"static" as in such a tool will never try and actually run your code; it can only detect what it thinks is defects in the sources that it has at its disposal
Well, I'm not saying the code might not suffer from it, but at least I can do something, it's not like when your fever is so high you can't even write System.out.println("Hello World!");P
@fge oh, thank you for promptly responding. We have this database that gets updates on say 'statuses' of hardware devices. The status changes are dependent on the user of the machine. Say, if a user turns up the device, it changes its database status to 1, and when off to 0, when using 3. But, we are abstracted from how those statuses gets updated. The only gateway we have for status updates is by constantly querying the status.
I implemented a thread that constantly looks up those values. however, they are hitting performance of the CPU badly. specially multiple threads looking up on multiple devices. More especially when the statuses changes often. Each change on the 'observed' DB, should be reflected on our native DB. When write/update queries are hitting, it eats the CPU resource badly.
@Michael, I monitor when does the updates run on my native DB. if the same status comes up on the timed check, they ignore the update. however, if the status changes of the observed DB is too frequent, then it would update the native DB same times
ahhhh @fge, im so sorry, i had the wrong statement of problem. I was already on that part that looks on the observed database, rather on the native DB. But the same problem exists, it has to constantly schedule a lookup for check. i wonder if there is a technology that would notify if there are changes instead of constantly checking.
@fge replication wouldnt be possible on this setup. one is MSSQL and the other is MySQL
see, the whole discussion gets ruined when MySQL gets mentioned. OMG, if only I knew this would be problematic, i couldve hit my professor back in 2010 for 'glorifying' and promoting that sh&*(& to me and my classmates
im not really quite sure how they do that. but when the supplier demonstrated the product to us, he just turns on the device uses it, and constantly hits the refresh button for his select query on MSSQL to show that the status changes..
i was thinking, there should be a technology of some sort already. because, would you agree that its quite straining to check on every half a second the status of the database. heck, what if every 1milisecond for mission critical reasons
Ok, this line kind of prove your point - Major additions to Java EE 5 include the JSTL and JSF technologies that simplify development of web applications