- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Continuous Learning
- System Commands
- Expected Program Output
- Automated Checks with GatorGrader
- Downloading Project Updates
- Using Travis CI
- System Requirements
- Reporting Problems
- Receiving Assistance
- Project Assessment
This assignment requires a programmer to implement and test a
DoublyLinkedList
. More details about the purpose and implementation of the
DoublyLinkedList
are available in Section 3.2 of the textbook. Also, you can
learn more about iterative algorithms by reviewing Section 1.5.2. Please note
that this assignment will also require you to read and use Java classes that
contain a test suite. Specifically, the programmer is responsible for learning
how to run and extend a test suite written in the JUnit testing framework, as
explained in Section 1.9. As verified by
Checkstyle, the source code for all
of the Java classes must adhere to all of the requirements in the Google Java
Style Guide.
The source code in the submitted Java source code files must also pass
additional tests set by the GatorGrader
tool. For instance, GatorGrader will
check to ensure that Experiment
and RunCampaign
have println
statements
that can produce the output from running a campaign of experiments. Gradle will
also run a JUnit test suite that will perform many checks on your
implementation of the Java classes. More details about the GatorGrader checks
are included later in this document and in the assignment sheet.
If you have not done so already, please read all of the relevant GitHub Guides that explain how to use many of the features that GitHub provides. In particular, please make sure that you have read the following GitHub guides: Mastering Markdown, Hello World, and Documenting Your Projects on GitHub. Each of these guides will help you to understand how to use both GitHub and GitHub Classroom.
Students who want to learn more about how to use Docker should review the Docker Documentation. Students are also encouraged to review the documentation for their text editor, which is available for text editors like Atom and VS Code. You should also review the Git documentation to learn more about how to use the Git command-line client. In addition to talking with the instructor and technical leader for your course, students are encouraged to search StackOverflow for answers to their technical questions.
To do well on this assignment, you should also read Section 1.5.2 to learn more about iteration constructs. You should further review Sections 4.1 to 4.3, focusing on the content that explains the steps of both an analytical and an empirical evaluation of an algorithm. Please read all of the content and study all of the technical diagrams and source code segments in Section 3.2. Finally, please see the course instructor or one of the student technical leaders if you have questions about any of these reading assignments.
This project invites students to enter system commands into a terminal window.
This assignment uses Docker to deliver programs, such
as gradle
and the source code and packages needed to run
GatorGrader, to a students'
computer, thereby eliminating the need for a programmer to install them on their
development workstation. Individuals who do not want to install Docker can
optionally install of the programs mentioned in the Project
Requirements section of this document.
Once you have installed Docker
Desktop, you can use the
following docker run
command to start gradle grade
as a containerized
application, using the DockaGator
Docker image available on
DockerHub.
docker run --rm --name dockagator \
-v "$(pwd)":/project \
-v "$HOME/.dockagator":/root/.local/share \
gatoreducator/dockagator
The aforementioned command will use "$(pwd)"
(i.e., the current directory) as
the project directory and "$HOME/.dockagator"
as the cached GatorGrader
directory. Please note that both of these directories must exist, although only
the project directory must contain something. Generally, the project directory
should contain the source code and technical writing of this assignment, as
provided to a student through GitHub. Additionally, the cache directory should
not contain anything other than directories and programs created by DockaGator,
thus ensuring that they are not otherwise overwritten during the completion of
the assignment. To ensure that the previous command will work correctly, you
should create the cache directory by running the command mkdir $HOME/.dockagator
. If the above docker run
command does not work correctly on
the Windows operating system, you may need to instead run the following command
to work around limitations in the terminal window:
docker run --rm --name dockagator \
-v "$(pwd):/project" \
-v "$HOME/.dockagator:/root/.local/share" \
gatoreducator/dockagator
If that Docker command does not work correctly, then you should first consider
writing the command on a single line in your terminal window and then replacing
$(pwd)
and $HOME
with the fully qualified name of the directory that those
variables represent. Students who are stuck on this step should explain to the
course instructor what they have already tried and what challenges they
currently face.
Here are some additional commands that you may need to run when using Docker:
docker info
: display information about how Docker runs on your workstationdocker images
: show the Docker images installed on your workstationdocker container list
: list the active images running on your workstationdocker system prune
: remove many types of "dangling" components from your workstationdocker image prune
: remove all "dangling" docker images from your workstationdocker container prune
: remove all stopped docker containers from your workstationdocker rmi $(docker images -q) --force
: remove all docker images from your workstation
Since the above docker run
command uses a Docker image that, by default, runs
gradle grade
and then exits the Docker container, you may want to instead run
the following command so that you enter an "interactive terminal" that will
allow you to repeatedly run commands within the Docker container.
docker run -it --rm --name dockagator \
-v "$(pwd)":/project \
-v "$HOME/.dockagator":/root/.local/share \
gatoreducator/dockagator /bin/bash
Once you have typed this command, you can use the GatorGrader
tool in the Docker container by
typing the command gradle grade
in your terminal. Running this command will
produce a lot of output that you should carefully inspect. If GatorGrader's
output shows that there are no mistakes in the assignment, then your source code
and writing are passing all of the automated baseline checks. However, if the
output indicates that there are mistakes, then you will need to understand what
they are and then try to fix them.
You can also complete several important Java programming tasks by using the
gradle
tool. For instance, you can compile (i.e., create bytecode from the
program's source code if it is correct) the program using the command gradle build
. Here are some other commands that you can type:
gradle grade
: run the GatorGrader tool to check your workgradle clean
: clean the project of all the derived filesgradle check
: check the quality of the code using Checkstylegradle build
: create the bytecode from the Java source codegradle run
: run the Java program in the command-linegradle cleanTest
: clean the JUnit test suite of derived filesgradle test
: run the JUnit test suite and display the resultsgradle tasks
: display details about the Gradle system
To run one of these commands, you must be in the main (i.e., "home base")
directory for this assignment where the build.gradle
file is located.
Typing the command gradle run
in the Docker container produces the following
output for the instructor's version of this assignment. Finally, please note
that this laboratory assignment invites you to run a comprehensive JUnit test
suite of a Java class in a different package. While this test suite does not
produce any output, you should carefully inspect its tests so that you
understand their strategy. In particular, it is critically important that you
study and understand every test case in TestDoublyLinkedList
.
DoublyLinkedList Before removeLast:
(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)
DoublyLinkedList After removeLast:
(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
In addition to meeting all of the requirements outlined in the assignment sheet, your submission must pass the following checks that GatorGrader automatically assesses:
- The DoublyLinkedList.java in src/main/java/practicaleight/list has exactly 0 of the
Add Your Name Here
fragment - The DoublyLinkedList.java in src/main/java/practicaleight/list has exactly 0 of the
TODO
fragment - The DoublyLinkedList.java in src/main/java/practicaleight/list has exactly 1 of the
package practicaleight
fragment complete! - The DoublyLinkedList.java in src/main/java/practicaleight/list has exactly 1 of the
public static void main
fragment! - The DoublyLinkedList.java in src/main/java/practicaleight/list has exactly 3 of the
println(
fragment - The command
gradle -q --console plain run
executes correctly - The command
gradle build
executes correctly - The command
gradle test
executes correctly - The command output has exactly 1 of the
After removeLast
fragment - The command output has exactly 1 of the
Before removeLast
fragment - The file DoublyLinkedList.java exists in the src/main/java/practicaleight/list directory
- The repository has at least 5 commit(s)
If GatorGrader's automated
checks pass correctly, the tool will produce the output like the following in
addition to returning a zero exit code (which you can access by typing the
command echo $?
).
┏━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┓
┃ Passed 12/12 (100%) of checks for cs101-F2019-practical8! ┃
┗━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
If GatorGrader's maintainers push updates to this sample assignment and you received it through GitHub Classroom and you would like to also receive these updates, then you can type this command in the main directory for this assignment:
git remote add download [email protected]:Allegheny-Computer-Science-101-F2019/cs101-F2019-practical8-starter.git
You should only need to type this command once; running the command additional times may yield an error message but will not negatively influence the state of your Git repository. Now, you are ready to download the updates provided by the GatorGrader maintainers by typing this command:
git pull download master
This second command can be run whenever the maintainers needs to provide you with new source code for this assignment. However, please note that, if you have edited the files that we updated, running the previous command may lead to Git merge conflicts. If this happens, you may need to manually resolve them with the help of the instructor or a student technical leader. Finally, please note that the Gradle plugin for GatorGrader will automatically download the newest version of GatorGrader.
This assignment uses Travis CI to automatically run GatorGrader and additional checking programs every time you commit to your GitHub repository. The checking will start as soon as you have accepted the assignment — thus creating your own private repository — and the course instructor and/or GitHub enables Travis for it. If you are using Travis for the first time, you will need to authorize Travis CI to access the private repositories that you created on GitHub. If you do not see either a yellow ● or a green ✔ or a red ✗ in your listing of commits, then please ask the instructor to see whether or not Travis CI was correctly enabled.
We developed this assignment to work with the following software and versions:
- Docker Desktop
- Operating Systems
- Linux
- MacOS
- Windows 10 Pro
- Windows 10 Enterprise
- Programming Language Tools
- Gradle 5.4
- MDL 0.5.0
- OpenJDK 11.0.4
- JUnit 4.9.0
- Proselint 0.10.2
- Python 3.6 or 3.7
If you have found a problem with this assignment's provided source code or documentation, then you can go to the Computer Science 101 Fall 2019 Practical 8 repository and raise an issue. If you have found a problem with the GatorGrader tool and the way that it checks your assignment, then you can also raise an issue in that repository. To ensure that your issue is properly resolved, please provide as many details as is possible about the problem that you experienced. If you discover a problem with the assignment sheet for this project, then please raise an issue in the GitHub repository that provides the assignment sheets for your course.
Whenever possible, individuals who find, and use the appropriate GitHub issue tracker to correctly document, a mistake in any aspect of this assignment will receive free GitHub stickers and extra credit towards their grade for the project.
If you are having trouble completing any part of this project, then please talk with either the course instructor or a student technical leader during the course session. Alternatively, you may ask questions in the Slack workspace for this course. Finally, you can schedule a meeting during the course instructor's office hours.
Taking inspiration from the principles of specification-based grading, the grade that a student receives on this practical assignment is based on the following:
- Travis CI Build Status: Since additional checks on the source code and/or technical writing may be encoded in Travis CI's actions and, moreover, all of the GatorGrader checks are also run in Travis CI, students will receive a checkmark grade if their last before-the-deadline build passes and a green ✔ appears in their GitHub commit log instead of a red ✗. Students are encouraged to repeatedly revise their source code in an attempt to get their Travis CI build to pass.
All grades for this project will be reported through a student's GitHub repository using either messages in the GitHub commit log or issues raised in the issue tracker. Students should ask questions about their grade for this project in GitHub so as to facilitate an effective conversation about the submitted deliverables.