Guide to Keep Annotations

Disclaimer

The annotation library described here is in development and considered to be in its prototype phase. As such it is not yet feature complete, but we are actively working on supporting all of the use cases we know of. Once the design exits the prototype phase, it is intended to move to an R8 independent library as part of androidx. All feedback: criticism, comments and suggestions are very welcome!

File new feature requests and bugs in the R8 component.

Table of contents

Introduction

When using a Java/Kotlin shrinker such as R8 or Proguard, developers must inform the shrinker about parts of the program that are used either externally from the program itself or internally via reflection and therefore must be kept.

Traditionally these aspects would be kept by writing keep rules in a configuration file and passing that to the shrinker.

The keep annotations described in this document represent an alternative method using Java annotations. The motivation for using these annotations is foremost to place the description of what to keep closer to the program point using reflective behavior. Doing so more directly connects the reflective code with the keep specification and makes it easier to maintain as the code develops. In addition, the annotations are defined independent from keep rules and have a hopefully more clear and direct meaning.

Build configuration

To use the keep annotations your build must include the library of annotations. It is currently built as part of each R8 build and if used with R8, you should use the matching version. You can find all archived builds at:

https://storage.googleapis.com/r8-releases/raw/<version>/keepanno-annotations.jar

Thus you may obtain version 8.2.34 by running:

wget https://storage.googleapis.com/r8-releases/raw/8.2.34/keepanno-annotations.jar

You will then need to set the system property com.android.tools.r8.enableKeepAnnotations to instruct R8 to make use of the annotations when shrinking:

java -Dcom.android.tools.r8.enableKeepAnnotations=1 \
  -cp r8.jar com.android.tools.r8.R8 \
  # ... the rest of your R8 compilation command here ...

Annotating code using reflection

The keep annotation library defines a family of annotations depending on your use case. You should generally prefer @UsesReflection where applicable.

For example, if your program is reflectively invoking a method, you should annotate the method that is doing the reflection. The annotation must describe the assumptions the reflective code makes.

In the following example, the method foo is looking up the method with the name hiddenMethod on objects that are instances of BaseClass. It is then invoking the method with no other arguments than the receiver.

The assumptions the code makes are that all methods with the name hiddenMethod and the empty list of parameters must remain valid for getDeclaredMethod if they are objects that are instances of the class BaseClass or subclasses thereof.

static class MyClass {

  @UsesReflection({
    @KeepTarget(
        instanceOfClassConstant = BaseClass.class,
        methodName = "hiddenMethod",
        methodParameters = {})
  })
  public void foo(BaseClass base) throws Exception {
    base.getClass().getDeclaredMethod("hiddenMethod").invoke(base);
  }
}

Annotating code used by reflection (or via JNI)

TODO

Annotating APIs

TODO

Migrating rules to annotations

There is no automatic migration of keep rules. Keep annotations often invert the direction and rules have no indication of where the reflection is taking place or why. Thus, migrating existing keep rules requires user involvement. Keep rules also have a tendency to be very general, matching a large number of classes and members. Often the rules are much too broad and are keeping more than needed which will have a negative impact on the shrinkers ability to reduce size.

First step in converting a rule is to determine the purpose of the rule. Is it API surface or is it reflection? Note that a very general rule may be covering several use cases and even a mix of both reflection and API usage.

When migrating it is preferable to use @UsesReflection instead of @UsedByReflection. For very general rules it might not be easy or worth it to migrate without completely reevaluating the rule. If one still wants to replace it by annotations, the general @KeepEdge can be used to define a context independent keep annotation.

For example, to keep all main methods in the program one could use:

@KeepEdge(
    consequences = {
      @KeepTarget(
          kind = KeepItemKind.CLASS_AND_MEMBERS,
          methodName = "main",
          methodReturnType = "void",
          methodParameters = {"java.lang.String[]"},
          methodAccess = {MethodAccessFlags.PUBLIC, MethodAccessFlags.STATIC})
    })
public class SomeClass {
  // ...
}

My use case is not covered!

The annotation library is in active development and not all use cases are described here or supported. Reach out to the R8 team by filing a new issue in our tracker. Describe your use case and we will look at how best to support it.

Troubleshooting

If an annotation is not working as expected it may be helpful to inspect the rules that have been extracted for the annotation. This can be done by inspecting the configuration output of the shrinker. For R8 you can use the command line argument --pg-conf-output <path> to emit the full configuration used by R8.