36

I have a Java application built with Maven with a lot of dependencies. When performing my test cases they sometimes pass fine, sometimes they fail because of some incompatible class combinations. So it seems to that there must be some classes twice in classpath which are taken randomly. The one is fine the other not.

  • How can I find out which classes / jars are incompatible in my classpath?
  • What is the right approach using Maven not to fall in that compatibility-traps?
2
  • How can Maven know? OSGi is the answer....
    – duffymo
    Sep 21, 2012 at 18:53
  • The standalone tool Tattletale is a good choice, personally I use progurad as one-stop solution, as it is more easy to integrate with Maven.
    – yorkw
    Sep 22, 2012 at 3:13

7 Answers 7

54

I think a better solution would be to use the maven-duplicate-finder-plugin.

Note: The new version is the duplicate-finder-maven-plugin.

6
  • 14
    This worked like a charm for me! No setup, no editing pom.xml, simply calling mvn com.ning.maven.plugins:maven-duplicate-finder-plugin:1.0.4:check from the command line. Aug 26, 2013 at 15:35
  • 6
    Is there a Gradle equivalent to this plugin?
    – Renato
    Mar 7, 2016 at 10:56
  • 2
    FYI there is something similar here: mojohaus.org/extra-enforcer-rules/banDuplicateClasses.html
    – vorburger
    Jan 23, 2017 at 20:34
  • 4
    The command line for the latest version is mvn org.basepom.maven:duplicate-finder-maven-plugin:1.4.0:check
    – Pino
    Dec 17, 2019 at 9:58
  • @Renato No equivalent exists. I prepared my own gradle plugin extending it from github.com/tehlers/gradle-duplicate-classes-check/blob/master/… with notable differences: 1) only inspect runtimeClasspath dependencies 2) inspect also current project source files
    – Alex
    Sep 3, 2020 at 15:17
17

You can try using this tool Tattletale.

3
6

You can detect duplicate classfile definitions in the classpath or module path using ClassGraph (disclaimer, I am the author of ClassGraph):

for (Entry<String, ResourceList> dup :
        new ClassGraph().scan().getAllResources().classFilesOnly().findDuplicatePaths()) {
    System.out.println(dup.getKey());              // Classfile path
    for (Resource res : dup.getValue()) {
        System.out.println(" -> " + res.getURI()); // Resource URI, showing classpath element
    }
}
2
2

There is a plugin in eclipse to check for duplicate classes in the build path (ClasspathChecker http://classpathchecker.free.fr/)

2

This problem is basically an application of the more general problem to "somehow scan the classpath (CP) and collect all class files and other resources", and then find duplicates in that...

There are a number of existing libraries for CP scanning (and it's not trivial to do this right in all environments, especially since the application class loader in Java 9 is no longer an URLClassLoader), notably Classgraph, using which it's relatively trivial to do this.

PS: For Java versions <9, JHades (jhades.github.io) is nice (but NOK on Java 9/10/11).

1

This is a another simple Open Source Duplicate Classpath Finder tool - Classpath Inspector

which gives pretty decent report of duplicate classes in the classpath.

-3

You can use the maven dependency:tree to see the maven hierarchy of your project and maven exclusion to exclude the jars you don't want

1
  • 1
    this does not show any classes, but only module dependencies. Nov 8, 2016 at 16:22

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