javac(1) | General Commands Manual | javac(1) |
NAME¶
javac - Java programming language compiler
SYNOPSIS¶
javac [ options ] [ sourcefiles ] [ @argfiles ]
Arguments may be in any order.
- options
- Command-line options.
- sourcefiles
- One or more source files to be compiled (such as MyClass.java).
- @argfiles
- One or more files that lists options and source files. The -J options are not allowed in these files.
DESCRIPTION¶
The javac tool reads class and interface definitions, written in the Java programming language, and compiles them into bytecode class files.
There are two ways to pass source code filenames to javac:
Source code file names must have .java suffixes, class file names must have .class suffixes, and both source and class files must have root names that identify the class. For example, a class called MyClass would be written in a source file called MyClass.java and compiled into a bytecode class file called MyClass.class.
Inner class definitions produce additional class files. These class files have names combining the inner and outer class names, such as MyClass$MyInnerClass.class.
You should arrange source files in a directory tree that reflects their package tree. For example, if you keep all your source files in /workspace, the source code for com.mysoft.mypack.MyClass should be in /workspace/com/mysoft/mypack/MyClass.java.
By default, the compiler puts each class file in the same directory as its source file. You can specify a separate destination directory with -d (see Options, below).
SEARCHING FOR TYPES¶
When compiling a source file, the compiler often needs information about a type whose definition did not appear in the source files given on the command line. The compiler needs type information for every class or interface used, extended, or implemented in the source file. This includes classes and interfaces not explicitly mentioned in the source file but which provide information through inheritance.
For example, when you subclass java.applet.Applet, you are also using Applet's ancestor classes: java.awt.Panel, java.awt.Container, java.awt.Component, and java.lang.Object.
When the compiler needs type information, it looks for a source file or class file which defines the type. The compiler searches for class files first in the bootstrap and extension classes, then in the user class path (which by default is the current directory). The user class path is defined by setting the CLASSPATH environment variable or by using the -classpath command line option. (For details, see Setting the Class Path).
If you set the -sourcepath option, the compiler searches the indicated path for source files; otherwise the compiler searches the user class path for both class files and source files.
You can specify different bootstrap or extension classes with the -bootclasspath and -extdirs options; see Cross-Compilation Options below.
A successful type search may produce a class file, a source file, or both. Here is how javac handles each situation:
- o
- Search produces a class file but no source file: javac uses the class file.
- o
- Search produces a source file but no class file: javac compiles the source file and uses the resulting class file.
- o
- Search produces both a source file and a class file: javac determines whether the class file is out of date. If the class file is out of date, javac recompiles the source file and uses the updated class file. Otherwise, javac just uses the class file.
javac considers a class file out of date only if it is older than the source file.
Note: javac can silently compile source files not mentioned on the command line. Use the -verbose option to trace automatic compilation.
OPTIONS¶
The compiler has a set of standard options that are supported on the current development environment and will be supported in future releases. An additional set of non-standard options are specific to the current virtual machine and compiler implementations and are subject to change in the future. Non-standard options begin with -X.
Standard Options¶
- -classpath classpath
- Set the user class path, overriding the user class path in the CLASSPATH environment variable. If neither CLASSPATH or -classpath is specified, the user class path consists of the current directory. See Setting the Class Path for more details.
If the -sourcepath option is not specified, the user class path is searched for both source files and class files.
As a special convenience, a class path element containing a
basename of * is considered equivalent to specifying a list of all
the files in the directory with the extension .jar or .JAR (a
java program cannot tell the difference between the two invocations).
For example, if directory foo contains a.jar and b.JAR,
then the class path element foo/* is expanded to a
A.jar:b.JAR, except that the order of jar files is unspecified. All
jar files in the specified directory, even hidden ones, are included in the
list. A classpath entry consisting simply of * expands to a list of
all the jar files in the current directory. The CLASSPATH environment
variable, where defined, will be similarly expanded. Any classpath wildcard
expansion occurs before the Java virtual machine is started -- no Java
program will ever see unexpanded wildcards except by querying the
environment. For example; by invoking
System.getenv("CLASSPATH").
- -Djava.ext.dirs=directories
- Override the location of installed extensions.
- -Djava.endorsed.dirs=directories
- Override the location of endorsed standards path.
- -d directory
- Set the destination directory for class files. The destination directory must already exist; javac will not create the destination directory. If a class is part of a package, javac puts the class file in a subdirectory reflecting the package name, creating directories as needed. For example, if you specify -d /home/myclasses and the class is called com.mypackage.MyClass, then the class file is called /home/myclasses/com/mypackage/MyClass.class.
If -d is not specified, javac puts the class file in the same directory as the source file.
Note: The directory specified by -d is not automatically added to your user class path.
- -deprecation
- Show a description of each use or override of a deprecated member or class. Without -deprecation, javac shows the names of source files that use or override deprecated members or classes. -deprecation is shorthand for -Xlint:deprecation.
- -encoding encoding
- Set the source file encoding name, such as EUC-JP and UTF-8.. If -encoding is not specified, the platform default converter is used.
- -g
- Generate all debugging information, including local variables. By default, only line number and source file information is generated.
- -g:none
- Do not generate any debugging information.
- -g:{keyword list}
- Generate only some kinds of debugging information, specified by a comma separated list of keywords. Valid keywords are:
- -help
- Print a synopsis of standard options.
- -nowarn
- Disable warning messages. This has the same meaning as -Xlint:none.
- -source release
- Specifies the version of source code accepted. The following values for release are allowed:
- 1.3
- The compiler does not support assertions, generics, or other language features introduced after JDK 1.3.
- 1.4
- The compiler accepts code containing assertions, which were introduced in JDK 1.4.
- 1.5
- The compiler accepts code containing generics and other language features introduced in JDK 5. This is the default.
- 5
- Synonym for 1.5
- -sourcepath sourcepath
- Specify the source code path to search for class or interface definitions. As with the user class path, source path entries are separated by colons (:) and can be directories, JAR archives, or ZIP archives. If packages are used, the local path name within the directory or archive must reflect the package name.
Note: Classes found through the classpath are subject to automatic recompilation if their sources are found.
Cross-Compilation Options¶
By default, classes are compiled against the bootstrap and extension classes of the platform that javac shipped with. But javac also supports cross-compiling, where classes are compiled against a bootstrap and extension classes of a different Java platform implementation. It is important to use -bootclasspath and -extdirs when cross-compiling; see Cross-Compilation Example below.
- -target version
- Generate class files that target a specified version of the VM. Class files will run on the specified target and on later versions, but not on earlier versions of the VM. Valid targets are 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 (also 5) and 1.6 (also 6).
The default for -target depends on the value of -source:
- -bootclasspath bootclasspath
- Cross-compile against the specified set of boot classes. As with the user class path, boot class path entries are separated by colons (:) and can be directories, JAR archives, or ZIP archives.
- -extdirs directories
- Cross-compile against the specified extension directories. Directories is a colon-separated list of directories. Each JAR archive in the specified directories is searched for class files.
Non-Standard Options¶
- -Xbootclasspath/p:path
- Prepend to the bootstrap class path.
- -Xbootclasspath/a:path
- Append to the bootstrap class path.
- -Xbootclasspath/:path
- Override location of bootstrap class files.
- -Xlint
- Enable all recommended warnings. In this release, all available warnings are recommended.
- -Xlint:none
- Disable all warnings not mandated by the Java Language Specification.
- -Xlint:-xxx
- Disable warning xxx, where xxx is one of the warning names supported for -Xlint:xxx, below
- -Xlint:unchecked
- Give more detail for unchecked conversion warnings that are mandated by the Java Language Specification.
- -Xlint:path
- Warn about nonexistent path (classpath, sourcepath, etc) directories.
- -Xlint:serial
- Warn about missing serialVersionUID definitions on serializable classes.
- -Xlint:finally
- Warn about finally clauses that cannot complete normally.
- -Xlint:fallthrough
- Check switch blocks for fall-through cases and provide a warning message for any that are found. Fall-through cases are cases in a switch block, other than the last case in the block, whose code does not include a break statement, allowing code execution to "fall through" from that case to the next case. For example, the code following the case 1 label in this switch block does not contain a break statement:
switch (x) { case 1:
System.out.println("1");
// No break; statement here. case 2:
System.out.println("2"); }
- -Xmaxerrors number
- Set the maximum number of errors to print.
- -Xmaxwarns number
- Set the maximum number of warnings to print.
- -Xstdout filename
- Send compiler messages to the named file. By default, compiler messages go to System.err.
The -J Option¶
- -Joption
- Pass option to the java launcher called by javac. For example, -J-Xms48m sets the startup memory to 48 megabytes. Although it does not begin with -X, it is not a `standard option' of javac. It is a common convention for -J to pass options to the underlying VM executing applications written in Java.
Note: CLASSPATH, -classpath, -bootclasspath, and -extdirs do not specify the classes used to run javac. Fiddling with the implementation of the compiler in this way is usually pointless and always risky. If you do need to do this, use the -J option to pass through options to the underlying java launcher.
COMMAND LINE ARGUMENT FILES¶
To shorten or simplify the javac command line, you can specify one or more files that themselves contain arguments to the javac command (except -J options). This enables you to create javac commands of any length on any operating system.
An argument file can include javac options and source filenames in any combination. The arguments within a file can be space-separated or newline-separated. If a filename contains embedded spaces, put the whole filename in double quotes.
Filenames within an argument file are relative to the current directory, not the location of the argument file. Wildcards (*) are not allowed in these lists (such as for specifying *.java). Use of the '@' character to recursively interpret files is not supported. The -J options are not supported because they are passed to the launcher, which does not support argument files.
When executing javac, pass in the path and name of each argument file with the '@' leading character. When javac encounters an argument beginning with the character `@', it expands the contents of that file into the argument list.
Example - Single Arg File¶
You could use a single argument file named "argfile" to hold all javac arguments:
C:> javac @argfile
This argument file could contain the contents of both files shown in the next example.
Example - Two Arg Files¶
You can create two argument files -- one for the javac options and the other for the source filenames: (Notice the following lists have no line-continuation characters.)
Create a file named "options" containing:
-d classes
-g
-sourcepath \java\pubs\ws\1.3\src\share\classes
Create a file named "classes" containing:
MyClass1.java
MyClass2.java
MyClass3.java
You would then run javac with:
% javac @options @classes
Example - Arg Files with Paths¶
The argument files can have paths, but any filenames inside the files are relative to the current working directory (not path1 or path2):
% javac @path1/options @path2/classes
PROGRAMMATIC INTERFACE¶
The com.sun.tools.javac.Main class provides two static methods to invoke the compiler from a program:
public static int compile(String[] args); public static int compile(String[] args, PrintWriter out);
The args parameter represents any of the command line arguments that would normally be passed to the javac program and are outlined in the above Synopsis section.
The out parameter indicates where the compiler's diagnostic output is directed.
The return value is equivalent to the exit value from javac.
Note that all other classes and methods found in a package whose name starts with com.sun.tools.javac (informally known as sub-packages of com.sun.tools.javac) are strictly internal and subject to change at any time.
EXAMPLES¶
Compiling a Simple Program¶
One source file, Hello.java, defines a class called greetings.Hello. The greetings directory is the package directory both for the source file and the class file and is off the current directory. This allows us to use the default user class path. It also makes it unnecessary to specify a separate destination directory with -d.
% ls greetings/ % ls greetings Hello.java % cat greetings/Hello.java package greetings; public class Hello {
public static void main(String[] args) {
for (int i=0; i < args.length; i++) {
System.out.println("Hello " + args[i]);
}
} } % javac greetings/Hello.java % ls greetings Hello.class Hello.java % java greetings.Hello World Universe Everyone Hello World Hello Universe Hello Everyone
Compiling Multiple Source Files¶
This example compiles all the source files in the package greetings.
% ls greetings/ % ls greetings Aloha.java GutenTag.java Hello.java Hi.java % javac greetings/*.java % ls greetings Aloha.class GutenTag.class Hello.class Hi.class Aloha.java GutenTag.java Hello.java Hi.java
Specifying a User Class Path¶
Having changed one of the source files in the previous example, we recompile it:
% pwd /examples % javac greetings/Hi.java
Since greetings.Hi refers to other classes in the greetings package, the compiler needs to find these other classes. The example above works, because our default user class path happens to be the directory containing the package directory. But suppose we want to recompile this file and not worry about which directory we're in? Then we need to add /examples to the user class path. We can do this by setting CLASSPATH, but here we'll use the -classpath option.
% javac -classpath /examples /examples/greetings/Hi.java
If we change greetings.Hi again, to use a banner utility, that utility also needs to be accessible through the user class path.
% javac -classpath /examples:/lib/Banners.jar \
/examples/greetings/Hi.java
To execute a class in greetings, we need access both to greetings and to the classes it uses.
% java -classpath /examples:/lib/Banners.jar greetings.Hi
Separating Source Files and Class Files¶
It often makes sense to keep source files and class files in separate directories, especially on large projects. We use -d to indicate the separate class file destination. Since the source files are not in the user class path, we use -sourcepath to help the compiler find them.
% ls classes/ lib/ src/ % ls src farewells/ % ls src/farewells Base.java GoodBye.java % ls lib Banners.jar % ls classes % javac -sourcepath src -classpath classes:lib/Banners.jar \
src/farewells/GoodBye.java -d classes % ls classes farewells/ % ls classes/farewells Base.class GoodBye.class
Note: The compiler compiled src/farewells/Base.java, even though we didn't specify it on the command line. To trace automatic compiles, use the -verbose option.
Cross-Compilation Example¶
Here we use javac to compile code that will run on a 1.4 VM.
% javac -target 1.4 -bootclasspath jdk1.4.2/lib/classes.zip \
-extdirs "" OldCode.java
The -target 1.4 option ensures that the generated class files will be compatible with 1.4 VMs. By default, javac compiles for JDK 6.
The Java Platform JDK's javac would also by default compile against its own bootstrap classes, so we need to tell javac to compile against JDK 1.4 bootstrap classes instead. We do this with -bootclasspath and -extdirs. Failing to do this might allow compilation against a Java Platform API that would not be present on a 1.4 VM and would fail at runtime.
SEE ALSO¶
- o
- java - the Java Application Launcher
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- jdb - Java Application Debugger
- o
- javah - C Header and Stub File Generator
- o
- javap - Class File Disassembler
- o
- javadoc - API Documentation Generator
- o
- jar - JAR Archive Tool
- o
- The Java Extensions Framework @
http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/extensions/index.html
07 Aug 2006 |