Snippet methods should specify a return type of void
and avoid returning any value wherever
possible. Instead, show the user how to interact with a returned object programmatically by printing
some example attributes to the console.
public static void main(main(String[] args) {
// TODO(developer): Replace these variables before running the sample.
String projectId = "my-project-id";
String filePath = "path/to/image.png";
inspectImageFile(projectId, filePath);
}
// This is an example snippet for showing best practices.
public static void exampleSnippet(String projectId, String filePath) {
// Snippet content ...
}
Samples should include examples and details of how to catch and handle common Exceptions
that are
the result of improper interactions with the client or service. Lower level exceptions that are
the result of environment or hardware errors (such as IOException
, InteruptedException
, or
FileNotFoundException
) should be allowed to bubble up to the next level.
If there is no solution (or if the solution is too verbose to resolve in a sample) to resolving the exception programmatically (such as a missing resource), it is acceptable to either log or leave a comment clearly explaining what actions the user should take to correct the situation.
In general, follow the
Google Java style guide
and catch the most specific type of Exception
, instead of a more general one.
Example:
try {
// Do something
} catch (IllegalArgumentException ok) {
// IllegalArgumentException's are thrown when an invalid argument has been passed to a function. Ok to ignore.
}
For example, looking at the code in googleapis/java-dialogflow searching for throws
and catch
, I see lots of specific enhanced exceptions - our samples should reflect the richness of those. For example, ApiException has 16 known subclasses that Gax throws. gRPC also throws io.grpc.StatusException
which has additional info to help developers understand the cause of their errors. There is also io.grpc.StatusRuntimeException
and io.grpc.ManagedChannelProvider.ProviderNotFoundException
. By listing them explicitly, users are clued into looking them up to understand how the API works and what might happen in production.
The preferred style for initialization is to use a try-with-resources statement with a comment clarifying how to handle multiple requests and clean up instructions.
Example:
// Initialize client that will be used to send requests. This client only needs to be created
// once, and can be reused for multiple requests. After completing all of your requests, call
// the "close" method on the client to safely clean up any remaining background resources.
try (DlpServiceClient dlp = DlpServiceClient.create()) {
// Do something
}
NOTE: Snippet should be optimized to run directly from a user's IDE. Command-Line arguments are considered an anti-pattern, and new samples should not implement them.
Dataflow samples are an exception to this guideline.
Google written dependencies are always preferred over alternatives. For example:
- Guava is preferred over Apache commons lang
- GSON is preferred for JSON parsing.
- Google HTTP Client is preferred.
Prefer using modern idioms / language features over older styles.
Should be about 1-3 lines at most, otherwise it should be in a named method.
- Prefer lambdas to anonymous classes
Streams can be extremely compact, efficient, and easy to use - consider using them.
- Avoid side effects (changes outside the scope of the stream)
- Prefer
for
each loops to.foreach()
- Checked Exceptions can be problematic inside streams.
Parallel Streams make sense in a few situations. However, there are many situations where their use is a net loss. Really think through your usage and consider what they might mean if you are already doing concurrent operations.
The following are some general Java best practices that should be followed in samples to remain idiomatic.
Use the java.time
package when dealing with units of time in some manner.
Use slf4j as shown here for consistent logging. Unless you are demonstrating how to use raw Stackdriver API's.