9

I am trying to use sun.misc.BASE64Encoder/Decoder, but this code:

(new sun.misc BASE64Encoder()).encode(new    
    sun.misc.BASE64Decoder().decodeBuffer("test string XML:"))

returns "test/string/XML/" I am embarrassed

4 Answers 4

22

Don't use sun.misc or com.sun classes. They are not guaranteed to be consistent between different versions of the jre.

Use commons-codec Base64.encodeBase64(..) and Base64.decodeBase64(..)

3
  • hehe.. I sent my recent project in which sun.misc.BASE64Encoder/Decoder used to a customer. Didn't know about inconsistency in different jre's. I hope it's a rare issue.
    – Roman
    Feb 15, 2010 at 16:14
  • 2
    It's actually been working fine since JDK 1.1, but it's still ugly to use internal APIs. From a purely practical standpoint, you have nothing to worry about. Jun 15, 2011 at 19:42
  • 2
    Why not to use sun.* packages: oracle.com/technetwork/java/faq-sun-packages-142232.html
    – justderb
    Mar 6, 2014 at 22:40
15

Use Class:

javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter

It has 2 methods of interest:

public static byte[] parseBase64Binary( String lexicalXSDBase64Binary )
public static String printBase64Binary( byte[] val )
1
  • 1
    I've been looking for a reliable way to convert Base64 using the native libraries for days now. Thanks!
    – bradreaves
    May 2, 2012 at 21:23
7

You first decoding the string "test string XML:", which isn't really valid Base64, since it contains spaces and a colon, none of which are valid B64 characters. I think that you meant to encode then decode, like this:

(new sun.misc.BASE64Decoder().decodeBuffer(new sun.misc.BASE64Encoder().encode("test string XML:"))
0
1

I think you want:

String s = "Hello world";
new sun.misc.BASE64Encoder().encode(s.getBytes("UTF-8"));

Even better, use the commons utils as the previous answer suggested. Only use sun.misc.Base64Encoder if you can't afford to add the external dependency on another jar.

0

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