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I was encrypting some text, for which I used BASE64Encoder

String encryptedValue = new BASE64Encoder().encode(encVal);

But I am getting a warning

The constructor 'BASE64Encoder()' is not API (restriction on required library 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.8.0_45\jre\lib\rt.jar')
The method 'CharacterEncoder.encode(byte[])' is not API (restriction on required library 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.8.0_45\jre\lib\rt.jar')
Access restriction: The type 'BASE64Encoder' is not API (restriction on required library 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jdk1.8.0_45\jre\lib\rt.jar')

I can suppress this warning by @SuppressWarnings("restriction"). But I want to know why I am getting this warning. Will it create problems later?

3 Answers 3

2

You should really avoid to call sun.* classes :

A Java program that directly calls into sun.* packages is not guaranteed to work on all Java-compatible platforms. In fact, such a program is not guaranteed to work even in future versions on the same platform.

Why Developers Should Not Write Programs That Call 'sun' Packages

Other libraries, like Apache Commons Codec will do what you need :

Commons Codec Base64

1

You are probably using the import sun.misc.BASE64Encoder; which is deprecated in 1.8

You should go with the new base64 that exists on 1.8 (https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/Base64.html ) or you can use apache common codec lib (which i use)

import org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64;

    String encryptedValue = new Base64().encodeToString(encVal);
0

BASE64Encoder reside in sun.misc package. As you are using 1.8 version which even Oracle discourages to use. Read it here http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/faq-sun-packages-142232.html.

Abstract from that link: From one release to another, these classes may be removed, or they may be moved from one package to another, and it's fairly likely that their interface (method names and signatures) will change

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