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External annotations

How it works

If you are using an external library, whose sources are not available to you, it does not seem feasible to use the attributes there for specifying code annotations.

In this case, you can use External Annotations, which allow you to complement the already compiled entities with attributes recognized by ReSharper's code analysis engine. External annotations let you 'cheat' the engine, by making it see the attributes (for methods, parameters, and other declarations), which were not declared at the time the library was compiled.

External annotations are specified in XML files. When loading solution, ReSharper looks for specifically named XML files in specific locations and reads annotations from there. These XML files have a structure similar to XmlDoc. For example, to annotate the method XmlReader.Create(Stream input) from the assembly System.Xml of .NET Framework 4.0, with the NotNull contracts, the XML file would look as follows:

<assembly name="System.Xml, Version=4.0.0.0"> <!--The attribute name contains the assembly name. If you don't specify the version, this file's attributes will be applied to all versions of the assemblies of that name --> <member name="M:System.Xml.XmlReader.Create(System.IO.Stream)"> <!--This shows the name of the member whose attributes are complemented; the notation is the same as XmlDoc --> <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.NotNullAttribute.#ctor" /> <!--attribute constructor names are also specified using XmlDoc notation --> <parameter name="input"> <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.NotNullAttribute.#ctor" /> </parameter> </member> </assembly>

JetBrains external annotations

The approach described above was used to annotate a huge amount of symbols in the .NET Framework Class Library, as well as in other frequently used libraries. External annotations for these libraries are installed with ReSharper to ensure better code analysis. Some features (for example, ASP.NET MVC support) also rely on external annotations.

The source code of JetBrains external annotations is available under the MIT license on GitHub: https://github.com/JetBrains/ExternalAnnotations. You are welcome to contribute to this repository or use it as an example for your own external annotations.

Create external annotations

You can create external annotations to specify contracts for any compiled assembly. To make sure ReSharper recognizes the XML file with external annotations, this file should be named [Assembly.Name].ExternalAnnotations.xml. Depending on how you are going to use the annotated binaries, you can create annotations files in the following places:

  • If you are going to publish some binaries (for example, via NuGet), place the annotations [Assembly.Name].ExternalAnnotations.xml file in the same folder where the annotated [Assembly.Name].dll file is located.

  • If you want to annotate some binaries included in your project, place the annotations files for each assembly in the ExternalAnnotations folder next to the project or solution file.

    When you put an annotations file in this folder, the file should be named after the assembly name, that is [Assembly.Name].xml. It can also be in a subfolder of ExternalAnnotations, but that folder must have the assembly name, that is ExternalAnnotations/[Assembly.Name]/[AnyName].xml

    This way you can also keep the annotations under a VCS so that your team could benefit from them.

To illustrate creating external annotations, imagine that you use a TestLib assembly that has MyTestClass class with static string ReverseString(String inputString) method. Suppose, that from the assembly documentation, you know that the method is pure and never returns null, and its parameter should never be null.

Initially, ReSharper is not aware of how ReverseString works, and therefore it finds no problems in the following code:

External annotations

Create external annotations for a compiled assembly

  1. Locate the TestLib.dll on your file system and create a file named TestLib.ExternalAnnotations.xml either in the same folder or in the ExternalAnnotations folder next to the project or solution file where TestLib.dll is referenced.

  2. Open TestLib.ExternalAnnotations.xml for editing and type in the following:

    <assembly name="TestLib"> <member name="M:TestLib.MyTestClass.ReverseString(System.String)"> <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.NotNullAttribute.#ctor" /> <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.PureAttribute.#ctor" /> <parameter name="inputString"> <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.NotNullAttribute.#ctor" /> </parameter> </member> </assembly>
  3. Reload your solution . Now ReSharper detects incorrect usage of ReverseString and highlights the problem with the null parameter:

    External annotations

    ... and the unnecessary check of the return value:

    External annotations
  4. To see, which external annotations are applied to a library symbol, you can use the Quick Documentation feature. Just press Control+Q over the symbol to study its attributes. In our case, we can see that ReverseString is annotated with [NotNull] and [Pure] attributes and the parameter is annotated with [NotNull]:

    Quick documentation with code annotation attributes

    The grey color of the attributes means that they come not from source or assembly code, but from external annotations.

Distribute external annotations

Another case of using external annotations is publishing external annotations for a library that you distribute, or for any library you like. In this case, the users of your library who also use ReSharper, Rider, or Fleet will get more suggestions and fixes.

External annotations for libraries can be published as and installed from NuGet packages. For more information about packaging external annotations, refer to ReSharper plugin development guide.

Last modified: 01 October 2024