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I'm using a 3rd party tool of objectPlanet called easyChart to produce graphical chart. They provide a jar lib called Chart.jar and ChartServer.jar

I write an easyChart object on server side:

Chart chart = new BarChart();
... <create chart data here> ...
ByteArrayOutputStream bStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
ObjectOutputStream oStream = new ObjectOutputStream( bStream );
oStream.writeObject (chart);
byte[] byteVal = bStream.toByteArray();
String chartInString = Base64.encode(byteVal);

and read it back on client side:

byte[] readByte = Base64.decode(chartInString);
ObjectInputStream ois = new ObjectInputStream(new ByteArrayInputStream(readByte));
Chart chart = (Chart) ois.readObject();

It works fine when server and client has same JVM version. I realize that GenericChart implements Serialization (this class is inside the jar provided).

How I can overcome this matter since I can't modify their provided jar classes?

Much appreciate any reply. Thank you!

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  • Which problems do you experience?
    – Henry
    Feb 18, 2013 at 9:37
  • lets say: server uses Java 6 update 27 when writing Chart object. I use 2 Client machine: 1st use Java 6 update 27, I can read the Chart object, 2nd use Java 7, I can't read the Chart object, it throws this exception: java.io.InvalidClassException: javax.swing.JComponent; local class incompatible: stream classdesc serialVersionUID = -1030230214076481435, local class serialVersionUID = 5670834184508236790
    – baizen
    Feb 18, 2013 at 9:39

2 Answers 2

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I can't read the Chart object, it throws this exception: java.io.InvalidClassException: javax.swing.JComponent; local class incompatible: stream classdesc serialVersionUID = -1030230214076481435, local class serialVersionUID = 5670834184508236790

Actually, this is not related to the JVM version but to the run time library. The class javax.swing.JComponent was changed in a way that makes the serial representation incompatible.

I am afraid, there is not much you can do about it apart from using the same version.

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  • +1 - And the flip side is that if you need your persistence to work across multiple JVM versions, you are better of using a different mechanism; e.g. JSON or XML serialization or a database.
    – Stephen C
    Feb 18, 2013 at 9:59
  • Or serialize the models instead of the Swing components themselves.
    – user207421
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:30
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There is a warning in the class Javadoc of every Swing class in existence that serialized versions will not be compatible with other JDK versions. So, don't serialize them. Serialize the models.

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  • 1
    How do I serialize the model? Jun 23, 2014 at 11:21

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