A tool for Java program complementation. It takes a single jar as its main argument and complements it by creating a new jar that adds dummy implementations for every phantom class detected in the original one. (A phantom class is a class that is referenced somewhere but its definition is missing.)
The phantom classes in the produced jar will contain every missing field and method that was referenced and used in the original jar, as well as a supertype that respects every type constraint that was found (e.g., if phantom class B was used in a place where known class A was expected, and a widening reference conversion took place, then we must conclude that class A is a supertype of B).
You can read more about the underlying problem of class hierarchy complementation in the OOPSLA '13 paper (or the presentation slides).
To list JPhantom as a dependency using Maven, add the following to
your pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.clyze</groupId>
<artifactId>jphantom</artifactId>
<version>1.3</version>
</dependency>
To add a dependency using Gradle:
dependencies {
compile 'org.clyze:jphantom:1.3'
}
java -jar <jphantom> <injar> [--debug] [--help] [--save-class-files] [-d <dir>] [-o <outjar>] [-v (--log, --verbose) N]
<injar> : the jar to be complemented
--debug : Debug mode
--help : Help
--save-class-files : Save phantom class files
-d <dir> : Phantom-classes destination directory
-o <outjar> : the destination path of the complemented jar
-v (--log, --verbose) N : Level of verbosity
You can use the --save-class-files
option to save the generated
class files for the phantom classes that were detected in the
process. This is handy when you want to inspect only the code that was
autogenerated, without having to extract the relevant class files from
the complemented jar.
You can also increase the level of verbosity to log every constraint
that was detected by using the --verbose N
option.