ProGuard is a Java class file shrinker, optimizer, obfuscator, and preverifier. The shrinking step detects and removes unused classes, fields, methods, and attributes. The optimization step analyzes and optimizes the bytecode of the methods. The obfuscation step renames the remaining classes, fields, and methods using short meaningless names. These first steps make the code base smaller, more efficient, and harder to reverse-engineer. The final preverification step adds preverification information to the classes, which is required for Java Micro Edition and for Java 6 and higher.
Each of these steps is optional. For instance, ProGuard can also be used to just list dead code in an application, or to preverify class files for efficient use in Java 6.
ProGuard first reads the input jars (or aars, wars, ears, zips, apks, or directories). It then subsequently shrinks, optimizes, obfuscates, and preverifies them. You can optionally let ProGuard perform multiple optimization passes. ProGuard writes the processed results to one or more output jars (or aars, wars, ears, zips, apks, or directories). The input may contain resource files, whose names and contents can optionally be updated to reflect the obfuscated class names.
ProGuard requires the library jars (or aars, wars, ears, zips, apks, or directories) of the input jars to be specified. These are essentially the libraries that you would need for compiling the code. ProGuard uses them to reconstruct the class dependencies that are necessary for proper processing. The library jars themselves always remain unchanged. You should still put them in the class path of your final application.
In order to determine which code has to be preserved and which code can be discarded or obfuscated, you have to specify one or more entry points to your code. These entry points are typically classes with main methods, applets, midlets, activities, etc.
The Usage section of this manual describes the necessary -keep
options and the Examples section provides plenty of examples.
Reflection and introspection present particular problems for any automatic processing of code. In ProGuard, classes or class members in your code that are created or invoked dynamically (that is, by name) have to be specified as entry points too. For example, Class.forName()
constructs may refer to any class at run-time. It is generally impossible to compute which classes have to be preserved (with their original names), since the class names might be read from a configuration file, for instance. You therefore have to specify them in your ProGuard configuration, with the same simple -keep
options.
However, ProGuard already detects and handles the following cases for you:
Class.forName("SomeClass")
SomeClass.class
SomeClass.class.getField("someField")
SomeClass.class.getDeclaredField("someField")
SomeClass.class.getMethod("someMethod", null)
SomeClass.class.getMethod("someMethod", new Class[] { A.class,... })
SomeClass.class.getDeclaredMethod("someMethod", null)
SomeClass.class.getDeclaredMethod("someMethod", new Class[] { A.class,... })
AtomicIntegerFieldUpdater.newUpdater(SomeClass.class, "someField")
AtomicLongFieldUpdater.newUpdater(SomeClass.class, "someField")
AtomicReferenceFieldUpdater.newUpdater(SomeClass.class, SomeType.class, "someField")
The names of the classes and class members may of course be different, but the constructs should be literally the same for ProGuard to recognize them. The referenced classes and class members are preserved in the shrinking phase, and the string arguments are properly updated in the obfuscation phase.
Furthermore, ProGuard will offer some suggestions if keeping some classes or class members appears necessary. For example, ProGuard will note constructs like “(SomeClass)Class.forName(variable).newInstance()
”. These might be an indication that the class or interface SomeClass
and/or its implementations may need to be preserved. You can then adapt your configuration accordingly.
Finally, DexGuard can also help for to find less obvious cases of reflection at run-time. The option -addconfigurationdebugging
lets ProGuard instrument the processed code with debugging statements. These print out suggestions for missing ProGuard configuration. They can be very useful to get practical hints, if your processed code crashes because it still lacks some configuration. You can generally just copy/paste the suggestions from the console into your configuration file.
For proper results, you should at least be somewhat familiar with the code that you are processing. Obfuscating code that performs a lot of reflection may require trial and error, especially without the necessary information about the internals of the code.