My project consists of some third party jar files, which was compiled in different version of java. 
My project is using older version of java so i am getting UnsupportedClassVersionError while executing the application. 
Is there any other way to get the version of java/jre number[45..51] in which the class files are compiled so that i can check the jar files before using it.
            Asked
            
        
        
            Active
            
        
            Viewed 4,026 times
        
    4
            
            
         
    
    
        Shriram
        
- 4,343
- 8
- 37
- 64
- 
                    You need the version of the class files or the version of your JRE? – RealSkeptic Oct 28 '15 at 16:08
- 
                    version of java in which class files are compiled! – Shriram Oct 28 '15 at 16:10
- 
                    You may use asm: http://asm.ow2.org/asm40/javadoc/user/org/objectweb/asm/ClassVisitor.html#visit(int, int, java.lang.String, java.lang.String, java.lang.String, java.lang.String[]) – user996142 Oct 28 '15 at 16:15
- 
                    I hope it is third party jar. Even i want this version of class files of asm.. compiled. Anyway thanks for the info! – Shriram Oct 28 '15 at 16:17
2 Answers
12
            You can use javap (with -v for verbose mode), and specify any class from the jar file. For example, looking at a Joda Time jar file:
javap -cp joda-time-2.7.jar -v org.joda.time.LocalDate
Here the -cp argument specifies the jar file to be in the classpath, the -v specifies that we want more verbose information, and then there's the name of one class in the jar file.
The output starts with:
Classfile jar:file:/c:/Users/Jon/Test/joda-time-2.7.jar!/org/joda/time/LocalDate.class
  Last modified 12-Jan-2015; size 16535 bytes
  MD5 checksum d19ebb51bc5eabecbf225945eccd23ef
  Compiled from "LocalDate.java"
public final class org.joda.time.LocalDate extends org.joda.time.base.BaseLocal implements org.joda.time.ReadablePartial,java.io.Serializable
  minor version: 0
  major version: 49
The "minor version" and "major version" bits are the ones you're interested in.
It's possible that a single jar file contains classes compiled with different versions, of course.
 
    
    
        Jon Skeet
        
- 1,421,763
- 867
- 9,128
- 9,194
- 
                    2To know what version printed there corresponds to what java version, see http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9170832/list-of-java-class-file-format-major-version-numbers – Wim Deblauwe Oct 28 '15 at 16:15
2
            
            
        If you only have standard Unix tools available and not the javap command then you can get a class file version in the form of a hex <minor> <major> version like this:
$ dd if=YourFile.class ibs=1 skip=4 count=4 of=/dev/stdout status=none | od -An -tx2 --endian=big
Example output. 0034 is 52 and therefore this class is java 8.
 0000 0034
 
    
    
        Andy Brown
        
- 11,766
- 2
- 42
- 61