tag | 9f455b147839ed9725f9164b375e7b5ca7443e22 | |
---|---|---|
tagger | The Android Open Source Project <initial-contribution@android.com> | Fri Jun 07 15:59:01 2019 -0700 |
object | 131fa1109349b57b6f5cdd6fd40f86ab4adba570 |
Android O MR1 IOT Release 1.0.13 (5612681)
commit | 131fa1109349b57b6f5cdd6fd40f86ab4adba570 | [log] [tgz] |
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author | Colin Cross <ccross@android.com> | Tue Apr 16 16:33:18 2019 -0700 |
committer | android-build-merger <android-build-merger@google.com> | Tue Apr 16 16:33:18 2019 -0700 |
tree | 348d1813c5c481be25bd52102e733079bd2e4d89 | |
parent | efa3e13a9c4a86969d580c77fb56f3e93c4a8902 [diff] | |
parent | 046783e742028423c3e62b448a2b738fc3c1b650 [diff] |
Merge changes from topic "guava-27.1" am: 046783e742 Change-Id: Ie1c209c135d8fc8f04891bd4c9b4005438f56d8f
Guava is a set of core libraries that includes new collection types (such as multimap and multiset), immutable collections, a graph library, functional types, an in-memory cache, and APIs/utilities for concurrency, I/O, hashing, primitives, reflection, string processing, and much more!
Guava comes in two flavors.
android
directory.Guava's Maven group ID is com.google.guava
and its artifact ID is guava
. Guava provides two different "flavors": one for use on a (Java 8+) JRE and one for use on Android or Java 7 or by any library that wants to be compatible with either of those. These flavors are specified in the Maven version field as either 27.1-jre
or 27.1-android
. For more about depending on Guava, see using Guava in your build.
To add a dependency on Guava using Maven, use the following:
<dependency> <groupId>com.google.guava</groupId> <artifactId>guava</artifactId> <version>27.1-jre</version> <!-- or, for Android: --> <version>27.1-android</version> </dependency>
To add a dependency using Gradle:
dependencies { compile 'com.google.guava:guava:27.1-jre' // or, for Android: api 'com.google.guava:guava:27.1-android' }
Snapshots of Guava built from the master
branch are available through Maven using version HEAD-jre-SNAPSHOT
, or HEAD-android-SNAPSHOT
for the Android flavor.
APIs marked with the @Beta
annotation at the class or method level are subject to change. They can be modified in any way, or even removed, at any time. If your code is a library itself (i.e. it is used on the CLASSPATH of users outside your own control), you should not use beta APIs, unless you repackage them. If your code is a library, we strongly recommend using the Guava Beta Checker to ensure that you do not use any @Beta
APIs!
APIs without @Beta
will remain binary-compatible for the indefinite future. (Previously, we sometimes removed such APIs after a deprecation period. The last release to remove non-@Beta
APIs was Guava 21.0.) Even @Deprecated
APIs will remain (again, unless they are @Beta
). We have no plans to start removing things again, but officially, we're leaving our options open in case of surprises (like, say, a serious security problem).
Guava has one dependency that is needed at runtime: com.google.guava:failureaccess:1.0
Serialized forms of ALL objects are subject to change unless noted otherwise. Do not persist these and assume they can be read by a future version of the library.
Our classes are not designed to protect against a malicious caller. You should not use them for communication between trusted and untrusted code.
For the mainline flavor, we unit-test the libraries using only OpenJDK 1.8 on Linux. Some features, especially in com.google.common.io
, may not work correctly in other environments. For the Android flavor, our unit tests run on API level 15 (Ice Cream Sandwich).