How to disable a particular checkstyle rule for a particular line of code?

Check out the use of the supressionCommentFilter at http://checkstyle.sourceforge.net/config_filters.html#SuppressionCommentFilter. You'll need to add the module to your checkstyle.xml

<module name="SuppressionCommentFilter"/>

and it's configurable. Thus you can add comments to your code to turn off checkstyle (at various levels) and then back on again through the use of comments in your code. E.g.

//CHECKSTYLE:OFF
public void someMethod(String arg1, String arg2, String arg3, String arg4) {
//CHECKSTYLE:ON

Or even better, use this more tweaked version:

<module name="SuppressionCommentFilter">
    <property name="offCommentFormat" value="CHECKSTYLE.OFF\: ([\w\|]+)"/>
    <property name="onCommentFormat" value="CHECKSTYLE.ON\: ([\w\|]+)"/>
    <property name="checkFormat" value="$1"/>
</module>

which allows you to turn off specific checks for specific lines of code:

//CHECKSTYLE.OFF: IllegalCatch - Much more readable than catching 7 exceptions
catch (Exception e)
//CHECKSTYLE.ON: IllegalCatch

*Note: you'll also have to add the FileContentsHolder:

<module name="FileContentsHolder"/>

See also

<module name="SuppressionFilter">
    <property name="file" value="docs/suppressions.xml"/>
</module>

under the SuppressionFilter section on that same page, which allows you to turn off individual checks for pattern matched resources.

So, if you have in your checkstyle.xml:

<module name="ParameterNumber">
   <property name="id" value="maxParameterNumber"/>
   <property name="max" value="3"/>
   <property name="tokens" value="METHOD_DEF"/>
</module>

You can turn it off in your suppression xml file with:

<suppress id="maxParameterNumber" files="YourCode.java"/>

Another method, now available in Checkstyle 5.7 is to suppress violations via the @SuppressWarnings java annotation. To do this, you will need to add two new modules (SuppressWarningsFilter and SuppressWarningsHolder) in your configuration file:

<module name="Checker">
   ...
   <module name="SuppressWarningsFilter" />
   <module name="TreeWalker">
       ...
       <module name="SuppressWarningsHolder" />
   </module>
</module> 

Then, within your code you can do the following:

@SuppressWarnings("checkstyle:methodlength")
public void someLongMethod() throws Exception {

or, for multiple suppressions:

@SuppressWarnings({"checkstyle:executablestatementcount", "checkstyle:methodlength"})
public void someLongMethod() throws Exception {

NB: The "checkstyle:" prefix is optional (but recommended). According to the docs the parameter name have to be in all lowercase, but practice indicates any case works.


If you prefer to use annotations to selectively silence rules, this is now possible using the @SuppressWarnings annotation, starting with Checkstyle 5.7 (and supported by the Checkstyle Maven Plugin 2.12+).

First, in your checkstyle.xml, add the SuppressWarningsHolder module to the TreeWalker:

<module name="TreeWalker">
    <!-- Make the @SuppressWarnings annotations available to Checkstyle -->
    <module name="SuppressWarningsHolder" />
</module>

Next, enable the SuppressWarningsFilter there (as a sibling to TreeWalker):

<!-- Filter out Checkstyle warnings that have been suppressed with the @SuppressWarnings annotation -->
<module name="SuppressWarningsFilter" />

<module name="TreeWalker">
...

Now you can annotate e.g. the method you want to exclude from a certain Checkstyle rule:

@SuppressWarnings("checkstyle:methodlength")
@Override
public boolean equals(Object obj) {
    // very long auto-generated equals() method
}

The checkstyle: prefix in the argument to @SuppressWarnings is optional, but I like it as a reminder where this warning came from. The rule name must be lowercase.

Lastly, if you're using Eclipse, it will complain about the argument being unknown to it:

Unsupported @SuppressWarnings("checkstyle:methodlength")

You can disable this Eclipse warning in the preferences if you like:

Preferences:
  Java
  --> Compiler
  --> Errors/Warnings
  --> Annotations
  --> Unhandled token in '@SuppressWarnings': set to 'Ignore'

What also works well is the SuppressWithNearbyCommentFilter which uses individual comments to suppress audit events.

For example

// CHECKSTYLE IGNORE check FOR NEXT 1 LINES
public void onClick(View view) { ... }

To configure a filter so that CHECKSTYLE IGNORE check FOR NEXT var LINES avoids triggering any audits for the given check for the current line and the next var lines (for a total of var+1 lines):

<module name="SuppressWithNearbyCommentFilter">
    <property name="commentFormat" value="CHECKSTYLE IGNORE (\w+) FOR NEXT (\d+) LINES"/>
    <property name="checkFormat" value="$1"/>
    <property name="influenceFormat" value="$2"/>
</module>

http://checkstyle.sourceforge.net/config.html