Analyzing exception flow in Java programs

  • Robillard M
  • Murphy G
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Abstract

Exception handling mechanisms provided by programming languages are intended to ease the difficulty of developing robust software systems. Using these mechanisms, a software developer can describe the exceptional conditions a module might raise, and the response of the module to exceptional conditions that may occur as it is executing. Creating a robust system from such a localized view requires a developer to reason about the flow of exceptions across modules. The use of unchecked exceptions, and in object-oriented languages, subsumption, makes it difficult for a software developer to perform this reasoning manually. In this paper, we describe a tool called Jex that analyzes the flow of exceptions in Java code to produce views of the exception structure. We demonstrate how Jex can help a developer identify program points where exceptions are caught accidentally, where there is an opportunity to add finer-grained recovery code, and where error-handling policies are not being followed.

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APA

Robillard, M. P., & Murphy, G. C. (1999). Analyzing exception flow in Java programs. ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes, 24(6), 322–337. https://doi.org/10.1145/318774.319251

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