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I'm trying to add Kotlin to my project and I need to use proguard. Which rules should I add to proguard to support Kotlin?

Thank you

1
  • 5
    Please provide more information, e.g. which rules you tried, how did that work, what errors did you get, etc. Nov 5, 2015 at 17:01

5 Answers 5

43

You don't need to do anything special. Kotlin works with ProGuard out of the box. But you may face some strange errors when processing your application with ProGuard. In this case just add

-dontwarn kotlin.**

Also if you want to get rid of null checks at runtime you may use the following rule:

-assumenosideeffects class kotlin.jvm.internal.Intrinsics {
    static void checkParameterIsNotNull(java.lang.Object, java.lang.String);
}
4
  • 2
    I believe a flag for kotlinc sets the policy for null checks. No need for proguard for that.
    – voddan
    May 25, 2016 at 8:41
  • Where did you find the thing about the flag? I would very much like to try that, but can't seem to find it anywhere :/
    – daemontus
    Jan 14, 2017 at 14:35
  • @daemontus kotlinc -X yields -Xno-param-assertions, -Xno-receiver-assertions and -Xno-call-assertions; see also source code
    – TWiStErRob
    Oct 15, 2018 at 18:54
  • Kotlin works with Proguard but Proguard is not working effectively with Kotlin yet. Kotlin support in Proguard is still in beta at this moment. E.g. Proguard cannot distinguish internal classes and members from public ones. It sees them as public because they are marked public in the bytecode.
    – WindRider
    Feb 24, 2020 at 15:24
19
-keep class kotlin.** { *; }
-keep class kotlin.Metadata { *; }
-dontwarn kotlin.**
-keepclassmembers class **$WhenMappings {
    <fields>;
}
-keepclassmembers class kotlin.Metadata {
    public <methods>;
}
-assumenosideeffects class kotlin.jvm.internal.Intrinsics {
    static void checkParameterIsNotNull(java.lang.Object, java.lang.String);
}

build gradle :

apply plugin: 'com.android.application'
apply plugin: 'kotlin-android'
apply plugin: 'kotlin-android-extensions'

https://kotlinlang.org/docs/tutorials/kotlin-android.html

2
  • Where should I add the first one? in proguard-rules.pro?
    – c-an
    Jun 25, 2019 at 9:46
  • @c-an yes. Add it to your proguard-rules file
    – Misagh
    Jun 30, 2019 at 11:51
11

In Kotlin 1.0.2 EAP proguard strips out when mappings for enums, so I have to keep them explicitly, so

-keepclassmembers class **$WhenMappings {
    <fields>;
}

is sufficient for correct obfuscation. Although if you want some performance improvements, you can also add

-assumenosideeffects class kotlin.jvm.internal.Intrinsics {
    static void checkParameterIsNotNull(java.lang.Object, java.lang.String);
}
0

if you use android studio, proguards comes with default. But you should on "Enables code shrinking" and "Enables resource shrinking" options for your code security and code optimization.

open your gradile file and check below.

android {
    buildTypes {
        release {
            // Enables code shrinking, obfuscation, and optimization for only
            // your project's release build type.
            minifyEnabled true

            // Enables resource shrinking, which is performed by the
            // Android Gradle plugin.
            shrinkResources true

            // Includes the default ProGuard rules files that are packaged with
            // the Android Gradle plugin. To learn more, go to the section about
            // R8 configuration files.
            proguardFiles getDefaultProguardFile('proguard-android-optimize.txt'), 'proguard-rules.pro'
        }
    }
}

Source : https://developer.android.com/studio/build/shrink-code

0
-3

Check in your build.gradle. Did you include:

implementation "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-stdlib-jre7:$kotlin_version"
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