The default mode, --illegal-access=permit , is intended to make you aware of code on the class path that reflectively accesses any JDK-internal APIs at least once. To learn about all such accesses, you can use the warn or the debug modes.
To verify that your application is ready for a future version of the JDK, run it with --illegal-access=deny along with any necessary --add-opens options. Any remaining illegal-access errors will most likely be due to static references from compiled code to JDK-internal APIs.
Apart from an understanding of the accesses amongst modules and their respective packages. I believe the crux of it lies in the Module System#Relaxed-strong-encapsulation and I would just cherry-pick the relevant parts of it to try and answer the question.
What defines an illegal reflective access and what circumstances trigger the warning?
To aid in the migration to Java-9, the strong encapsulation of the modules could be relaxed.
An implementation may provide static access, i.e. by compiled bytecode.
May provide a means to invoke its run-time system with one or more packages of one or more of its modules open to code in all unnamed modules, i.e. to code on the classpath. If the run-time system is invoked in this way, and if by doing so some invocations of the reflection APIs succeed where otherwise they would have failed.
In such cases, you've actually ended up making a reflective access which is "illegal" since in a pure modular world you were not meant to do such accesses.
How it all hangs together and what triggers the warning in what scenario?
This relaxation of the encapsulation is controlled at runtime by a new launcher option --illegal-access
which by default in Java9 equals permit
. The permit
mode ensures
The first reflective-access operation to any such package causes a warning to be issued, but no warnings are issued after that point. This single warning describes how to enable further warnings. This warning cannot be suppressed.
The modes are configurable with values debug
(message as well as stacktrace for every such access), warn
(message for each such access), and deny
(disables such operations).
Few things to debug and fix on applications would be:-
--illegal-access=deny
to get to know about and avoid opening packages from one module to another without a module declaration including such a directive(opens
) or explicit use of --add-opens
VM arg.jdeps
tool with the --jdk-internals
optionThe warning message issued when an illegal reflective-access operation is detected has the following form:
WARNING: Illegal reflective access by $PERPETRATOR to $VICTIM
where:
$PERPETRATOR
is the fully-qualified name of the type containing the code that invoked the reflective operation in question plus the code source (i.e., JAR-file path), if available, and
$VICTIM
is a string that describes the member being accessed, including the fully-qualified name of the enclosing type
Questions for such a sample warning: = JDK9: An illegal reflective access operation has occurred. org.python.core.PySystemState
Last and an important note, while trying to ensure that you do not face such warnings and are future safe, all you need to do is ensure your modules are not making those illegal reflective accesses. :)
There is an Oracle article I found regarding Java 9 module system
By default, a type in a module is not accessible to other modules unless itβs a public type and you export its package. You expose only the packages you want to expose. With Java 9, this also applies to reflection.
As pointed out in https://stackoverflow.com/a/50251958/134894, the differences between the AccessibleObject#setAccessible
for JDK8 and JDK9 are instructive. Specifically, JDK9 added
This method may be used by a caller in class C to enable access to a member of declaring class D if any of the following hold:
- C and D are in the same module.
- The member is public and D is public in a package that the module containing D exports to at least the module containing C.
- The member is protected static, D is public in a package that the module containing D exports to at least the module containing C, and C is a subclass of D.
- D is in a package that the module containing D opens to at least the module containing C. All packages in unnamed and open modules are open to all modules and so this method always succeeds when D is in an unnamed or open module.
which highlights the significance of modules and their exports (in Java 9)
Just look at setAccessible()
method used to access private
fields and methods:
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/lang/reflect/AccessibleObject.html#setAccessible-boolean-
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/java/lang/reflect/AccessibleObject.html#setAccessible-boolean-
Now there is a lot more conditions required for this method to work. The only reason it doesn't break almost all of older software is that modules autogenerated from plain JARs are very permissive (open and export everything for everyone).
If you want to go with the add-open option, here's a command to find which module provides which package ->
java --list-modules | tr @ " " | awk '{ print $1 }' | xargs -n1 java -d
the name of the module will be shown with the @ while the name of the packages without it
NOTE: tested with JDK 11
IMPORTANT: obviously is better than the provider of the package does not do the illegal access
if you want to hide warnings you could just use "--add-opens" option
--add-opens <source-module>/<package>=<target-module>(,<target-module>)*
for example you have an error:
java.lang.ClassLoader.findLoadedClass(java.lang.String)
First open String java 11 documentation Class String where you can find module and package name
Module java.base, Package java.lang
Solution:
java --add-opens=java.base/java.lang=ALL-UNNAMED -jar example.jar
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