Gendarme - Rule-based code analysis for Mono.
gendarme [--config configfile] [--set ruleset] [--log file |
--xml file | --html file] [options] assemblies ...
Gendarme is a extensible rule-based tool used to find
problems in .NET applications and libraries. Gendarme inspects programs and
libraries that contain code in ECMA CIL format (Mono and .NET) and looks for
common problems with the code, problems that compilers do not typically
check or have historically not checked.
- --config
configfile
- Specify the rule sets and rule settings. Default is 'rules.xml'.
- --set ruleset
- Specify a rule set from configfile. Defaults to 'default'.
- --log file
- Save the report, as a text file, to the specified file.
- --xml file
- Save the report, formatted as XML, to the specified file.
- --html file
- Save the report, formatted as HTML, to the specified file.
- --console
- Write the defects on stdout. This is the default (implicit) behavior if
none of --log, --xml, or --html options are specified. If (explicitely)
specified then the defects will be shown on both stdout and inside
text/xml/html report(s).
- --ignore
ignore-file
- Do not report defects listed in the specified file.
- --limit N
- Stop reporting after N defects are found.
- --severity [all |
audit[+] | low[+|-] | medium[+|-] | high[+|-] |
critical[-]],...
- Filter the reported defects to include the specified severity levels.
Default is 'medium+' (i.e. low and audit levels are ignored).
- --confidence
[all | low[+] | normal[+|-] | high[+|-] | total[-]],...
- Filter the reported defects to include the specified confidence levels.
Default is 'normal+' (i.e. low level is ignored).
- --quiet
- Used to disable progress and other information which is normally written
to stdout.
- --v|verbose
- When present additional progress information is written to stdout. May be
used more than once to write even more info.
- --version
- Display Gendarme's version number. This will match the Mono version number
that this copy of Gendarme was released with.
- assemblies
...
- Specify the assemblies to verify. You can specify multiple filenames,
including masks (? and *). You can also provide a file that lists several
assemblies (one per line) by prefixing the filename with @ on the command
line.
- ignore-file
- This file is used to filter out defects from gendarme reports.
- rules.xml
- This file is used in conjunction with the --set option to control and
configure the rules used by Gendarme. It contains a set of named rules
(rule sets) and each rule set contains a list of rules.
- gendarme.exe.config
- Used by debug versions of Gendarme to enable logging for rules. It is
useful for Gendarme's developers (i.e. not meant for end-users).
- GENDARME_COLOR
- The runner will use colors when displaying defects on the console. By
default colors are dark in order to display correctly on any background.
You can change this default to "light" (lighter colors looks
nice on a dark background, or "none" so no colors will be used.
E.g.
GENDARME_COLOR=none gendarme ...
- 0
- The runner returns 0 when no error has occurred. If some code was analyzed
then this also means that no defects were found and reported.
- 1
- The runner execution was successful but either some defects where found or
no assembly was specified.
- 2
- The runner execution was interrupted by I/O errors (e.g. missing
files).
- 3
- The runner founds errors in the (default or user supplied) configuration
files. Specific error messages should be printed on the console.
- 4
- The runner execution was interrupted by a non-handled exception. This is
likely a bug inside Gendarme and should be reported on Novell's bugzilla
(http://bugzilla.novell.com) or on the mailing-list.
Copyright (C) 2005-2010 Novell, Inc (http://www.novell.com)
Mailing lists are listed at the
http://groups.google.com/group/gendarme
http://www.mono-project.com/Gendarme