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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Roslyn analyzer — detect unwrapped driver-capability calls (OTOPCUA0001). Closes task #200. New netstandard2.0 analyzer project src/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers registered as an <Analyzer>-item ProjectReference from the Server csproj so the warning fires at every Server compile. First (and only so far) rule OTOPCUA0001 — "Driver capability call must be wrapped in CapabilityInvoker" — walks every InvocationOperation in the AST + trips when (a) the target method implements one of the seven guarded capability interfaces (IReadable / IWritable / ITagDiscovery / ISubscribable / IHostConnectivityProbe / IAlarmSource / IHistoryProvider) AND (b) the method's return type is Task, Task<T>, ValueTask, or ValueTask<T> — the async-wire-call constraint narrows the rule to the surfaces the Phase 6.1 pipeline actually wraps + sidesteps pure in-memory accessors like IHostConnectivityProbe.GetHostStatuses() which would trigger false positives AND (c) the call does NOT sit inside a lambda argument passed to CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync / ExecuteWriteAsync / AlarmSurfaceInvoker.*. The wrapper detection walks up the syntax tree from the call site, finds any enclosing InvocationExpressionSyntax whose method's containing type is one of the wrapper classes, + verifies the call lives transitively inside that invocation's AnonymousFunctionExpressionSyntax argument — a sibling "result = await driver.ReadAsync(...)" followed by a separate invoker.ExecuteAsync(...) call does NOT satisfy the wrapping rule + the analyzer flags it (regression guard in the 5th test). Five xunit-v3 + Shouldly tests at tests/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers.Tests: direct ReadAsync in server namespace trips; wrapped ReadAsync inside CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync lambda passes; direct WriteAsync trips; direct DiscoverAsync trips; sneaky pattern — read outside the lambda + ExecuteAsync with unrelated lambda nearby — still trips. Hand-rolled test harness compiles a stub-plus-user snippet via CSharpCompilation.WithAnalyzers + runs GetAnalyzerDiagnosticsAsync directly, deliberately avoiding Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp.Analyzer.Testing.XUnit because that package pins to xunit v2 + this repo is on xunit.v3 everywhere else. RS2008 release-tracking noise suppressed by adding AnalyzerReleases.Shipped.md + AnalyzerReleases.Unshipped.md as AdditionalFiles, which is the canonical Roslyn-analyzer hygiene path. Analyzer DLL referenced from Server.csproj via ProjectReference with OutputItemType=Analyzer + ReferenceOutputAssembly=false — the DLL ships as a compiler plugin, not a runtime dependency. Server build validates clean: the analyzer activates on every Server file but finds zero violations, which confirms the Phase 6.1 wrapping work done in prior PRs is complete + the analyzer is now the regression guard preventing the next new capability surface from being added raw. slnx updated with both the src + tests project entries. Full solution build clean, analyzer suite 5/5 passing.
Roslyn analyzer — detect unwrapped driver-capability calls (OTOPCUA0001). Closes task #200. New netstandard2.0 analyzer project src/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers registered as an <Analyzer>-item ProjectReference from the Server csproj so the warning fires at every Server compile. First (and only so far) rule OTOPCUA0001 — "Driver capability call must be wrapped in CapabilityInvoker" — walks every InvocationOperation in the AST + trips when (a) the target method implements one of the seven guarded capability interfaces (IReadable / IWritable / ITagDiscovery / ISubscribable / IHostConnectivityProbe / IAlarmSource / IHistoryProvider) AND (b) the method's return type is Task, Task<T>, ValueTask, or ValueTask<T> — the async-wire-call constraint narrows the rule to the surfaces the Phase 6.1 pipeline actually wraps + sidesteps pure in-memory accessors like IHostConnectivityProbe.GetHostStatuses() which would trigger false positives AND (c) the call does NOT sit inside a lambda argument passed to CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync / ExecuteWriteAsync / AlarmSurfaceInvoker.*. The wrapper detection walks up the syntax tree from the call site, finds any enclosing InvocationExpressionSyntax whose method's containing type is one of the wrapper classes, + verifies the call lives transitively inside that invocation's AnonymousFunctionExpressionSyntax argument — a sibling "result = await driver.ReadAsync(...)" followed by a separate invoker.ExecuteAsync(...) call does NOT satisfy the wrapping rule + the analyzer flags it (regression guard in the 5th test). Five xunit-v3 + Shouldly tests at tests/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers.Tests: direct ReadAsync in server namespace trips; wrapped ReadAsync inside CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync lambda passes; direct WriteAsync trips; direct DiscoverAsync trips; sneaky pattern — read outside the lambda + ExecuteAsync with unrelated lambda nearby — still trips. Hand-rolled test harness compiles a stub-plus-user snippet via CSharpCompilation.WithAnalyzers + runs GetAnalyzerDiagnosticsAsync directly, deliberately avoiding Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp.Analyzer.Testing.XUnit because that package pins to xunit v2 + this repo is on xunit.v3 everywhere else. RS2008 release-tracking noise suppressed by adding AnalyzerReleases.Shipped.md + AnalyzerReleases.Unshipped.md as AdditionalFiles, which is the canonical Roslyn-analyzer hygiene path. Analyzer DLL referenced from Server.csproj via ProjectReference with OutputItemType=Analyzer + ReferenceOutputAssembly=false — the DLL ships as a compiler plugin, not a runtime dependency. Server build validates clean: the analyzer activates on every Server file but finds zero violations, which confirms the Phase 6.1 wrapping work done in prior PRs is complete + the analyzer is now the regression guard preventing the next new capability surface from being added raw. slnx updated with both the src + tests project entries. Full solution build clean, analyzer suite 5/5 passing.
Roslyn analyzer — detect unwrapped driver-capability calls (OTOPCUA0001). Closes task #200. New netstandard2.0 analyzer project src/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers registered as an <Analyzer>-item ProjectReference from the Server csproj so the warning fires at every Server compile. First (and only so far) rule OTOPCUA0001 — "Driver capability call must be wrapped in CapabilityInvoker" — walks every InvocationOperation in the AST + trips when (a) the target method implements one of the seven guarded capability interfaces (IReadable / IWritable / ITagDiscovery / ISubscribable / IHostConnectivityProbe / IAlarmSource / IHistoryProvider) AND (b) the method's return type is Task, Task<T>, ValueTask, or ValueTask<T> — the async-wire-call constraint narrows the rule to the surfaces the Phase 6.1 pipeline actually wraps + sidesteps pure in-memory accessors like IHostConnectivityProbe.GetHostStatuses() which would trigger false positives AND (c) the call does NOT sit inside a lambda argument passed to CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync / ExecuteWriteAsync / AlarmSurfaceInvoker.*. The wrapper detection walks up the syntax tree from the call site, finds any enclosing InvocationExpressionSyntax whose method's containing type is one of the wrapper classes, + verifies the call lives transitively inside that invocation's AnonymousFunctionExpressionSyntax argument — a sibling "result = await driver.ReadAsync(...)" followed by a separate invoker.ExecuteAsync(...) call does NOT satisfy the wrapping rule + the analyzer flags it (regression guard in the 5th test). Five xunit-v3 + Shouldly tests at tests/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers.Tests: direct ReadAsync in server namespace trips; wrapped ReadAsync inside CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync lambda passes; direct WriteAsync trips; direct DiscoverAsync trips; sneaky pattern — read outside the lambda + ExecuteAsync with unrelated lambda nearby — still trips. Hand-rolled test harness compiles a stub-plus-user snippet via CSharpCompilation.WithAnalyzers + runs GetAnalyzerDiagnosticsAsync directly, deliberately avoiding Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp.Analyzer.Testing.XUnit because that package pins to xunit v2 + this repo is on xunit.v3 everywhere else. RS2008 release-tracking noise suppressed by adding AnalyzerReleases.Shipped.md + AnalyzerReleases.Unshipped.md as AdditionalFiles, which is the canonical Roslyn-analyzer hygiene path. Analyzer DLL referenced from Server.csproj via ProjectReference with OutputItemType=Analyzer + ReferenceOutputAssembly=false — the DLL ships as a compiler plugin, not a runtime dependency. Server build validates clean: the analyzer activates on every Server file but finds zero violations, which confirms the Phase 6.1 wrapping work done in prior PRs is complete + the analyzer is now the regression guard preventing the next new capability surface from being added raw. slnx updated with both the src + tests project entries. Full solution build clean, analyzer suite 5/5 passing.
Roslyn analyzer — detect unwrapped driver-capability calls (OTOPCUA0001). Closes task #200. New netstandard2.0 analyzer project src/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers registered as an <Analyzer>-item ProjectReference from the Server csproj so the warning fires at every Server compile. First (and only so far) rule OTOPCUA0001 — "Driver capability call must be wrapped in CapabilityInvoker" — walks every InvocationOperation in the AST + trips when (a) the target method implements one of the seven guarded capability interfaces (IReadable / IWritable / ITagDiscovery / ISubscribable / IHostConnectivityProbe / IAlarmSource / IHistoryProvider) AND (b) the method's return type is Task, Task<T>, ValueTask, or ValueTask<T> — the async-wire-call constraint narrows the rule to the surfaces the Phase 6.1 pipeline actually wraps + sidesteps pure in-memory accessors like IHostConnectivityProbe.GetHostStatuses() which would trigger false positives AND (c) the call does NOT sit inside a lambda argument passed to CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync / ExecuteWriteAsync / AlarmSurfaceInvoker.*. The wrapper detection walks up the syntax tree from the call site, finds any enclosing InvocationExpressionSyntax whose method's containing type is one of the wrapper classes, + verifies the call lives transitively inside that invocation's AnonymousFunctionExpressionSyntax argument — a sibling "result = await driver.ReadAsync(...)" followed by a separate invoker.ExecuteAsync(...) call does NOT satisfy the wrapping rule + the analyzer flags it (regression guard in the 5th test). Five xunit-v3 + Shouldly tests at tests/ZB.MOM.WW.OtOpcUa.Analyzers.Tests: direct ReadAsync in server namespace trips; wrapped ReadAsync inside CapabilityInvoker.ExecuteAsync lambda passes; direct WriteAsync trips; direct DiscoverAsync trips; sneaky pattern — read outside the lambda + ExecuteAsync with unrelated lambda nearby — still trips. Hand-rolled test harness compiles a stub-plus-user snippet via CSharpCompilation.WithAnalyzers + runs GetAnalyzerDiagnosticsAsync directly, deliberately avoiding Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp.Analyzer.Testing.XUnit because that package pins to xunit v2 + this repo is on xunit.v3 everywhere else. RS2008 release-tracking noise suppressed by adding AnalyzerReleases.Shipped.md + AnalyzerReleases.Unshipped.md as AdditionalFiles, which is the canonical Roslyn-analyzer hygiene path. Analyzer DLL referenced from Server.csproj via ProjectReference with OutputItemType=Analyzer + ReferenceOutputAssembly=false — the DLL ships as a compiler plugin, not a runtime dependency. Server build validates clean: the analyzer activates on every Server file but finds zero violations, which confirms the Phase 6.1 wrapping work done in prior PRs is complete + the analyzer is now the regression guard preventing the next new capability surface from being added raw. slnx updated with both the src + tests project entries. Full solution build clean, analyzer suite 5/5 passing.