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javac(1)

javac(1)                          Basic Tools                         javac(1)



NAME
       javac - Reads Java class and interface definitions and compiles them
       into bytecode and class files.

SYNOPSIS
       javac [ options ] [ sourcefiles ] [ classes] [ @argfiles ]

       Arguments can be in any order:

       options
              Command-line options. See Options.

       sourcefiles
              One or more source files to be compiled (such as MyClass.java).

       classes
              One or more classes to be processed for annotations (such as
              MyPackage.MyClass).

       @argfiles
              One or more files that list options and source files. The -J
              options are not allowed in these files. See Command-Line
              Argument Files.

DESCRIPTION
       The javac command reads class and interface definitions, written in the
       Java programming language, and compiles them into bytecode class files.
       The javac command can also process annotations in Java source files and
       classes.

       There are two ways to pass source code file names to javac.

       · For a small number of source files, list the file names on the
         command line.

       · For a large number of source files, list the file names in a file
         that is separated by blanks or line breaks. Use the list file name
         preceded by an at sign (@) with the javac command.

       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 that combine the inner and outer class names, such as
       MyClass$MyInnerClass.class.

       Arrange source files in a directory tree that reflects their package
       tree. For example, if all of your source files are in /workspace, then
       put the source code for com.mysoft.mypack.MyClass 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
       the -d option.

OPTIONS
       The compiler has a set of standard options that are supported on the
       current development environment. An additional set of nonstandard
       options are specific to the current virtual machine and compiler
       implementations and are subject to change in the future. Nonstandard
       options begin with the -X option.

       · See also Cross-Compilation Options

       · See also Nonstandard Options

   STANDARD OPTIONS
       -Akey[=value]
              Specifies options to pass to annotation processors. These
              options are not interpreted by javac directly, but are made
              available for use by individual processors. The key value should
              be one or more identifiers separated by a dot (.).

       -cp path or -classpath path
              Specifies where to find user class files, and (optionally)
              annotation processors and source files. This class path
              overrides the user class path in the CLASSPATH environment
              variable. If neither CLASSPATH, -cp nor -classpath is specified,
              then the user class path is the current directory. See Setting
              the Class Path.

              If the -sourcepath option is not specified, then the user class
              path is also searched for source files.

              If the -processorpath option is not specified, then the class
              path is also searched for annotation processors.

       -Djava.ext.dirs=directories
              Overrides the location of installed extensions.

       -Djava.endorsed.dirs=directories
              Overrides the location of the endorsed standards path.

       -d directory
              Sets the destination directory for class files. The directory
              must already exist because javac does not create it. If a class
              is part of a package, then javac puts the class file in a
              subdirectory that reflects the package name and creates
              directories as needed.

              If you specify -d/home/myclasses and the class is called
              com.mypackage.MyClass, then the class file is
              /home/myclasses/com/mypackage/MyClass.class.

              If the -d option is not specified, then javac puts each class
              file in the same directory as the source file from which it was
              generated.

              Note: The directory specified by the -d option is not
              automatically added to your user class path.

       -deprecation
              Shows a description of each use or override of a deprecated
              member or class. Without the -deprecation option, javac shows a
              summary of the source files that use or override deprecated
              members or classes. The -deprecation option is shorthand for
              -Xlint:deprecation.

       -encoding encoding
              Sets the source file encoding name, such as EUC-JP and UTF-8. If
              the -encoding option is not specified, then the platform default
              converter is used.

       -endorseddirs directories
              Overrides the location of the endorsed standards path.

       -extdirs directories
              Overrides the location of the ext directory. The directories
              variable is a colon-separated list of directories. Each JAR file
              in the specified directories is searched for class files. All
              JAR files found become part of the class path.

              If you are cross-compiling (compiling classes against bootstrap
              and extension classes of a different Java platform
              implementation), then this option specifies the directories that
              contain the extension classes. See Cross-Compilation Options for
              more information.

       -g
              Generates all debugging information, including local variables.
              By default, only line number and source file information is
              generated.

       -g:none
              Does not generate any debugging information.

       -g:[keyword list]
              Generates only some kinds of debugging information, specified by
              a comma separated list of keywords. Valid keywords are:

              source Source file debugging information.

              lines  Line number debugging information.

              vars   Local variable debugging information.


       -help
              Prints a synopsis of standard options.

       -implicit:[class, none]
              Controls the generation of class files for implicitly loaded
              source files. To automatically generate class files, use
              -implicit:class. To suppress class file generation, use
              -implicit:none. If this option is not specified, then the
              default is to automatically generate class files. In this case,
              the compiler issues a warning if any such class files are
              generated when also doing annotation processing. The warning is
              not issued when the -implicit option is set explicitly. See
              Searching for Types.

       -Joption
              Passes option to the Java Virtual Machine (JVM), where option is
              one of the options described on the reference page for the Java
              launcher. For example, -J-Xms48m sets the startup memory to 48
              MB. See java(1).

              Note: The CLASSPATH, -classpath, -bootclasspath, and -extdirs
              options do not specify the classes used to run javac. Trying to
              customize the compiler implementation with these options and
              variables is risky and often does not accomplish what you want.
              If you must customize the complier implementation, then use the
              -J option to pass options through to the underlying Java
              launcher.

       -nowarn
              Disables warning messages. This option operates the same as the
              -Xlint:none option.

       -parameters
              Stores formal parameter names of constructors and methods in the
              generated class file so that the method
              java.lang.reflect.Executable.getParameters from the Reflection
              API can retrieve them.

       -proc: [none, only]
              Controls whether annotation processing and compilation are done.
              -proc:none means that compilation takes place without annotation
              processing. -proc:only means that only annotation processing is
              done, without any subsequent compilation.

       -processor class1 [,class2,class3...]
              Names of the annotation processors to run. This bypasses the
              default discovery process.

       -processorpath path
              Specifies where to find annotation processors. If this option is
              not used, then the class path is searched for processors.

       -s dir
              Specifies the directory where to place the generated source
              files. The directory must already exist because javac does not
              create it. If a class is part of a package, then the compiler
              puts the source file in a subdirectory that reflects the package
              name and creates directories as needed.

              If you specify -s /home/mysrc and the class is called
              com.mypackage.MyClass, then the source file is put in
              /home/mysrc/com/mypackage/MyClass.java.

       -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 Java SE 1.3.

              1.4    The compiler accepts code containing assertions, which
                     were introduced in Java SE 1.4.

              1.5    The compiler accepts code containing generics and other
                     language features introduced in Java SE 5.

              5      Synonym for 1.5.

              1.6    No language changes were introduced in Java SE 6.
                     However, encoding errors in source files are now reported
                     as errors instead of warnings as in earlier releases of
                     Java Platform, Standard Edition.

              6      Synonym for 1.6.

              1.7    The compiler accepts code with features introduced in
                     Java SE 7.

              7      Synonym for 1.7.

              1.8    This is the default value. The compiler accepts code with
                     features introduced in Java SE 8.

              8      Synonym for 1.8.


       -sourcepath sourcepath
              Specifies the source code path to search for class or interface
              definitions. As with the user class path, source path entries
              are separated by colons (:) on Oracle Solaris and semicolons on
              Windows and can be directories, JAR archives, or ZIP archives.
              If packages are used, then the local path name within the
              directory or archive must reflect the package name.

              Note: Classes found through the class path might be recompiled
              when their source files are also found. See Searching for Types.

       -verbose
              Uses verbose output, which includes information about each class
              loaded and each source file compiled.

       -version
              Prints release information.

       -werror
              Terminates compilation when warnings occur.

       -X
              Displays information about nonstandard options and exits.

   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 the -bootclasspath and -extdirs
       options when cross-compiling.

       -target version
              Generates class files that target a specified release of the
              virtual machine. Class files will run on the specified target
              and on later releases, but not on earlier releases of the JVM.
              Valid targets are 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5 (also 5), 1.6 (also
              6), 1.7 (also 7), and 1.8 (also 8).

              The default for the -target option depends on the value of the
              -source option:

              · If the -source option is not specified, then the value of the
                -target option is 1.8

              · If the -source option is 1.2, then the value of the -target
                option is 1.4

              · If the -source option is 1.3, then the value of the -target
                option is 1.4

              · If the -source option is 1.5, then the value of the -target
                option is 1.8

              · If the -source option is 1.6, then the value of the -target is
                option 1.8

              · If the -source option is 1.7, then the value of the -target is
                option 1.8

              · For all other values of the -source option, the value of the
                -target option is the value of the -source option.


       -bootclasspath bootclasspath
              Cross-compiles 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.

   COMPACT PROFILE OPTION
       Beginning with JDK 8, the javac compiler supports compact profiles.
       With compact profiles, applications that do not require the entire Java
       platform can be deployed and run with a smaller footprint. The compact
       profiles feature could be used to shorten the download time for
       applications from app stores. This feature makes for more compact
       deployment of Java applications that bundle the JRE. This feature is
       also useful in small devices.

       The supported profile values are compact1, compact2, and compact3.
       These are additive layers. Each higher-numbered compact profile
       contains all of the APIs in profiles with smaller number names.

       -profile
              When using compact profiles, this option specifies the profile
              name when compiling. For example:

              javac -profile compact1 Hello.java



              javac does not compile source code that uses any Java SE APIs
              that is not in the specified profile. Here is an example of the
              error message that results from attempting to compile such
              source code:

              cd jdk1.8.0/bin
              ./javac -profile compact1 Paint.java
              Paint.java:5: error: Applet is not available in profile 'compact1'
              import java.applet.Applet;



              In this example, you can correct the error by modifying the
              source to not use the Applet class. You could also correct the
              error by compiling without the -profile option. Then the
              compilation would be run against the full set of Java SE APIs.
              (None of the compact profiles include the Applet class.)

              An alternative way to compile with compact profiles is to use
              the -bootclasspath option to specify a path to an rt.jar file
              that specifies a profile's image. Using the -profile option
              instead does not require a profile image to be present on the
              system at compile time. This is useful when cross-compiling.

   NONSTANDARD OPTIONS
       -Xbootclasspath/p:path
              Adds a suffix to the bootstrap class path.

       -Xbootclasspath/a:path
              Adds a prefix to the bootstrap class path.

       -Xbootclasspath/:path
              Overrides the location of the bootstrap class files.

       -Xdoclint:[-]group [/access]
              Enables or disables specific groups of checks, where group is
              one of the following values: accessibility, syntax, reference,
              html or missing. For more information about these groups of
              checks see the -Xdoclint option of the javadoc command. The
              -Xdoclint option is disabled by default in the javac command.

              The variable access specifies the minimum visibility level of
              classes and members that the -Xdoclint option checks. It can
              have one of the following values (in order of most to least
              visible) : public, protected, package and private. For example,
              the following option checks classes and members (with all groups
              of checks) that have the access level protected and higher
              (which includes protected, package and public):

              -Xdoclint:all/protected



              The following option enables all groups of checks for all access
              levels, except it will not check for HTML errors for classes and
              members that have access level package and higher (which
              includes package and public):

              -Xdoclint:all,-html/package



       -Xdoclint:none
              Disables all groups of checks.

       -Xdoclint:all[/access]
              Enables all groups of checks.

       -Xlint
              Enables all recommended warnings. In this release, enabling all
              available warnings is recommended.

       -Xlint:all
              Enables all recommended warnings. In this release, enabling all
              available warnings is recommended.

       -Xlint:none
              Disables all warnings.

       -Xlint:name
              Disables warning name. See Enable or Disable Warnings with the
              -Xlint Option for a list of warnings you can disable with this
              option.

       -Xlint:-name
              Disables warning name. See Enable or Disable Warnings with the
              -Xlint Option with the -Xlint option to get a list of warnings
              that you can disable with this option.

       -Xmaxerrs number
              Sets the maximum number of errors to print.

       -Xmaxwarns number
              Sets the maximum number of warnings to print.

       -Xstdout filename
              Sends compiler messages to the named file. By default, compiler
              messages go to System.err.

       -Xprefer:[newer,source]
              Specifies which file to read when both a source file and class
              file are found for a type. (See Searching for Types). If the
              -Xprefer:newer option is used, then it reads the newer of the
              source or class file for a type (default). If the
              -Xprefer:source option is used, then it reads the source file.
              Use -Xprefer:source when you want to be sure that any annotation
              processors can access annotations declared with a retention
              policy of SOURCE.

       -Xpkginfo:[always,legacy,nonempty]
              Control whether javac generates package-info.class files from
              package-info.java files. Possible mode arguments for this option
              include the following.

              always Always generate a package-info.class file for every
                     package-info.java file. This option may be useful if you
                     use a build system such as Ant, which checks that each
                     .java file has a corresponding .class file.

              legacy Generate a package-info.class file only if package-
                     info.java contains annotations. Don't generate a package-
                     info.class file if package-info.java only contains
                     comments.

                     Note: A package-info.class file might be generated but be
                     empty if all the annotations in the package-info.java
                     file have RetentionPolicy.SOURCE.

              nonempty
                     Generate a package-info.class file only if package-
                     info.java contains annotations with RetentionPolicy.CLASS
                     or RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME.


       -Xprint
              Prints a textual representation of specified types for debugging
              purposes. Perform neither annotation processing nor compilation.
              The format of the output could change.

       -XprintProcessorInfo
              Prints information about which annotations a processor is asked
              to process.

       -XprintRounds
              Prints information about initial and subsequent annotation
              processing rounds.

ENABLE OR DISABLE WARNINGS WITH THE -XLINT OPTION
       Enable warning name with the -Xlint:name option, where name is one of
       the following warning names. Note that you can disable a warning with
       the -Xlint:-name: option.

       cast   Warns about unnecessary and redundant casts, for example:

              String s = (String) "Hello!"



       classfile
              Warns about issues related to class file contents.

       deprecation
              Warns about the use of deprecated items, for example:

              java.util.Date myDate = new java.util.Date();
              int currentDay = myDate.getDay();



              The method java.util.Date.getDay has been deprecated since JDK
              1.1

       dep-ann
              Warns about items that are documented with an @deprecated
              Javadoc comment, but do not have a @Deprecated annotation, for
              example:

              /**
                * @deprecated As of Java SE 7, replaced by {@link #newMethod()}
                */
              public static void deprecatedMethood() { }
              public static void newMethod() { }



       divzero
              Warns about division by the constant integer 0, for example:

              int divideByZero = 42 / 0;



       empty  Warns about empty statements after ifstatements, for example:

              class E {
                  void m() {
                       if (true) ;
                  }
              }



       fallthrough
              Checks the switch blocks for fall-through cases and provides 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 end with a break statement:

              switch (x) {
              case 1:
                System.out.println("1");
                // No break statement here.
              case 2:
                System.out.println("2");
              }



              If the -Xlint:fallthrough option was used when compiling this
              code, then the compiler emits a warning about possible fall-
              through into case, with the line number of the case in question.

       finally
              Warns about finally clauses that cannot complete normally, for
              example:

              public static int m() {
                try {
                   throw new NullPointerException();
                }  catch (NullPointerException(); {
                   System.err.println("Caught NullPointerException.");
                   return 1;
                 } finally {
                   return 0;
                 }
                }



              The compiler generates a warning for the finally block in this
              example. When the int method is called, it returns a value of 0.
              A finally block executes when the try block exits. In this
              example, when control is transferred to the catch block, the int
              method exits. However, the finally block must execute, so it is
              executed, even though control was transferred outside the
              method.

       options
              Warns about issues that related to the use of command-line
              options. See Cross-Compilation Options.

       overrides
              Warns about issues regarding method overrides. For example,
              consider the following two classes:

              public class ClassWithVarargsMethod {
                void varargsMethod(String... s) { }
              }
              public class ClassWithOverridingMethod extends ClassWithVarargsMethod {
                 @Override
                 void varargsMethod(String[] s) { }
              }



              The compiler generates a warning similar to the following:.

              warning: [override] varargsMethod(String[]) in ClassWithOverridingMethod
              overrides varargsMethod(String...) in ClassWithVarargsMethod; overriding
              method is missing '...'



              When the compiler encounters a varargs method, it translates the
              varargs formal parameter into an array. In the method
              ClassWithVarargsMethod.varargsMethod, the compiler translates
              the varargs formal parameter String... s to the formal parameter
              String[] s, an array, which matches the formal parameter of the
              method ClassWithOverridingMethod.varargsMethod. Consequently,
              this example compiles.

       path   Warns about invalid path elements and nonexistent path
              directories on the command line (with regard to the class path,
              the source path, and other paths). Such warnings cannot be
              suppressed with the @SuppressWarnings annotation, for example:

              javac -Xlint:path -classpath /nonexistentpath Example.java



       processing
              Warn about issues regarding annotation processing. The compiler
              generates this warning when you have a class that has an
              annotation, and you use an annotation processor that cannot
              handle that type of exception. For example, the following is a
              simple annotation processor:

              Source file AnnocProc.java:

              import java.util.*;
              import javax.annotation.processing.*;
              import javax.lang.model.*;
              import.javaz.lang.model.element.*;
              @SupportedAnnotationTypes("NotAnno")
              public class AnnoProc extends AbstractProcessor {
                public boolean process(Set<? extends TypeElement> elems, RoundEnvironment renv){
                   return true;
                }
                public SourceVersion getSupportedSourceVersion() {
                   return SourceVersion.latest();
                 }
              }



              Source file AnnosWithoutProcessors.java:

              @interface Anno { }
              @Anno
              class AnnosWithoutProcessors { }



              The following commands compile the annotation processor
              AnnoProc, then run this annotation processor against the source
              file AnnosWithoutProcessors.java:

              javac AnnoProc.java
              javac -cp . -Xlint:processing -processor AnnoProc -proc:only AnnosWithoutProcessors.java



              When the compiler runs the annotation processor against the
              source file AnnosWithoutProcessors.java, it generates the
              following warning:

              warning: [processing] No processor claimed any of these annotations: Anno



              To resolve this issue, you can rename the annotation defined and
              used in the class AnnosWithoutProcessors from Anno to NotAnno.

       rawtypes
              Warns about unchecked operations on raw types. The following
              statement generates a rawtypes warning:

              void countElements(List l) { ... }



              The following example does not generate a rawtypes warning

              void countElements(List<?> l) { ... }



              List is a raw type. However, List<?> is an unbounded wildcard
              parameterized type. Because List is a parameterized interface,
              always specify its type argument. In this example, the List
              formal argument is specified with an unbounded wildcard (?) as
              its formal type parameter, which means that the countElements
              method can accept any instantiation of the List interface.

       Serial Warns about missing serialVersionUID definitions on serializable
              classes, for example:

              public class PersistentTime implements Serializable
              {
                private Date time;
                 public PersistentTime() {
                   time = Calendar.getInstance().getTime();
                 }
                 public Date getTime() {
                   return time;
                 }
              }



              The compiler generates the following warning:

              warning: [serial] serializable class PersistentTime has no definition of
              serialVersionUID



              If a serializable class does not explicitly declare a field
              named serialVersionUID, then the serialization runtime
              environment calculates a default serialVersionUID value for that
              class based on various aspects of the class, as described in the
              Java Object Serialization Specification. However, it is strongly
              recommended that all serializable classes explicitly declare
              serialVersionUID values because the default process of computing
              serialVersionUID vales is highly sensitive to class details that
              can vary depending on compiler implementations, and as a result,
              might cause an unexpected InvalidClassExceptions during
              deserialization. To guarantee a consistent serialVersionUID
              value across different Java compiler implementations, a
              serializable class must declare an explicit serialVersionUID
              value.

       static Warns about issues relating to the use of statics, for example:

              class XLintStatic {
                  static void m1() { }
                  void m2() { this.m1(); }
              }



              The compiler generates the following warning:

              warning: [static] static method should be qualified by type name,
              XLintStatic, instead of by an expression



              To resolve this issue, you can call the static method m1 as
              follows:

              XLintStatic.m1();



              Alternately, you can remove the static keyword from the
              declaration of the method m1.

       try    Warns about issues relating to use of try blocks, including try-
              with-resources statements. For example, a warning is generated
              for the following statement because the resource ac declared in
              the try block is not used:

              try ( AutoCloseable ac = getResource() ) {    // do nothing}



       unchecked
              Gives more detail for unchecked conversion warnings that are
              mandated by the Java Language Specification, for example:

              List l = new ArrayList<Number>();
              List<String> ls = l;       // unchecked warning



              During type erasure, the types ArrayList<Number> and
              List<String> become ArrayList and List, respectively.

              The ls command has the parameterized type List<String>. When the
              List referenced by l is assigned to ls, the compiler generates
              an unchecked warning. At compile time, the compiler and JVM
              cannot determine whether l refers to a List<String> type. In
              this case, l does not refer to a List<String> type. As a result,
              heap pollution occurs.

              A heap pollution situation occurs when the List object l, whose
              static type is List<Number>, is assigned to another List object,
              ls, that has a different static type, List<String>. However, the
              compiler still allows this assignment. It must allow this
              assignment to preserve backward compatibility with releases of
              Java SE that do not support generics. Because of type erasure,
              List<Number> and List<String> both become List. Consequently,
              the compiler allows the assignment of the object l, which has a
              raw type of List, to the object ls.

       varargs
              Warns about unsafe usages of variable arguments (varargs)
              methods, in particular, those that contain non-reifiable
              arguments, for example:

              public class ArrayBuilder {
                public static <T> void addToList (List<T> listArg, T... elements) {
                  for (T x : elements) {
                    listArg.add(x);
                  }
                }
              }



              Note: A non-reifiable type is a type whose type information is
              not fully available at runtime.

              The compiler generates the following warning for the definition
              of the method ArrayBuilder.addToList

              warning: [varargs] Possible heap pollution from parameterized vararg type T



              When the compiler encounters a varargs method, it translates the
              varargs formal parameter into an array. However, the Java
              programming language does not permit the creation of arrays of
              parameterized types. In the method ArrayBuilder.addToList, the
              compiler translates the varargs formal parameter T... elements
              to the formal parameter T[] elements, an array. However, because
              of type erasure, the compiler converts the varargs formal
              parameter to Object[] elements. Consequently, there is a
              possibility of heap pollution.

COMMAND-LINE ARGUMENT FILES
       To shorten or simplify the javac command, you can specify one or more
       files that 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 file names in any
       combination. The arguments within a file can be separated by spaces or
       new line characters. If a file name contains embedded spaces, then put
       the whole file name in double quotation marks.

       File Names within an argument file are relative to the current
       directory, not the location of the argument file. Wild cards (*) are
       not allowed in these lists (such as for specifying *.java). Use of the
       at sign (@) 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 the javac command, pass in the path and name of each
       argument file with the at sign (@) leading character. When the javac
       command encounters an argument beginning with the at sign (@), it
       expands the contents of that file into the argument list.

       Example 1 Single Argument File

       You could use a single argument file named argfile to hold all javac
       arguments:

       javac @argfile

       This argument file could contain the contents of both files shown in
       Example 2

       Example 2 Two Argument Files

       You can create two argument files: one for the javac options and the
       other for the source file names. Note that the following lists have no
       line-continuation characters.

       Create a file named options that contains the following:

       -d classes
       -g
       -sourcepath /java/pubs/ws/1.3/src/share/classes

       Create a file named classes that contains the following:

       MyClass1.java
       MyClass2.java
       MyClass3.java

       Then, run the javac command as follows:

       javac @options @classes

       Example 3 Argument Files with Paths

       The argument files can have paths, but any file names inside the files
       are relative to the current working directory (not path1 or path2):

       javac @path1/options @path2/classes


ANNOTATION PROCESSING
       The javac command provides direct support for annotation processing,
       superseding the need for the separate annotation processing command,
       apt.

       The API for annotation processors is defined in the
       javax.annotation.processing and javax.lang.model packages and
       subpackages.

   HOW ANNOTATION PROCESSING WORKS
       Unless annotation processing is disabled with the -proc:none option,
       the compiler searches for any annotation processors that are available.
       The search path can be specified with the -processorpath option. If no
       path is specified, then the user class path is used. Processors are
       located by means of service provider-configuration files named META-
       INF/services/javax.annotation.processing.Processor on the search path.
       Such files should contain the names of any annotation processors to be
       used, listed one per line. Alternatively, processors can be specified
       explicitly, using the -processor option.

       After scanning the source files and classes on the command line to
       determine what annotations are present, the compiler queries the
       processors to determine what annotations they process. When a match is
       found, the processor is called. A processor can claim the annotations
       it processes, in which case no further attempt is made to find any
       processors for those annotations. After all of the annotations are
       claimed, the compiler does not search for additional processors.

       If any processors generate new source files, then another round of
       annotation processing occurs: Any newly generated source files are
       scanned, and the annotations processed as before. Any processors called
       on previous rounds are also called on all subsequent rounds. This
       continues until no new source files are generated.

       After a round occurs where no new source files are generated, the
       annotation processors are called one last time, to give them a chance
       to complete any remaining work. Finally, unless the -proc:only option
       is used, the compiler compiles the original and all generated source
       files.

   IMPLICITLY LOADED SOURCE FILES
       To compile a set of source files, the compiler might need to implicitly
       load additional source files. See Searching for Types. Such files are
       currently not subject to annotation processing. By default, the
       compiler gives a warning when annotation processing occurred and any
       implicitly loaded source files are compiled. The -implicit option
       provides a way to suppress the warning.

SEARCHING FOR TYPES
       To compile a source file, the compiler often needs information about a
       type, but the type definition is not in the source files specified 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 that provide information through inheritance.

       For example, when you create a subclass java.applet.Applet, you are
       also using the ancestor classes of Applet: java.awt.Panel,
       java.awt.Container, java.awt.Component, and java.lang.Object.

       When the compiler needs type information, it searches for a source file
       or class file that 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 option.

       If you set the -sourcepath option, then 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 the -extdirs options. See Cross-Compilation Options.

       A successful type search may produce a class file, a source file, or
       both. If both are found, then you can use the -Xprefer option to
       instruct the compiler which to use. If newer is specified, then the
       compiler uses the newer of the two files. If source is specified, the
       compiler uses the source file. The default is newer.

       If a type search finds a source file for a required type, either by
       itself, or as a result of the setting for the -Xprefer option, then the
       compiler reads the source file to get the information it needs. By
       default the compiler also compiles the source file. You can use the
       -implicit option to specify the behavior. If none is specified, then no
       class files are generated for the source file. If class is specified,
       then class files are generated for the source file.

       The compiler might not discover the need for some type information
       until after annotation processing completes. When the type information
       is found in a source file and no -implicit option is specified, the
       compiler gives a warning that the file is being compiled without being
       subject to annotation processing. To disable the warning, either
       specify the file on the command line (so that it will be subject to
       annotation processing) or use the -implicit option to specify whether
       or not class files should be generated for such source files.

PROGRAMMATIC INTERFACE
       The javac command supports the new Java Compiler API defined by the
       classes and interfaces in the javax.tools package.

   EXAMPLE
       To compile as though providing command-line arguments, use the
       following syntax:

       JavaCompiler javac = ToolProvider.getSystemJavaCompiler();

       The example writes diagnostics to the standard output stream and
       returns the exit code that javac would give when called from the
       command line.

       You can use other methods in the javax.tools.JavaCompiler interface to
       handle diagnostics, control where files are read from and written to,
       and more.

   OLD INTERFACE
       Note: This API is retained for backward compatibility only. All new
       code should use the newer Java Compiler API.

       The com.sun.tools.javac.Main class provides two static methods to call
       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 typically be passed to the compiler.

       The out parameter indicates where the compiler diagnostic output is
       directed.

       The return value is equivalent to the exit value from javac.

       Note: All other classes and methods found in a package with names that
       start with com.sun.tools.javac (subpackages of com.sun.tools.javac) are
       strictly internal and subject to change at any time.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Compile a Simple Program

       This example shows how to compile the Hello.java source file in the
       greetings directory. The class defined in Hello.java is called
       greetings.Hello. The greetings directory is the package directory both
       for the source file and the class file and is underneath the current
       directory. This makes it possible to use the default user class path.
       It also makes it unnecessary to specify a separate destination
       directory with the -d option.

       The source code in 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]);
               }
           }
       }

       Compile greetings.Hello:

       javac greetings/Hello.java

       Run greetings.Hello:

       java greetings.Hello World Universe Everyone
       Hello World
       Hello Universe
       Hello Everyone

       Example 2 Compile Multiple Source Files

       This example compiles the Aloha.java, GutenTag.java, Hello.java, and
       Hi.java source files in the greetings package.

       % javac greetings/*.java
       % ls greetings
       Aloha.class         GutenTag.class      Hello.class         Hi.class
       Aloha.java          GutenTag.java       Hello.java          Hi.java

       Example 3 Specify a User Class Path

       After changing one of the source files in the previous example,
       recompile it:

       pwd
       /examples
       javac greetings/Hi.java

       Because greetings.Hi refers to other classes in the greetings package,
       the compiler needs to find these other classes. The previous example
       works because the default user class path is the directory that
       contains the package directory. If you want to recompile this file
       without concern for which directory you are in, then add the examples
       directory to the user class path by setting CLASSPATH. This example
       uses the -classpath option.

       javac -classpath /examples /examples/greetings/Hi.java

       If you change greetings.Hi to use a banner utility, then 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 the greetings package, the program needs access
       to the greetings package, and to the classes that the greetings classes
       use.

       java -classpath /examples:/lib/Banners.jar greetings.Hi

       Example 4 Separate Source Files and Class Files

       The following example uses javac to compile code that runs on JVM 1.7.

       javac -source 1.7 -target 1.7 -bootclasspath jdk1.7.0/lib/rt.jar \
       -extdirs "" OldCode.java

       The -source 1.7 option specifies that release 1.7 (or 7) of the Java
       programming language be used to compile OldCode.java. The option
       -target 1.7 option ensures that the generated class files are
       compatible with JVM 1.7. Note that in most cases, the value of the
       -target option is the value of the -source option; in this example, you
       can omit the -target option.

       You must specify the -bootclasspath option to specify the correct
       version of the bootstrap classes (the rt.jar library). If not, then the
       compiler generates a warning:

       javac -source 1.7 OldCode.java
       warning: [options] bootstrap class path not set in conjunction with
       -source 1.7

       If you do not specify the correct version of bootstrap classes, then
       the compiler uses the old language rules (in this example, it uses
       version 1.7 of the Java programming language) combined with the new
       bootstrap classes, which can result in class files that do not work on
       the older platform (in this case, Java SE 7) because reference to
       nonexistent methods can get included.

       Example 5 Cross Compile

       This example uses javac to compile code that runs on JVM 1.7.

       javac -source 1.7 -target 1.7 -bootclasspath jdk1.7.0/lib/rt.jar \
                   -extdirs "" OldCode.java

       The-source 1.7 option specifies that release 1.7 (or 7) of the Java
       programming language to be used to compile OldCode.java. The -target
       1.7 option ensures that the generated class files are compatible with
       JVM 1.7.

       You must specify the -bootclasspath option to specify the correct
       version of the bootstrap classes (the rt.jar library). If not, then the
       compiler generates a warning:

       javac -source 1.7 OldCode.java
       warning: [options] bootstrap class path not set in conjunction with -source 1.7

       If you do not specify the correct version of bootstrap classes, then
       the compiler uses the old language rules combined with the new
       bootstrap classes. This combination can result in class files that do
       not work on the older platform (in this case, Java SE 7) because
       reference to nonexistent methods can get included. In this example, the
       compiler uses release 1.7 of the Java programming language.

SEE ALSO
       · java(1)

       · jdb(1)

       · javah(1)

       · javadoc(1)

       · jar(1)

       · jdb(1)



JDK 8                            03 March 2015                        javac(1)
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