I have been on several teams where we studiously designed UML diagrams at the beginning of the project. As the project progressed, and deadlines approached, the UML diagrams were left somewhere behind, not to be updated in months. When a new developer joined the team, we showcased the old UML diagrams, and kept telling ” Oh, we never had time to update them, please see the source code to get an idea. And, don’t hesitate to ask if you have any doubt’s”. I am sure, you all have gone through the same scenario.
However, we don’t have to keep making up stories anymore, since this article shows how easy and simple it is to include UML diagrams within your Javadoc and also keep them updated with every change in the source code repository. We can do these in less than a few minutes, and in a few simple steps.
Getting started with UmlGraph takes five steps:
1. Download the source code for UMlGraph.
2. Download and install Graphviz.
3. Make changes to your Ant build file.
4. Run the Ant target.
5. Add this target to your CI job.
Step 1: Download the source code for UMLGraph here. Unzip the contents. To compile the Java doclet from the source code run ant on the build.xml file. Copy the UmlGraph.jar file to your projects library. If there is a version mismatch between the different versions of JDK you are using you get an exception like this:
java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError: Bad version number in .class file
Make sure you recompile the UMLGraph source code, and copy the library to your project.

Step 2 : Download and install Graphviz from here. The dot file needs to be post-processed with Graphviz to produce the actual UML diagram. Running the UmlGraph doclet will generate a Graphviz diagram specification that can be automatically processed to create png drawings. You can also generate other formats using Graphviz as well. If Graphviz isn’t installed you will get an exception as shown below:
BUILD FAILED
/Users/meerasubbarao/Development/webservices-samples/build.xml:107:
Execute failed: java.io.IOException: dot: not found
Total time: 269 milliseconds
Step 3. Changes to your build.xml file.
Assuming you already have a working project, with Ant build file. Add the following target to your build.xml file as shown below:
<target name="javadocs" depends="build" description="generates javadoc and also UML Diagram">
<mkdir dir="${reports.dir}/javadoc"/>
<javadoc sourcepath="${src.dir}" packagenames="com.stelligent.*" destdir="${reports.dir}/javadoc"
classpathref="java.classpath" private="true">
<doclet name="org.umlgraph.doclet.UmlGraphDoc"
path="lib/UMLGraph.jar">
<param name="-attributes" />
<param name="-operations" />
<param name="-qualify" />
<param name="-types" />
<param name="-visibility" />
</doclet>
</javadoc>
<apply executable="dot" dest="${reports.dir}" parallel="false">
<arg value="-Tpng"/>
<arg value="-o"/>
<targetfile/>
<srcfile/>
<fileset dir="${reports.dir}" includes="*.dot"/>
<mapper type="glob" from="*.dot" to="*.png"/>
</apply>
</target>
A number of options control the operation of UMLGraph class diagram generator. These can be specified as parameters within your build file as shown above.
Details about a few options are:
-output
Specify the output file (default graph.dot).
-d
Specify the output directory (defaults to the current directory).
-qualify
Produce fully-qualified class names.
-horizontal
Layout the graph in the horizontal direction.
-attributes
Show class attributes (Java fields)
-operations
Show class operations (Java methods)
-constructors
Show a class's constructors
-visibility
Adorn class elements according to their visibility (private, public, protected, package)
-types
Add type information to attributes and operations
-enumerations
Show enumarations as separate stereotyped primitive types.
-enumconstants
When showing enumerations, also show the values they can take.
-all
Same as -attributes -operations -visibility -types -enumerations -enumconstants
Step 4. Run the ant target:
Open a command window and run the ant target: ant javadocs and you should see output as such in your console window:
meera-subbaraos-macbook-9:webservices-samples meerasubbarao$ ant javadocs
Buildfile: build.xml
init:
cleanGenerated:
build:
[javac] Compiling 22 source files to /Users/meerasubbarao/Development/ci-jobs/jobs/PetStore_Nightly/workspace/webservices-samples/classes
[javac] Note: Some input files use unchecked or unsafe operations.
[javac] Note: Recompile with -Xlint:unchecked for details.
javadocs:
[javadoc] Generating Javadoc
[javadoc] Javadoc execution
[javadoc] Loading source files for package com.stelligent.biz.ws...
[javadoc] Loading source files for package com.stelligent.ent.jpa...
[javadoc] Constructing Javadoc information...
[javadoc] UmlGraphDoc version 5.0, running the standard doclet
[javadoc] Standard Doclet version 1.5.0_13
[javadoc] Building tree for all the packages and classes...
[javadoc] Building index for all the packages and classes...
[javadoc] Building index for all classes...
[javadoc] Generating /Users/meerasubbarao/Development/ci-jobs/jobs/PetStore_Nightly/workspace/webservices-samples/reports/javadoc/stylesheet.css...
[javadoc] UmlGraphDoc version 5.0, altering javadocs
[javadoc] Building Package view for package com.stelligent.biz.ws
[javadoc] Building Package view for package com.stelligent.ent.jpa
[javadoc] Building Context view for class com.stelligent.biz.ws.SupplierManagerBean
[javadoc] Building Context view for class com.stelligent.biz.ws.SupplierManager
[javadoc] Building Context view for class com.stelligent.biz.ws.SignonManagerBean
[javadoc] Building Context view for class com.stelligent.biz.ws.SignonManager
.....
BUILD SUCCESSFUL
Total time: 8 seconds
meera-subbaraos-macbook-9:webservices-samples meerasubbarao$
The javadoc generated is pretty neat with UML diagrams on the top:

Step 5: Add this target to your CI Job.
If you already have a CI server like Hudson up and running, which runs commit builds and nightly builds, adding this new target is a one step process. In my case, I already have a nightly job running as shown below. I have added this ant target to my default target as shown below:
<target name="all" depends="cleanAndDeployForCoverage, javadocs" />
Next, force a build on the Hudson job, publish the javadocs, and you can see the results on the hudson dashboard.

The Javadoc displayed from within the Hudson dashboard:

Now that we have UML diagram integrated within our build file and also our CI job, we can ensure that our code base and the UML diagrams are always in sync. We saw how to include these ant targets in our commit builds or nightly builds of our CI jobs, and also published these artifacts as part of our post build process.
Resources:

August 22nd, 2008 at 2:38 am
This seems to be interesting. I’m not using a CI server, but used to generate docs with Ant all the time.
August 22nd, 2008 at 3:27 am
I’m facing some issues in running the javadocs target from my project as it gives me some errors. I have given the full path to dot.exe file as;
apply executable=”C:\java\Graphviz-2.20.2\bin\dot”, but it still returns an error.
—————–
Error:
Ensure that dot is in your path and that its path does not contain spaces
javadoc: warning - Could not find map file C:\project\reports\javadoc\com\mypac\TestClass.map
—————–
It’s true that this TestClass.map file is not available there, how does that file get generated?
August 22nd, 2008 at 6:28 am
Man, I haven’t even considered doing anything other than creating diagrams from my code for what, a decade? Kind of a no-brainer.
It’s also nice if you generate them external to Javadocs, though, so they can be included in other forms of documentation like requirement and functional specs.
August 22nd, 2008 at 6:50 am
Hi Kamal,
Did you try running from the command line? I have seen the same exception when running the target from Eclipse.
August 26th, 2008 at 1:25 am
Hi Meera,
Yes, I was trying with Eclipse. Anyway I tried with command line, and I succeeded.
Thanks for sharing.
September 10th, 2008 at 9:43 am
[…] In the last two articles, “UML Diagrams within Javadocs” and “Visual Documentation of Ant Dependencies in 3 Simple Steps” we saw how easy and valuable it was to automate technical documentation. By using open source tools, we were easily able to provide good technical documentation within a few minutes, and at no cost at all. We were also able to keep this up-to date by adding additional tasks to our Ant build files, and run them from our CI Server(Hudson in our case) on commit and nightly builds, and also publish the results. […]
November 6th, 2008 at 10:58 am
When running in Eclipse I’m having the “Ensure that dot is in your path and that its path does not contain spaces” problem. When running the same target from command-line, everything works perfectly.
What should be done to make it working within Eclipse ?
August 7th, 2009 at 4:30 am
For UML diagram generating with Maven, see this: http://globatic.blogspot.com/2009/08/maven-with-javadoc-uml-diagrams.html