Retrolambda


Source link: https://github.com/orfjackal/retrolambda

Retrolambda: Use Lambdas on Java 7

Just as there was Retroweaver et al. for running Java 5 code with generics on Java 1.4, Retrolambda lets you run Java 8 code with lambda expressions, method references and try-with-resources statements on Java 7, 6 or 5. It does this by transforming your Java 8 compiled bytecode so that it can run on an older Java runtime. After the transformation they are just a bunch of normal .class files, without any additional runtime dependencies. Read more details.

There is also limited support for backporting default methods and static methods on interfaces. This feature is disabled by default.

Retrolambda supports backporting to Java 7, Java 6 and Java 5 runtimes. And for adventurous developers there are other backporting tools that may let you go from Java 5 down to Java 1.4.

Android developers may use Retrolambda to take advantage of the Java 8 features on Android. Serge Zaitsev has written an article about it and there is a Gradle plugin which makes it easy.

Retrolambda does not backport the new Java 8 APIs, but there are other projects that have backported some of them:

Additionally Animal Sniffer and IntelliJ IDEA can warn about the use of Java 8 APIs.

User Guide

Retrolambda can be run as a Maven plugin, Gradle plugin or command line application. Also have a look at some tips for using Retrolambda effectively.

Maven Plugin

To run Retrolambda using Maven, add the following to your pom.xml:

<plugin>
  <groupId>net.orfjackal.retrolambda</groupId>
  <artifactId>retrolambda-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>2.5.1</version>
  <executions>

<execution>

 <goals>

  <goal>process-main</goal>

  <goal>process-test</goal>

 </goals>

</execution>
  </executions> </plugin>

See the plugin documentation for all possible parameters. There is also a usage example in end-to-end-tests/pom.xml

Gradle Plugin

Gradle Retrolamba Plugin is developed by Evan Tatarka. See its site for usage instructions.

Command Line Application

Download the latest retrolambda.jar from Maven Central.

Use JDK 8 to compile your source code.

Run Retrolambda, using Java 8, on the class files produced by JDK 8. Run java -jar retrolambda.jar without any additional options to see the instructions (for your convenience they are also shown below).

Your class files should now run on Java 7 or older.

Usage: java -Dretrolambda.inputDir=? -Dretrolambda.classpath=? [-javaagent:retrolambda.jar] -jar retrolambda.jar  Retrolambda takes Java 8 classes and backports lambda expressions and some other language features to work on Java 7, 6 or 5. Web site: https://github.com/orfjackal/retrolambda  Copyright (c) 2013-2017  Esko Luontola and other Retrolambda contributors This software is released under the Apache License 2.0. The license text is at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0  Configurable system properties:
 retrolambda.bytecodeVersion

 Major version number for the generated bytecode. For a list, see

 offset 7 at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_class_file#General_layout

 Default value is 51 (i.e. Java 7)
 retrolambda.defaultMethods

 Whether to backport default methods and static methods on interfaces.

 LIMITATIONS: All backported interfaces and all classes which implement

 them or call their static methods must be backported together,

 with one execution of Retrolambda.

 Disabled by default. Enable by setting to "true"
 retrolambda.inputDir (required)

 Input directory from where the original class files are read.
 retrolambda.outputDir

 Output directory into where the generated class files are written.

 Defaults to same as retrolambda.inputDir
 retrolambda.classpath (required)

 Classpath containing the original class files and their dependencies.

 Uses ; or : as the path separator, see java.io.File#pathSeparatorChar
 retrolambda.classpathFile (alternative)

 File listing the classpath entries.

 Alternative to retrolambda.classpath for avoiding the command line

 length limit. The file must list one file per line with UTF-8 encoding.
 retrolambda.includedFiles

 List of files to process, instead of processing all files.

 This is useful for a build tool to support incremental compilation.

 Uses ; or : as the path separator, see java.io.File#pathSeparatorChar
 retrolambda.includedFilesFile (alternative)

 File listing the files to process, instead of processing all files.

 Alternative to retrolambda.includedFiles for avoiding the command line

 length limit. The file must list one file per line with UTF-8 encoding.
 retrolambda.quiet

 Reduces the amount of logging.

 Disabled by default. Enable by setting to "true"  If the Java agent is used, then Retrolambda will use it to capture the lambda classes generated by Java. Otherwise Retrolambda will hook into Java's internal lambda dumping API, which is more susceptible to suddenly stopping to work between Java releases. 

Tips

Be sure to run comprehensive tests on your target JVM version (e.g. Java 7), in case the code accidentally uses Java 8 APIs or language features that Retrolambda doesn't backport.

During development, inside an IDE, it's the easiest to use Java 8, without Retrolamba, to compile and run tests. But in your continuous integration and release builds you should run all tests using the target Java version. For example, you can configure Maven Surefire Plugin to run tests using a different JVM.

I recommend setting up environment variables JAVA8_HOME, JAVA7_HOME etc. and referring to those variables in the build configuration, instead of relying on what happens to be the default Java version in JAVA_HOME.

You will need Java 8 for compiling and also for generating Javadocs. JDK 7's Javadoc tool will fail for some valid Java 8 code.

Backported Language Features

Lambda expressions are backported by converting them to anonymous inner classes. This includes the optimization of using a singleton instance for stateless lambda expressions to avoid repeated object allocation.

Method references are basically just syntax sugar for lambda expressions and they are backported in the same way.

Try-with-resources statements are backported by removing calls to Throwable.addSuppressed if the target bytecode version is below Java 7. If you would like the suppressed exceptions to be logged instead of swallowed, please create a feature request and we'll make it configurable.

Objects.requireNonNull calls are replaced with calls to Object.getClass if the target bytecode version is below Java 7. The synthetic null checks generated by JDK 9 use Objects.requireNonNull, whereas earlier JDK versions used Object.getClass.

Optionally also:

Default methods are backported by copying the default methods to a companion class (interface name + "$") as static methods, replacing the default methods in the interface with abstract methods, and by adding the necessary method implementations to all classes which implement that interface.

Static methods on interfaces are backported by moving the static methods to a companion class (interface name + "$"), and by changing all methods calls to call the new method location. [1]

[1] The static methods are moved to a companion class even with default method support disabled, because some of them may be lambda implementation methods, but the method calls to static methods are not updated. This may cause weird error messages if static methods on interfaces are accidentally used without enabling default method support.

Known Limitations

Does not backport Java 8 APIs.

Backporting default methods and static methods on interfaces requires all backported interfaces and all classes which implement them or call their static methods to be backported together, with one execution of Retrolambda. In other words, you must always do a clean build. Also, backporting default methods won't work across module or dependency boundaries.

May break if a future JDK 8 build stops generating a new class for each invokedynamic call. Retrolambda works so that it captures the bytecode that java.lang.invoke.LambdaMetafactory generates dynamically, so optimizations to that mechanism may break Retrolambda.

Version History

Retrolambda 2.5.1 (2017-02-23)

  • Fixed the enclosing method attribute of anonymous classes declared inside lambda expressions ( Issue #121)

Retrolambda 2.5.0 (2017-01-22)

  • Fixed lambda expressions in subclasses accidentally overriding lambda expressions in their parent. If you are using version 2.2.0 or greater, it is strongly recommended to upgrade to this version. ( Issue #109)

Retrolambda 2.4.0 (2017-01-11)

  • Added an option to reduce the amount of logging ( Issue #103)
  • Removes java/lang/invoke/LambdaForm$Hidden annotations from the generated lambda classes to avoid issues with ProGuard ( Pull request #118)
  • Fixed backporting classes in the default package ( Issue #105)
  • Fixed backporting java.lang.Object itself ( Pull request #113)

Retrolambda 2.3.0 (2016-04-30)

  • Optimize generated code to reduce method count ( Issue #81)
  • Fix method reference to protected method in base class in other package failing with IllegalAccessError ( Issue #89)

Retrolambda 2.2.0 (2016-04-29)

  • Backports calls to Objects.requireNonNull, improving JDK 9 support ( Issue #75)
  • Optimize generated code to reduce method count ( Issue #81)

Retrolambda 2.1.0 (2015-12-19)

  • Added the -Dretrolambda.classpathFile parameter to avoid the command line length limit ( Issue #70)
  • Added the -Dretrolambda.includedFilesFile parameter to avoid the command line length limit ( Pull request #74)
  • Made it easier to invoke Retrolambda as a library. Made Config an interface and fixed an assumption of using the default file system ( Pull request #71)
  • Don't create a companion class when an interface has just a static initialization block because of constant fields ( Issue #66)
  • Improved error messages: report the name of the class or lambda method which crashed Retrolambda ( Issue #69)

Retrolambda 2.0.6 (2015-09-06)

  • Fixed method references to constructors causing VerifyError on Android ( Issue #67)

Retrolambda 2.0.5 (2015-07-19)

  • Support for lambdas with marker interfaces ( Issue #62)

Retrolambda 2.0.4 (2015-07-08)

  • Fixed a compile error when calling default methods from another module ( Issue #56)
  • Fixed method references to constructors of the current class ( Issue #60)
  • Removes bytecode references to java.lang.invoke.MethodHandles.Lookup on Java 6 and older ( Issue #61)
  • Copies non-class files from input to output directory ( Issue #54)

Retrolambda 2.0.3 (2015-06-07)

  • Fixed Retrolambda generating stack map frames for Java 5 bytecode, causing some bytecode tools to fail ( Issue #55)

Retrolambda 2.0.2 (2015-04-14)

  • Fixed a hack which caused lambdas in interfaces to be backported twice, possibly producing broken method calls in the bytecode ( Issue #48)
  • Fixed the handling of non-static lambda implementation methods in interfaces, i.e. lambdas which capture this ( Issue #48)
  • Removes generic method signatures from the default method implementation methods which are placed in the interface's companion class, to avoid them getting out of sync with their erased method descriptors ( Issue #48)

Retrolambda 2.0.1 (2015-04-06)

  • Fixed not backporting lambda expressions in default methods and static methods on interfaces ( Issue #48)

Retrolambda 2.0.0 (2015-03-28)

  • Backports default methods and static methods on interfaces ( Issue #31)

Retrolambda 1.8.1 (2015-01-06)

  • Backports lambda expressions in an interface's constant initializer ( Issue #42)

Retrolambda 1.8.0 (2014-11-16)

  • Backports try-with-resources statements to Java 6 and older by removing calls to Throwable.addSuppressed ( Issue #38)

Retrolambda 1.7.0 (2014-10-21)

  • Support for serializable lambdas ( Issue #35)

Retrolambda 1.6.2 (2014-10-03)

  • Fixed a crash when trying to backport Android classes ( Issue #34)

Retrolambda 1.6.1 (2014-08-25)

  • Fixed a crash when trying backport classes which are nominally the same as those included in the JRE, but which have different bytecode ( Issue #29)

Retrolambda 1.6.0 (2014-08-20)

  • Does not anymore require the use of a Java agent ( Issue #27)
  • Maven plugin: by default run Retrolambda in the same process as Maven, making it a bit faster. If Maven is not running under Java 8, then will fall back to forking the process and using the Java agent mechanism

Retrolambda 1.5.0 (2014-07-19)

Retrolambda 1.4.0 (2014-07-04)

  • Added an optional -Dretrolambda.includedFiles parameter to support the incremental compilers of build tools ( Issue #23)
  • Decides which lambda classes to save based on the current class being processed, instead of the class loader that loaded the lambda class ( Issue #21)

Retrolambda 1.3.0 (2014-06-04)

  • Maven plugin: made the input and output directories configurable ( Issue #20)
  • Maven plugin: by default use the current JRE for running Retrolambda. For the old behavior, add <java8home>${ env.JAVA8_HOME } </java8home> to the plugin configuration

Retrolambda 1.2.3 (2014-05-19)

  • Android: Fixed NoSuchMethodError when calling a private method to which there is a method reference ( Issue #18)
  • Fixed the possibility of accidentally overriding private methods to which there is method reference ( Issue #19)

Retrolambda 1.2.2 (2014-05-15)

  • Fixed method references to private methods; will now make them package-private the same way as lambda implementation methods ( Issue #17)

Retrolambda 1.2.1 (2014-05-04)

  • Fixed the Retrolambda Maven plugin not using the project's classpath ( Issue #16)
  • Maven plugin: save retrolambda.jar under target/retrolambda/
  • Suppress false warning about class initializer methods on interfaces

Retrolambda 1.2.0 (2014-05-02)

  • Maven plugin for running Retrolambda (thanks, Dave Moten)

Retrolambda 1.1.4 (2014-03-29)

  • Removes from interfaces bridge methods which were generated by JDK 8 e.g. when an interface overrides a method and refines its return type ( Issue #13)

Retrolambda 1.1.3 (2014-03-25)

  • Fixed incompatibility with the Eclipse JDT compiler, version Kepler SR2 with the Java 8 support patch 1.0.0.v20140317-1959 ( Issue #12)

Retrolambda 1.1.2 (2014-01-08)

  • Updated to work with JDK 8 Early Access Build b121 (2013-12-19) ( Issue #3)

Retrolambda 1.1.1 (2013-11-27)

  • Show help if the -javaagent parameter is missing ( Issue #2)

Retrolambda 1.1.0 (2013-07-25)

  • Create only one instance of lambdas which do not capture arguments; i.e. the same optimization as what JDK 8 does
  • Start the sequence number of lambda classes from one (e.g. com.example.Foo$$Lambda$1) for each enclosing class

Retrolambda 1.0.0 (2013-07-23)

  • Backports lambda expressions and method references to Java 7 and older
  • Tested to work with JDK 8 Early Access Build b99 (2013-07-19)

Resources

A material Date Range Picker.

An Android library that brings the Material Design 5.1 scrollbar to pre-5.1 devices. Designed for recyclerViews.

Demos the new Android Design library. This is not an exhaustive sample, but shows some of the important features in the Design library:

  • Collapsing Toolbar
  • FloatingActionButton
  • View anchoring
  • NavigationView
  • Snackbar

VectAlign (a.k.a. VectorDrawableAlign) is a command line tool which automagically aligns two VectorDrawable "pathData" strings in order to allow morphing animations between them through an AnimatedVectorDrawable.

StringPicker is a library to provides a custom view and dialog fragment to pick string value.

This app is designed to demonstrate the various components of the Android Support libraries, in particular, showing how to implement Material design into your app, using these controls.

Topics


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