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Posted to dev@tika.apache.org by "Dave Meikle (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2015/05/25 11:40:17 UTC

[jira] [Created] (TIKA-1637) Oracle internal API jdeps request for information

Dave Meikle created TIKA-1637:
---------------------------------

             Summary: Oracle internal API jdeps request for information
                 Key: TIKA-1637
                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TIKA-1637
             Project: Tika
          Issue Type: Task
            Reporter: Dave Meikle
            Assignee: Dave Meikle
            Priority: Trivial


We have been asked to provide information to Oracle around the internal API usage in Apache Tika to support move to JDK 9, which contains significant changes.

{quote}
Hi David,

My name is Rory O'Donnell, I am the OpenJDK Quality Group Lead.  

I'm contacting you because your open source project seems to be a very popular dependency for other open source projects.
As part of the preparations for JDK 9, Oracle’s engineers have been analyzing open source projects like yours to understand usage. One area of concern involves identifying compatibility problems, such as reliance on JDK-internal APIs. 

Our engineers have already prepared guidance on migrating some of the more common usage patterns of JDK-internal APIs to supported public interfaces.  The list is on the OpenJDK wiki [0].

As part of the ongoing development of JDK 9, I would like to inquire about your usage of  JDK-internal APIs and to encourage migration towards supported Java APIs if necessary.

The first step is to identify if your application(s) is leveraging internal APIs. 

  Step 1: Download JDeps. 
Just download a preview release of JDK8(JDeps Download). You do not need to actually test or run your application on JDK8.  JDeps(Docs) looks through JAR files and identifies which JAR files use internal APIs and then lists those APIs.    
  Step 2: To run JDeps against an application. The command looks like:
jdk8/bin/jdeps -P -jdkinternals *.jar > your-application.jdeps.txt

The output inside your-application.jdeps.txt will look like:

your.package (Filename.jar)
      -> com.sun.corba.se            JDK internal API (rt.jar)
3rd party library using Internal APIs:
If your analysis uncovers a third-party component that you rely on, you can contact the provider and let them know of the upcoming changes. You can then either work with the provider to get an updated library that won't rely on Internal APIs, or you can find an alternative provider for the capabilities that the offending library provides.

Dynamic use of Internal APIs:
JDeps can not detect dynamic use of internal APIs, for example through reflection, service loaders and similar mechanisms.

Rgds,Rory 

[0] https://wiki.openjdk.java.net/display/JDK8/Java+Dependency+Analysis+Tool
-- 
Rgds,Rory O'Donnell
Quality Engineering Manager
Oracle EMEA , Dublin, Ireland 
{quote}



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