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So, I'm TRYING to release some software but Proguard is giving me a headache.

When I try to export using proguard I'm getting lots of warning ie "can't find referenced class"

For example:

[2011-08-07 17:44:37 - GAME] Warning: org.simpleframework.xml.stream.StreamReader: can't find referenced class javax.xml.stream.events.XMLEvent
[2011-08-07 17:44:37 - GAME] Warning: there were 52 unresolved references to classes or interfaces.
[2011-08-07 17:44:37 - GAME]          You may need to specify additional library jars (using '-libraryjars'),
[2011-08-07 17:44:37 - GAME]          or perhaps the '-dontskipnonpubliclibraryclasses' option.
[2011-08-07 17:44:37 - GAME] java.io.IOException: Please correct the above warnings first.
[ 

The warnings seem to related to simpleframework, so in my proguard config file I've added the following:

-libraryjars pathtoprojecttolibs\simple-xml-2.4.jar

Where pathtoprojecttolibs is the path to jars which are referenced by my project.

This makes NO difference.

If simpleframework references javax can I tell proguard to ignore this too??

Any ideas?

5
  • 1
    Are you using proguard just to do treeshaking? If so, have you checked you file size without using it? You can get superwierd bugs when proguard throws out something that is accessed using reflection for instance which you won't find until it breaks runtime so be really, really sure you need it.
    – alun
    Aug 7, 2011 at 17:25
  • I was really only using it to try to protect the code being nicked as easily? Do you think its worth it? Aug 7, 2011 at 17:27
  • 3
    @ListenToRick Proguard is perfectly fine, if it's run with the proper configs and your resultant app tested properly. I'm pretty sure Google even recommends its use. Google provides a lot of guides/examples for using Proguard with Android apps. Aug 7, 2011 at 17:44
  • Proguard is a good tool but google recommending it is probably at least as much because of a rather wierd size limitation in the dex-format as anything else. (See code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=7147)
    – alun
    Aug 7, 2011 at 17:54
  • 5
    @alun, that's not the reason. Those of us who don't want our apps reverse engineered, or who are using licensing to 'try' to prevent piracy should use an obfuscation tool such as this to make it harder for would be hackers. Making your application take less space is also a benefit for the end user, and there are also optimizations made by these tools as well... yet another benefit. Oct 23, 2011 at 4:28

9 Answers 9

128

org.simpleframework.xml.stream.StreamReader in your code refers to javax.xml.stream.events.XMLEvent. The latter class is part of the Java runtime (rt.jar) but not part of the Android runtime (android.jar), so ProGuard warns that something might be broken. If you're sure that your application works anyway, you can specify

-dontwarn javax.xml.stream.events.**

ProGuard hell?

6
  • 15
    That did not fix it for me, however this did -dontwarn javax.xml.**
    – Jeshurun
    May 27, 2012 at 14:50
  • 8
    Adding -libraryjars <java.home>/lib/rt.jar fixed the issue for me.
    – Gautam
    Dec 27, 2012 at 7:40
  • 3
    I got additional warnings about eg javax.xml.stream.XMLInputFactory, so i used -dontwarn javax.xml.stream.**
    – spatialist
    Jan 16, 2014 at 11:08
  • 1
    How can I set -dontwarn sing the GUI? May 9, 2015 at 19:04
  • 1
    Its weird I still encountered this problem in 2018, I am not sure what I missed but is this solution still apply in 2018 without some drawbacks?
    – nww04
    Apr 23, 2018 at 3:34
9

In my case the root cause was here. Those warnings you can just skip with :

-dontwarn org.simpleframework.xml.stream.**

The original answer is here

6

This error occurs because the libs you use depend on other libs which are not realy used, but Proguard is looking for them.
Add your -dontwarn lines to your proguard-rules.pro file in your Android project to disable this warnings.

enter image description here

You can find which dependencies you need to add to your proguard-rules.pro in the stacktrace of your error.

3

You should include this in your Proguard config:

-dontskipnonpubliclibraryclasses
3
  • Well, it did for me at the time...~4 years ago...things may have changed since then :) Seemed to have worked for at least 2 other people anyway. Jun 8, 2015 at 18:01
  • The default proguard-android.txt already has this line. Jul 7, 2017 at 12:52
  • 1
    @Ultimecia that commit is from 2013, this post was made in 2011 Jul 7, 2017 at 18:40
3

My Magic key that solved my hours of searching: Add this to progruard-android.txt

-dontskipnonpubliclibraryclassmembers
0

Hmm. Reading that warning it would seem the library you are trying to use has a dependancy on javax.xml.stream.events. I don't think that namespace is actually included in android at all. (See Package Index).

Try deploying it to the emulator without using proguard and see if it works. My guess would be no if that warning is accurate.

1
  • Hi, if it is working in emulator without the proguard, it means the warnings are inaccurate? I am trying to figure out why I had these kind of similar warnings. I don't want to just suppress the warnings. Aug 18, 2017 at 9:09
0

I think this is an edge case but in my case I had to completely wipe the build folder on my Jenkins proguard tried to work with old code which was not there any more - just in case anybody has the same issue.

0

In my case I haven't changed anything and warning started to show. The problem was with broken gradle caches. Check my other answer. I share with this because it took my 2 hours to find the problem :]

0

Add this line to your proguard-rules.pro file in the gradle scripts directory:

-dontwarn package.class.name.**

where package.class.name is the package name with the class name of the jar file appended.

For example:

-dontwarn com.myexternalclass.utils.**

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