Provided by: clirr_0.6-7_all bug

NAME

       clirr - Check source and binary compatibility of Java libraries

SYNOPSIS

       clirr -o oldjar -n newjar [options]

DESCRIPTION

       Clirr  is  a  tool  that  checks  Java libraries for binary and source compatibility with older releases.
       Basically you give it two sets of jar files and Clirr dumps out a list of changes in the public API.

OPTIONS


       -a, --show-all-scopes

              show private and package classes

       -f, --output-file <arg>

              output file name

       -i, --include-pkg <arg>

              include only classes from this package and its subpackages

       -n, --new-version <arg>

              jar files of new version

       -ncp, --new-classpath <arg>

              3rd party classpath that is referenced by new-version

       -o, --old-version <arg>

              jar files of old version

       -ocp, --orig-classpath <arg>

              3rd party classpath that is referenced by old-version

       -p, --show-pkg-scope

              show package scope classes

       -s, --style [text|xml]

              output style

MESSAGES

       When clirr generates an ERROR, WARNING or INFO message about a change in the jars being  compared,  there
       is  an  associated  message  reference  code.  This manual contains an explanation of the meaning of that
       message which may contain information which could not be fitted into the brief message summary.

       Messages are separated into three severity levels: ERROR, WARNING and INFO.

       Errors come in two flavours:

              Link-time failures, where an exception will be thrown as soon as  code  compiled  against  an  old
              version  of  a  class  and  the  new  version  of  the  class are loaded into the same classloader
              hierarchy.

              Run-time failures, where an exception is thrown when code compiled against the old  version  of  a
              class attempts to call a method on a new version of the class, or vice versa.

       Clirr  reports  "errors"  for  cases where it is possible to get a run-time failure. Whether one actually
       occurs can depend upon the way the library is called, i.e. changes reported as an error may in fact  work
       when used as long as the patterns of use of the library do not trigger the failure situation.

       Warnings  are  issued  for  situations  where  no  link  or  runtime  exception will occur, but where the
       application may behave unexpectedly due to the changes that have occurred.

       Information messages provide users with information about new features  which  have  been  added  without
       breaking backward compatibility in any way.

       When  using  clirr  to  report on changes to items which have private or package scope, these changes are
       always reported as INFO level changes, never WARNING or ERROR  level.  This  allows  users  of  clirr  to
       generate  "change reports" at a level suitable for developers without having some of those changes marked
       (irrelevantly) as binary incompatibilities.

       There can never be binary incompatibilities for changes to private classes, methods  or  fields  as  that
       access can only occur from within the same class (i.e. the same compilation unit).

       Clirr  does not report binary incompatibility WARNINGs or ERRORs for package-scoped items either, because
       Java packages are intended to be "release units", i.e. all classes within a package are compiled together
       (ensuring compatibility) then released as a unit. The  only  time  that  package-scope  incompatibilities
       could possibly be an issue is when users of a library write their own classes using a package declaration
       belonging  to  some  external  library,  or when a subset of updated classes (e.g. a single class) from a
       package is used to override certain classes from a  previous  release  of  the  library.  Both  of  these
       situations are considered very poor practice by Java programming convention.

       In  the  following  sections, the term "old" is used to refer to a class, interface, method or field from
       the set of  jars  which  represent  the  old/previous/original/baseline  version  of  the  library  being
       inspected.  The  term  "new" is used to refer to a class, interface, method or field from the set of jars
       which represent the new/current/latest version of the library being inspected.

       In the following sections, the term "type" is used to refer to something which may be either a  class  or
       interface.

       1000 - Increased visibility of class

              Severity: INFO

              The specified type exists in both versions, but its declared access specifier has changed to relax
              restrictions on what other code can access it.

              Top-level  types  (ie  those which are not nested within another class) may only have "package" or
              "public" accessibility. Nested types can take on any of the four available accessibility values.

              Regardless of whether  the  object  is  top-level  or  nested,  a  change  in  accessibility  from
              left-to-right  of  the  sequence  private->package->protected->public always ensures that all code
              which could previously access that type can still access that type. Therefore  such  a  change  is
              always binary and source-code compatible.

              Note  that  the  declaration "protected" provides access to both code derived from the type and to
              code within the same package, ie "protected" accessibility also implies package accessibility.

       1001 - Decreased visibility of class

              Severity: ERROR

              The specified type exists in both versions, but its  declared  access  specifier  has  changed  to
              tighten the restrictions on what other code may access it.

              Top-level  types  (ie  those which are not nested within another class) may only have "package" or
              "public" accessibility. Nested types can take on any of the four available accessibility values.

              Regardless  of  whether  the  type  is  top-level  or  nested,  a  change  in  accessibility  from
              left-to-right  of  the  sequence public->protected->package->private may cause existing code which
              could previously access the type to no longer be able to do so.

              Section 13.4.3 of the Java Language Specification states  explicitly  that  an  IllegalAccessError
              should  occur if a pre-existing binary tries to access a type when the type accessibility has been
              changed to something that would cause a compile-time error. However this does  not  appear  to  be
              enforced in practice, at least in current JVMs. Nevertheless this should be an error, and so clirr
              reports this change as a binary-compatibility ERROR.

       2000 - Changed from class to interface

              Severity: ERROR

              The specified class has become an interface in the new version. This change is always a binary and
              source-code incompatibility, for obvious reasons.

       2001 - Changed from interface to class

              Severity: ERROR

              The specified interface has become an class in the new version. This change is always a binary and
              source-code incompatibility, for obvious reasons.

       3001 - Removed final modifier from class

              Severity: INFO

              The  specified  class  was  declared  final  in the old version, but is no longer final in the new
              version.

       3002 - Added final modifier to effectively final class

              Severity: INFO

              The specified class was not declared final  in  the  old  version,  but  is  now  declared  final.
              Normally, this would be an incompatibility because pre-existing derived classes would no longer be
              valid when used with the new version of this class. However in this case the old class version had
              no  public or protected constructors, so it was not possible for any derived classes to exist even
              for the old version of the library. Changing such a class to final therefore  can  not  break  any
              existing code.

       3003 - Added final modifier to class

              Severity: ERROR

              The  specified  class  was  not  declared final in the old version, but is now declared final. Any
              pre-existing classes which were declared as subclasses of this class will therefore not  be  valid
              with the new version of the library.

              A  VerifyError  is thrown by the classloader when an attempt is made to load a subclass of a final
              class.

              Note that a class Y is loaded by the standard classloader only when the first attempt is  made  to
              create  an  instance  of  Y,  or to directly reference the Class object for class Y. If some other
              class X has class Y as a declared member, or as a parameter to some method, then loading  class  X
              does not cause class Y to be loaded.

       3004 - Removed abstract modifier from class

              Severity: INFO

              The  old  version  of  this  class  was  declared  to be an abstract class. The new version is not
              abstract, allowing users to create instances of the class.

       3005 - Added abstract modifier to class

              Severity: ERROR

              The old version of this class was not declared to  be  abstract.  The  new  version  is  abstract.
              Pre-existing code which creates instances of this class is no longer valid with the new version.

       4000 - Added interface to the set of implemented interfaces

              Severity: INFO

              The  new  version of the type now implements an additional interface. This does not invalidate any
              existing code (source or binary), and is a completely backward-compatible change.

              Note that this message can be reported without any change  occurring  in  the  specified  type;  a
              change  to  the  set  of interfaces supported by a type will cause this message to be reported for
              every descendant of that type.

       4001 - Removed interface from the set of implemented interfaces

              Severity: ERROR

              The old version of this type declared that it implemented an interface  which  the  new  class  or
              interface does not. Existing code which explicitly or implicitly casts objects of this type to the
              now missing interface is no longer valid.

              Note  that  this  message  can  be  reported without any change occurring in the specified type; a
              change to the set of interfaces supported by a type will cause this message  to  be  reported  for
              every descendant of that type.

       5000 - Added class to the set of superclasses

              Severity: INFO or WARNING

              The  new  version  of the class has a class in its inheritance hierarchy which the old version did
              not, either because its direct parent is now a different class,  or  because  one  of  its  parent
              classes has changed its inheritance hierarchy.

              If  the  specified class has java.lang.Throwable as an ancestor, then this change is reported as a
              WARNING, because this class change may change the exception-catching behaviour  of  programs  that
              use this class.

              Note  that  this  message  can  be reported without any change occurring in the specified class; a
              change to the set of superclasses of an ancestor class will cause this message to be reported  for
              every descendant class.

       5001 - Removed class from the set of superclasses

              Severity: ERROR

              The  old version of this class has a class in its inheritance hierarchy which the new version does
              not, either because its direct parent is now a different class,  or  because  one  of  its  parent
              classes has changed its inheritance hierarchy.

              Existing  code  which explicitly or implicitly casts objects of this type to the now missing class
              type is no longer valid.

              Note that this message can be reported without any change occurring  in  the  specified  class;  a
              change  to the set of superclasses of an ancestor class will cause this message to be reported for
              every descendent class.

              Note also that if this class has Throwable in its ancestry, then the class  hierarchy  change  can
              also cause changes in the exception-catching behaviour of programs using this class.

       6000 - Added field

              Severity: INFO

              The   new  class  has  an  additional  static  or  instance  member.  This  change  is  completely
              backwards-compatible.

       6001 - Removed field

              Severity: ERROR

              The new class has removed a field present in the old version.  Pre-existing  code  which  directly
              accesses that field will no longer be valid.

       6002 - Value of field no longer a compile-time constant

              Severity: WARNING

              Code  compiled  against  the  old version of the class was permitted to "inline" the value of this
              field because it was a compile-time constant. Therefore, existing binary code will continue to use
              the old value of this field, instead of the new value (which cannot be inlined).

       6003 - Value of compile-time constant has changed

              Severity: WARNING

              Code compiled against the old version of the class was permitted to "inline"  the  value  of  this
              field because it was a compile-time constant. Therefore, existing binary code will continue to use
              the old value of this field, instead of the new value.

       6004 - Field type changed

              Severity: ERROR

              The  type  associated  with  the  specified  static  or instance member of the specified class has
              changed. Pre-existing code which directly  accesses  that  field  may  no  longer  be  valid,  and
              therefore this is an incompatible change.

       6005 - Field now non-final

              Severity: INFO

              The field was previously final, and is no longer final. This means that the field value can now be
              modified during the lifetime of the class or instance.

              Whether  a value in a field could previously be "inlined" into other classes is an issue addressed
              by messages 6002 and 6003, not this message.

       6006 - Field now final

              Severity: ERROR

              The field can no longer be modified during the lifetime of  the  class  or  instance.  Code  which
              previously modified this field is therefore no longer valid.

       6007 - Field now non-static

              Severity: ERROR

              The field is now an instance variable rather than a class variable. Code which previously accessed
              this field via the Class rather than an instance of the class is no longer valid.

       6008 - Field now static

              Severity: ERROR

              The field is now a class variable rather than an instance variable.

              For  some reason (presumably internal implementation issues), the Java standard declares that this
              change is not binary-compatible, and that an IncompatibleClassChangeError will be thrown  if  code
              compiled  against  the  "old" version of a class is used together with a "new" version for which a
              field is now static.

              Because source code is permitted to access class variables via instances of that  class,  this  is
              expected  to  be a source-code compatible change. However currently CLIRR reports this as an ERROR
              for source-code compatibility too.

       6009 - Field More Accessible

              Severity: INFO

              In the new version, the specified field is accessible to more code than it was previously.

       6010 - Field Less Accessible

              Severity: ERROR

              In the new version, the specified field is  accessible  to  less  code  than  it  was  previously.
              Therefore existing code may no longer be valid.

       6011 - Removed Constant Field

              Binary Severity: WARNING

              Source Severity: ERROR

              The  new  class  has  removed  a  field present in the old version. Pre-existing source code which
              directly accesses that field will no longer be valid.

              Previously, however, the field was final and was initialised with a constant value. Therefore code
              compiled against the previous version of the class  will  have  inlined  this  constant  and  will
              continue to work, using the previous value of this field. A warning is issued as this is often not
              desirable behaviour. However it is not a binary incompatibility.

       7000 - Method now in Superclass

              Severity: INFO

              The  old  class  had a method named X. The new class no longer has this method, but a parent class
              does define this method, so no binary or source incompatibility has occurred.

              Note that this change may have the effect of forcing the new class to become 'abstract'.  If  this
              is the case, then this change is reported separately.

       7001 - Method now in Interface

              Severity: INFO

              The  old  class or interface previously had a method named X. The new class or interface no longer
              has this method, but a  parent  interface  does  define  this  method,  so  no  binary  or  source
              incompatibility has occurred.

              Note  that  this change may have the effect of forcing the new class to become 'abstract'. If this
              is the case, then this change is reported separately.

       7002 - Method Removed

              Severity: ERROR

              The old class or interface had a method named X. The new class or interface  no  longer  has  this
              method, and this method is not defined on any parent class or interface.

              Whether  an  error  actually  occurs  at  runtime  for  this change depends on usage patterns. The
              modified class can be used with existing code as long as that existing code does  not  attempt  to
              call  the  removed  method.  If  a  call  to  the missing method is made, then a NoSuchMethodError
              exception is generated when the method invocation occurs.

       7003 - Method Overide Removed

              Severity: INFO

              The specified method on the old class or interface was overriding an inherited definition. The new
              class or interface no longer has this method explicitly declared on it, but it  still  inherits  a
              definition so there is no binary incompatibility.  7004 - Method Argument Count Changed

              Severity: ERROR

              The  specified  method  has  had arguments added or removed. This means that code which previously
              invoked it will no longer invoke the same method.

              If there is an inherited method definition with  the  old  prototype,  then  there  is  no  binary
              incompatibility; code which was compiled against the old version of this class will now invoke the
              inherited  implementation.  In  this situation, clirr should output an INFO message rather than an
              error. However at the current date, clirr does not check for this situation.

              If there is no inherited method definition with the old prototype, then the  change  is  a  binary
              incompatibility.

       7005 - Method Argument Type changed

              Binary Severity: INFO or ERROR

              Source Severity: ERROR

              The  specified  method  has had the type of one or more of its arguments modified. This means that
              code compiled against the old version of the class will no longer invoke the same method.  However
              exactly  the  same  old  source  code, when compiled against the new class version may invoke this
              method if the argument types are assignment-compatible.

              If there is an inherited method definition with  the  old  prototype,  then  there  is  no  binary
              incompatibility; code which was compiled against the old version of this class will now invoke the
              inherited implementation. At the current date, clirr does not check for this situation.

              If  there  is  no  inherited method definition with the old prototype, then the change is a binary
              incompatibility.

              If the parameter types changed were all changed to supertypes of their previous declared types, or
              for primitive parameter types if they were changed to "larger" types in every case, then  the  new
              code is source-code-compatible with the previous release even if it is not binary-compatible. Note
              that  in  this  situation,  recompiling  code which uses the library may change its behaviour from
              calling an inherited method to calling a method on  the  class  which  has  a  slightly  different
              prototype. At the current date, clirr does not check for this situation.

       7006 - Method Return Type changed

              Binary Severity: ERROR

              Source Severity: INFO or ERROR

              The  specified  method has had its declared return type changed. Whether a problem actually occurs
              at runtime when using code compiled against the old version of this  library  depends  upon  usage
              patterns.  Old  code  may call other methods on this class. However any attempt to call the method
              whose return type has changed will result in a NoSuchMethodError being thrown when the  method  is
              invoked, because the return type is part of the "method signature".

              The  change  is source-code-compatible if and only if the new return type is assignable to the old
              return type. This means that:

                  if the old return type was a primitive type, then the new return type must  be  narrower  than
              the old type.
                  if the old return type was an interface, then the new return type must be a class or interface
              which implements the old return type.
                  if  the  old  return  type  was  a  class,  then the new return type must be a subclass of the
              previously returned type.

              Clirr does not currently check for source-code compatibility for changes in method  return  types;
              currently these are simply reported as an ERROR.

       7007 - Method has been Deprecated

              Severity: INFO

              The  specified method has been declared as "deprecated". This is always a binary-compatible change
              as well as a source-code-compatible change.

       7008 - Method has been Undeprecated

              Severity: INFO

              The specified method was  declared  "deprecated"  in  the  previous  version,  but  is  no  longer
              deprecated  in  the  current  release.  While  slightly unusual, this is permitted. This change is
              always a binary-compatible change as well as a source-code-compatible change.

       7009 - Method is now Less Accessible

              Severity: ERROR

              The access permissions associated with the specified method have been  tightened  to  permit  less
              user code to access the method.

              Whether this change is a source-code compatibility issue or not depends upon patterns of usage.

              This  change  should be a binary incompatibility. Note, however, that current JVMs do not validate
              this. Code compiled against a previous version of a class  can  successfully  invoke  methods  for
              which they no longer have access rights. Nevertheless, the Java Language Specification states that
              this is an error, so clirr reports this change as a binary incompatibility.

       7010 - Method is now More Accessible

              Severity: INFO

              The access permissions associated with the specified method have been loosened to permit more user
              code to access the method. This is always a binary and source-code compatible change.

       7011 - Method Added

              Severity: INFO

              A  non-abstract  method  has been added to the specified class. This is always a binary-compatible
              change.

              It is also a source-code compatible change.

              Q: if the new method overrides an inherited one, then which version does code compiled against the
              old library invoke?

       7012 - Method Added to Interface

              Binary Severity: ERROR

              Source Severity: ERROR

              A method declaration has been added to the specified interface.  This  is  always  reported  as  a
              binary-compatibility error, but in practice the changed class might be used successfully with code
              compiled against the old interface depending upon usage patterns.

              Old  code  which  invokes  methods  upon  code  compiled against the new (expanded) interface will
              continue to work without issues. And old code which implements the old version  of  the  interface
              will  also continue to work correctly as long as no code attempts to invoke any of the newly-added
              methods against that instance. But code which (validly) invokes one of  the  new  methods  in  the
              interface  against  an object which implements only the old version of the interface will cause an
              AbstractMethodError to be thrown at the time the method invocation is attempted.

              Adding a method to an interface is always reported as an ERROR,  because  classes  that  implement
              that interface must now be modified to implement the declared method.

       7013 - Abstract Method Added to Class

              Binary Severity: ERROR

              Source Severity: ERROR

              An abstract method declaration has been added to the specified class. This is always reported as a
              binary-compatibility error, but in practice the changed class might be used successfully with code
              compiled against the old class depending upon usage patterns.

              If  instances  of  objects  compiled  against the old class are created, then their methods can be
              invoked without problems. But if  the  newly-added  abstract  method  is  ever  invoked,  then  an
              AbstractMethodError is thrown at the time the method invocation is attempted.

       7014 - Method now final

              Severity: ERROR

              The  method  was  previously  non-final, and is now final. Subclasses of this class will no longer
              compile or run.

              When the old class containig this method was  final  (explicitly  or  by  only  providing  private
              constructors)  then subclasses cannot exist. Clirr currently does not check for this situation, so
              this will raise a false alarm in some corner cases.

       7015 - Method now non-final

              Severity: INFO

              The method was previously final, and is now non-final. This is always a binary-compatible change.

       8000 - Class Added

              Severity: INFO

              The new version of the library has a class which was not present in the old version.

       8001 - Class Removed

              Severity: ERROR

              The new version of the library no longer contains the specified class.

EXAMPLES


       Check the compatibility of a library with a previous version:

              clirr -o foo-1.0.jar -n foo-2.0.jar

       Check the backward compatibility of a new library depending on Apache Commons Logging:

              clirr   -o   foo-1.0.jar   -n   foo-2.0.jar    -ocp    /usr/share/java/commons-logging.jar    -ncp
              /usr/share/java/commons-logging.jar

HOMEPAGE

       http://clirr.sourceforge.net

                                                  November 2013                                         CLIRR(1)